A man in West Virginia is suing the state to get evolution removed from the public schools because learning about evolution hurts his daughter’s chances of getting into college and preparing for a career in veterinary medicine.
I don’t even…
A man in West Virginia is suing the state to get evolution removed from the public schools because learning about evolution hurts his daughter’s chances of getting into college and preparing for a career in veterinary medicine.
I don’t even…
I like fossils. I like irony. I can understand why so many people send me links to this article, or others like it: Alberta creationist Edgar Nernberg digs up what scientists are calling the most important fossil finds in decades, which calls these particular fossils “priceless”.
I have to say that I was positively thrilled by this article on how you can lose weight by eating chocolate. It encapsulates so many things I try to drill into my students — I’ll probably use it in my genetics class as an example of bad statistics, and my writing class as an example of using science writing skills for evil.
Here’s the deal: chocolate doesn’t help you lose weight. But if you confuse the data with a large number of variables that you ignore, and do a little unscrupulous p-hacking, you can get an effect with statistical significance. So these authors set out to produce a bad study in nutritional science, and see if they can get it to be publicized.
I made a dreadful mistake. Before embarking on my trip to Germany, with those long transatlantic flights, I stocked up my Kindle with a couple of books to keep me entertained. One of them was Nessa Carey’s Junk DNA: A Journey Through the Dark Matter of the Genome. It was a poor investment. I could not finish it. I got maybe a half hour worth of reading out of it before I was too exasperated to continue, and instead watched a ghastly Night at the Museum sequel being shown on the plane’s entertainment system. It was a terrible movie, but better than this book.
Actually, it didn’t take me a half hour to become peevish. The very first page after the acknowledgments, in a section called “Notes on Nomenclature,” contained this abomination.
Oh, jesus. The horror.
It was a conference that made promises and required £89 to attend, and it was full of desperate, sick people.
By carrying that coconut, octopuses of this sort made a change in their legal status necessary.
This town in Australia got some unusual precipitation: millions of spiders that proceeded to blanket the entire town with cobwebs.
Over there on the right is a classic example of garbled science: the claim that vegetables can be grown ‘without chemicals,’ as if the vegetables themselves weren’t little lumps of chemicals already.
But I have another one to add to the list of bad ideas, and this one comes from a press release from the American Thoracic Society.
Electronic cigarette flavorings alter lung function at the cellular level.