Science journalists and science communicators who attended the Knight New Media Center Best Practices: Covering Science in Cyberspace seminar in March 2007 collectively wrote a blog during the meeting:
Two dozen prominent science journalists and science communicators were invited to participate in this special conference with three goals: 1) Identify the critical issues facing science journalists in the digital age; 2) identify innovative forms of multimedia story-telling and presentation of complex issues online; and 3) identify "best practices" for coverage of science issues on digital platforms. Among the topics discussed were:
* Defining exactly what is "science";
* Revealing untold science stories and determining why they have not been told;
* Exploring visual journalism and digital story telling techniques.Knight New Media Center welcomes comments from readers related to the journalists' specific discussions or related to the more general topic of science journalism. To post your comments, please browse the blog posts once the seminar has begun.
There are some interesting entries there.
(Hat-tip: Anton)
- Log in to post comments
There are persons today who deny the existence of God. Some say, God is dead. But is their theory right? Speaking of such persons, Paul states in one of his letters:
[Gods] invisible qualities are clearly seen from the worlds creation onward, because they are perceived by the things made, even his eternal power and Godship, so that they are inexcusable. (Romans 1:20)
The vast universe and all the marvels that it contains are truly an expression of Gods eternal power.
Even famous scientists have at times acknowledged their own smallness in comparison with the stupendous power and wisdom apparent in creation. For example, Albert Einstein once testified:
It is enough for me to . . . reflect upon the marvelous structure of the universe, which we can dimly perceive, and to try humbly to comprehend even an infinitesimal part of the intelligence manifest in nature.
The discoverer of the law of gravity, Sir Isaac Newton, was another who was deeply impressed by the evidence of Gods invisible qualities that are to be seen in His creation. The following account relates how Newton testified to his belief in Almighty God:
Newton once had a skilled mechanic make for him a model of the solar system. Balls representing the planets were geared together so as to move realistically in orbit. One day an atheist friend visited Newton. On seeing the model, he operated it, and exclaimed in admiration, Who made it? Newton answered, Nobody! The atheist replied, You must think I am a fool! Of course somebody made it, and he is a genius. Newton then said to his friend, This thing is but a puny imitation of a much grander system whose laws you know, and I am not able to convince you that this mere toy is without a designer and maker; yet you profess to believe that the great original from which the design is taken has come into being without either designer or maker!
Newtons friend came to acknowledge that the great Designer and Maker of all things is God. Surely we, too, as we look on the marvels of creation about us, in the heavens and on earth, must acknowledge that an all-wise Creator made it all! How thankful we should be that this mighty Creator lovingly placed man here on this earth and that he is deeply interested in us!
Sincerely,
Marilyn