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Sadly, William Shatner is not British.
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"Texas is one of 19 states left that require a periodic safety review - down from a peak of 31 states in the 1970s. The District of Columbia recently disbanded its inspection program because of high costs and a lack of evidence that the inspections saved lives. There is no serious discussion about eliminating Texas' program, which includes an emissions test in Dallas and some other locations. But state officials and insurers acknowledge that more could be done to determine what the inspections are accomplishing. "
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"As a physicist, he found a way to capture atoms and won a Nobel prize. Now he is marshalling scientists and engineers to transform the world's biggest energy economy. Eric Hand profiles the US energy secretary, Nature's Newsmaker of the Year."
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"I have a PhD in physics, and although much of what I do at work is statistical data analysis and some engineering-type modeling I still have a physicists' outlook in general. I don't think a really simple physical model can tell us exactly what the doubling the amount of carbon dioxide in the atmosphere will do...but I do think it can tell us a lot. So, let's take a look. "
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"I think that countering biases means figuring out misconceptions, confronting them, and knocking them down first thing. If you don't hit the misconception, you don't actually teach anyone anything. The misconceptions run strong and reassert themselves over time. So, I want to try to list the issues people have with science, rational and irrational, and want to think about how to respond to and perhaps counter these."
Uncertain Principles
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"Uncertain Principles" features the miscellaneous ramblings of a physicist at a small liberal arts college. Physics, politics, pop culture, and occasional conversations with his dog.
"Prof. Orzel gives the impression of an everyday guy who just happens to have a vast but hidden knowledge of physics." (anonymous student evaluation comment)
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Links for 2009-12-21
Category: Links Dump
Posted on: December 21, 2009 7:43 AM, by Chad Orzel
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Comments
Posted by: Bob O'H | December 21, 2009 9:00 AM
Honorary knighthoods for non-Commonwealth citizens are fairly common, actually. If they can give one to Bob Geldof (let alone Bill Gates and Alan Greenspan), they can hand them out to the entire crew of the Enterprise I'd have thought. For Services to the Split Infinitive.
Posted by: chris y | December 21, 2009 9:07 AM