This episode was one that I did not feel was dumbed down. I learned things I hadn't known before, and that's the main reason I watch documentaries.
Ditto.
This episode was one that I did not feel was dumbed down. I learned things I hadn't known before, and that's the main reason I watch documentaries.
When we "listen" to the radio, we're not even listening to radio waves, we're listening to the modulation of those waves. Same with TV.
Here's a better critique of Cosmos and mythologizing science so that it morphs into dogma that casts aside the scientific method.
This episode was one that I did not feel was dumbed down. I learned things I hadn't known before, and that's the main reason I watch documentaries.
Ditto.
What a waste of energy somebody spent in typing up that nonsense.Here's a better critique of Cosmos and mythologizing science so that it morphs into dogma that casts aside the scientific method.
When has Cosmos (whether Sagan or Tyson) ever not said this?In science, accepted ideas are always subject to being overturned in light of new experiments and theories. That's what makes it science.
When we "listen" to the radio, we're not even listening to radio waves, we're listening to the modulation of those waves. Same with TV.
Well, yeah; we're listening to the vibrations in the radio's speaker. The radio waves transmit the information that tells the speaker how to vibrate. Or more specifically, their reception in the antenna creates electrical potentials that are transmitted through the radio's wires to its speaker magnets, causing them to vibrate, causing the speakers to create compression waves in the air which travel to our ears, causing our eardrums to vibrate and create electrical potentials in our auditory nerves, which our brains interpret as sound. And of course the radio waves themselves are translated by the microphone and transmitter from the original acoustic vibrations. (Unless you're listening to static, or to signals from a radio telescope. That's the closest you can get to "hearing" actual radio waves.)
I'm gonna say it: I miss Carl Sagan.
While I like this version of Cosmos, I miss the lyricism of Sagan. His writing--and those of his partners, was beautiful. Moving.
Think of the rivers of blood spilled by all those generals and emperors so that in glory and triumph they could become the momentary masters of a fraction of a dot.
You just made his point. post-Cosmos science can only support the accepted consensus, and can't ever be allowed to challenge it. Any scientist who does is accused of not being a "true scientist" (Last week's news was the poster child for the no-true Scotsman fallacy, with an IPCC lead author and the head of the Indiana department of environmental quality dismissed as "non-scientists" because they failed to voice support for the reining orthodoxy). Just supporting the IPCC position on global warming can get one branded as a "denier", because the science has diverged from the alarmist dogma (No scientific evidence for increased or more severe weather, etc).
What a waste of energy somebody spent in typing up that nonsense.Here's a better critique of Cosmos and mythologizing science so that it morphs into dogma that casts aside the scientific method.
You're using religious imagery and American-centric material to preach to a Canadian atheist who would far rather have correct science than the crap that our governments are trying to tell us is real.What a waste of energy somebody spent in typing up that nonsense.Here's a better critique of Cosmos and mythologizing science so that it morphs into dogma that casts aside the scientific method.
Again, you make his point as well as any medieval monk who stuck his finger in his ears anytime someone questioned the consensus on the celestial spheres. This is quite a change from the post-Sputnik era when overturning widely accepted truths in light of new findings was lauded.
The result has been science beset by a combination of feel-good babble and apocalyptic prophecies of doom, both based on very sloppy methods, noble-cause corruption, selective reporting (only "positive" results get published), leading to a elevated non-repeatability of findings, especially in social sciences, health, and the environment.
... <snip>
...the whole past temperature reconstruction debate is itself a meaningless distraction, because the climate swings back and forth all the time, almost completely unrelated to mans' historic development of the scientific method. We've been advancing through all those ups and downs of climate, and where we happened to pop up on the curve (with our new mental tools) is essentially random. We could just as well have been at the peak of a climate cycle or the trough, and that position would be completely irrelevant to the question of climate sensitivity. But it is vitally important for those who need to believe that we'd been living in the Garden of Eden and are now about to be cast into the pits of Hell, and disputing such a truth is tantamount to questioning the divinity of Jesus.
And the whole past temperature reconstruction debate is itself a meaningless distraction, because the climate swings back and forth all the time, almost completely unrelated to mans' historic development of the scientific method. We've been advancing through all those ups and downs of climate, and where we happened to pop up on the curve (with our new mental tools) is essentially random.
Atheist, remember? Science is not a "belief system." I've lived long enough in this region and seen enough to know that conditions are not the same now as they were when I was a small child 45 years ago (I'm 50). I have no reason to doubt the integrity of the journalists of the Canadian Broadcasting Corporation (CBC) when they show footage of polar bears, and report how some of these bears - mostly cubs - have been discovered to have drowned because there isn't enough pack ice, and they die because they can't swim far enough.That's why I'm using the religious imagery, so atheists can better note if they're falling for the same storyline delivered by priests in different robes. Let me try a simple questionaire:
Does your belief system include an impending apocalypse due to mankind's sins, and are you required to repent and change your ways?
Corporations believe they can do that. I'm a human, not a corporation.Can you buy indulgences, carbon offsets, and the like?
Link, please. And do NOT tell me to "google it". You're the one making the claim, so it's up to you to provide the proof so I can check it out for myself.Are you preparing for the day that millions of animals and plants are driven to extinction by global warming, even though the IPCC AR5 report notes that the current number of climate caused extinctions stands at zero?
My "belief system" has no bearing on this issue. The rest of your post seems vaguely-worded. Please rephrase.Is your belief system kind of nutty, like holding that there's one perfect number representing an ideal temperature, and that any slight deviation from this number spells doom and catastrophe for all mankind, despite the fact that it really doesn't matter what this number is in any particular location, since individual locations vary by almost two order's of magnitude more than the apocalyptic shift? (The number line is large, but all numbers are equal as long as none of them ever change.)
I'm unfamiliar with the general climate of North Dakota.Do you lie awake at night worrying that Canada might one day become as warm as North Dakota, and that human life there will therefore cease to exist?
I have never been to Florida, and don't expect I ever will. I have also never been to Nunavut, and don't expect I ever will. I have never hunted seals, and don't condone anyone doing so unless the alternative would be to starve to death.Have you ever wondered why you're vacationing in the apocalyptic hell of Florida's intensely hot climate instead of hunting seals in Nunavut, but then thought that if the Earth were two degrees warmer, both flamingos and harp seals would go extinct because science?
Atheist, remember? Science is not a "belief system." I've lived long enough in this region and seen enough to know that conditions are not the same now as they were when I was a small child 45 years ago (I'm 50). I have no reason to doubt the integrity of the journalists of the Canadian Broadcasting Corporation (CBC) when they show footage of polar bears, and report how some of these bears - mostly cubs - have been discovered to have drowned because there isn't enough pack ice, and they die because they can't swim far enough.
As for "repenting" - it's called becoming more aware of the wasteful and environmentally harmful things humans do out of carelessness or greed or apathy, and deciding to stop adding to the problem. This is the only planet we have, and it's to our benefit to keep it livable.
Corporations believe they can do that. I'm a human, not a corporation.Can you buy indulgences, carbon offsets, and the like?
Link, please. And do NOT tell me to "google it". You're the one making the claim, so it's up to you to provide the proof so I can check it out for myself.
I'm unfamiliar with the general climate of North Dakota.
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