A few carnivals have popped up:
Also, Mendel's Garden #6 is looking for submissions — it will be hosted at The Voltage Gate tomorrow!
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Tangled Bank #84 is up on Voltage Gate.
The Ever-Present Past: Your Nearest Site - a one-time local-archaeology carnival (still accepting entries for a couple of more days) is up on Aardvarchaeology.
The Carnival Of Education #128 is up on The Education Wonks.
Carnival of the Liberals #43 is up on…
Skeptics' Circle #43 - the Sad Puppy Edition - is up on Adventures in Ethics and Science.
Carnival of the Liberals #21 is up on Archy.
While the conference site is down and before the new one is built, I need, for myself, a list of blog carnivals I follow, so here I am putting it here for my own reference (let me know if I am missing a delightful and useful carnival - if you manage one of them, make sure I am on your mailing list…
I am hosting The Giant's Shoulders this month. Please get me your submissions by the 15th. Hint: Darwin's birthday is this month. Hint: Darwin was a giant. Do Darwin!
Send submissions via the blog carnival submission thingie.
Berry Go Round #13: Winter-Tough is here, at Watching The World…
The Royal Society has opened an online archive of all their journals for nearly 350 years to the public for free until next year.
http://www.pubs.royalsoc.ac.uk/index.cfm?page=1373
Beer image used in TV ad for church
That might work in Australia.
Philip Brooks: Sweet! Thanks for the tip.
It being a lots-of-allergens-in-the-mist day, I am bleary-eyed. I read it as "Carnivore of Education" and thought, oh, damn, the creationists are at it again...
In the run-up to Talk Like A Pirate Day, I asked people on the Elmhurst Solutions science forums if they could think of any pirate science, ie anything discovered or invented by pirates which would count as science or technology by the standards of their own era at least. We weren't doing very well (I'd only got as far as proposing that Francis Drake qualified as a pirate if not necessarily as an innovator other than in military tactics) until someone suggested William Dampier. Wikipedia doesn't really give enough scientific details though.
Hah! The Arena Deal in Sacramento imploded yesterday!
http://www.sacbee.com/101/story/23098.html
It's Festivus in September.
I'm sick of people suggesting that certain kinds of statements are metaphysical, not able to be tested, and that therefore science has nothing to say about them.
That's just stupid. The logic that science is founded on has plenty to say about them - and if a thing cannot be tested even in principle, it has no potential consequences. None at all. It makes absolutely no difference whether the statement is considered to be true or false; it makes absolutely no difference whether the negation of the statement is considered to be true or false. It is quite literally meaningless.
Holding up meaningless statements as arguments is obviously incorrect. Claiming to be able to derive conclusions from those statements is incorrect. This is so terribly obvious that the vast majority of people seem to be unable to grasp it, yet it is nevertheless true.
Also, this: http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/americas/5347564.stm
It's nice to see that at least a few people in the Senate have some guts. Now we'll just have to see whether Congress can overturn Bush's veto on this matter.
Arrr, ye swabs! Here be some loot:
http://greenfield.fortunecity.com/sunshine/235/mdampier.htm
While Gutenberg has some of Dampier's works, this links to facsimile archives:
http://delta.ulib.org/zoom/creator.html?id=1470
Most especially Dampier's Voyages and Descriptions
http://www.canadiana.org/ECO/mtq?doc=34673
And a nice summary of A Pirate of Exquisite Mind: Explorer, Naturalist, and Buccaneer: The Life of William Dampier is here:
http://www.powells.com/cgi-bin/biblio?inkey=1-0802714250-2
And as ye scurvy dogs can plainly see, "Dampier" is just before "Darwin" in the Galapagos:
http://www.galapagos.to/BOOKS.HTM#DampierR
Of all the blogs I read, you'd be most likely to know: Is "evolutionary tract", in the sense of an evolutionary pathway or branch (as opposed to a book on evolution), a malapropped "evolutionary track", perhaps by malcognition with "revolutionary tract", or does it actually mean something real? If so, how does it differ from "evolutionary path"?
Yes, that's the book which had been read by the person suggesting him.
David Horton says
Andrew Brown writes in The Grauniad
I think it's because it's right.