History and Philosophy (often of Science)

Theodore Beale, a.k.a. "Vox Day", quote-miner and "Christian libertarian opinion columnist," apparently has issues with women in science. This via Ed Brayton: Because they are the intellectual driving force of humanity, men will be fine. They will simply continue to do what they have always done and pursue the same challenges they have always pursued, focused on the realities of success rather than its superficial attributes. It is the institutions they are exiting, voluntarily and involuntarily, that will be destroyed instead. It is written that "women ruin everything"; having destroyed the…
Births 1910 - Robert Havemann, German chemist 1920 - Nicolaas Bloembergen, Dutch physicist and Nobel Prize laureate Deaths 1920 - Julio Garavito Armero, Colombian astronomer 1955 - Alexander Fleming, Scottish scientist and Nobel Prize laureate 1977 - Ulysses S. Grant IV, American geologist
Events 1977 - Rings of Uranus: Astronomers discover rings around Uranus. 1982 - Syzygy: all nine planets align on the same side of the Sun. 2006 - Mars Reconnaissance Orbiter arrives at Mars. Births 1628 - Marcello Malpighi, Italian physician 1709 - Georg Steller, German naturalist Deaths 1585 - Rembert Dodoens, Flemish physician and botanist 1670 - Johann Rudolf Glauber, German chemist 1942 - William Henry Bragg, English physicist and Nobel Prize laureate 1966 - Frits Zernike, Dutch physicist and Nobel Prize laureate
Apparently it is PZ's birthday. Wander on over and remind him how old he is ... Events 2006 - Liquid water is discovered on Enceladus, the sixth largest moon of Saturn. Births 1564 - David Fabricius, German astronomer 1758 - Franz Joseph Gall, German neuroscientist & phrenologist 1887 - Fritz Lenz, German geneticist 1923 - Walter Kohn, Austrian-born physicist and Nobel Prize laureate Deaths 1851 - Hans Christian Ãrsted, Danish physicist 1954 - Eva Ahnert-Rohlfs, German astronomer 1954 - V. Walfrid Ekman, Swedish oceanographer 1974 - Earl Wilbur Sutherland Jr., American physiologist…
Sincerest apologies for being MIA for quite a while now. This week in particular was hectic (in good ways) and time to blog was negligible. Two candidates interviewed and the systematics workshop was excellent. But it is now Saturday, Spring Break has started, and I theoretically have some down free time. Wilkins is going to be staying with me for a few days, so we hope to hit the Arizona-Sonoran Desert Museum and the "Feathered Dinosaurs and the Origin of Flight" exhibit at the Arizona Museum of Natural History before heading north to Utah for the Edges and Boundaries of Biological Objects…
Apologies for no Monday Mustelid yesterday. Busy, busy. Events 1675 - John Flamsteed appointed first Astronomer Royal 1774 - First sighting of Orion Nebula by William Herschel. 1997 - Bill Clinton bans federally funded human cloning research. 2002 - Canada bans human embryo cloning but permits government-funded scientists to use embryos left over from fertility treatment or abortions. 2006 - Final contact attempt with Pioneer 10 by the Deep Space Network. No response was received. Births 1835 - John Hughlings Jackson, English neurologist 1847 - Karl Bayer, Austrian chemist 1854 - Napier…
Events 1879 - The United States Geological Survey is created. Births 1918 - Dr. Arthur Kornberg, American biochemist and Nobel Prize laureate Deaths 1703 - Robert Hooke, English scientist 1765 - William Stukeley, English archaeologist 1988 - Sewall Wright, American evolutionary biologist 1999 - Gerhard Herzberg, German-born chemist and Nobel Prize laureate
It’s going to be quite the busy week here at ASU. John Wilkins is in town, as is Richard Dawkins. For the latter’s talk on Thursday, I’ve managed to snag VIP tickets - courtesy of the RDF - for Wilkins and I. Then we also have the launch of the International Institute for Species Exploration (Monday) and a two-day workshop Systematics and Biodiversity: Concepts and Prospects (Tuesday and Wednesday) featuring such names as Norm Platnick, Olivier Rieppel, Robert Kohler, Polly Winsor, a bunch of us ASU people, and, eh, Wilkins. A nice mix of historians, philosophers and taxonomists. On top of…
No real time to post anything substantial - still grading and we have job candidates in this coming week. Still, here’s something to keep you amused. Events 1808 - The inaugural meeting of the Wernerian Natural History Society was held in Edinburgh. 1972 - The Pioneer 10 space probe is launched 1998 - Data sent from the Galileo spacecraft indicates that Europa has a liquid ocean under a thick crust of ice. Births 1779 - Joel Roberts Poinsett, American statesman and botanist 1862 - Boris Borisovich Galitzine, Russian physicist Deaths 1729 - Francesco Bianchini, Italian philosopher and…
Events 1896 - Henri Becquerel discovers radioactivity. 1966 - Venera 3 crashes on Venus becoming the first spacecraft to land on another planet. 1980 - Voyager 1 probe confirms that Janus (moon of Saturn) exists. Births 1910 - Archer John Porter Martin, English chemist and Nobel Prize laureate 1943 - Richard H. Price, American physicist 1943 - Rashid Sunyaev, Russian physicist Deaths 1697 - Francesco Redi, Italian physician 1911 - Jacobus Henricus van ’t Hoff, Dutch chemist and Nobel Prize laureate 1966 - Fritz Houtermans, German physicist 1995 - Georges J.F. Kohler, German biologist and…
Vox Day - who writes for WorldNetDaily - has published a book, The Irrational Atheist which is available for free online. It’s an attack on Hitchens, Harris, Dawkins and other "new atheists". Brent Rasmussen over at Unscrewing the Inscrutable has taken the book very seriously. So I decided to check it out. Unfortunately, it doesn’t start off very well for Day. Turning to chapter 1, you see the epigraph Vox Dei, as every philosopher knows, cannot be trusted in science attributed to Charles Darwin. Is Darwin actually saying that the "voice of God" is not to be trusted in science? As anyone who…
It’s that time of the year - first set of papers to be graded. That, coupled with our job search and some other things means I’m not going to be able to post anything over the next seven to ten days. So there’ll be no "Monday Mustelid" or "Today in Science" for a while. Just warning ya!
Births 1723 - Tobias Mayer, German astronomer 1781 - René Laënnec, French physician 1792 - Karl Ernst von Baer, German biologist 1796 - Philipp Franz von Siebold, German physician 1888 - Otto Stern, German physicist and Nobel Prize laureate Deaths 1600 - Giordano Bruno, Italian philosopher 1680 - Jan Swammerdam, Dutch biologist
Births 1727 - Nikolaus Joseph von Jacquin, Austrian scientist 1804 - Karl Theodor Ernst von Siebold, German physiologist 1822 - Francis Galton, English biologist and biometrician 1834 - Ernst Haeckel, German zoologist and philosopher Deaths 1531 - Johannes Stöffler, German mathematician and astronomer 1754 - Richard Mead, English physician 1980 - Erich Hückel, German physicist 1997 - Chien-Shiung Wu, Chinese-American physicist
Events 1946 - ENIAC, the first general-purpose electronic computer, unveiled at the University of Pennsylvania. Births 1564 - Galileo Galilei, Italian astronomer and physicist 1809 - André Dumont, Belgian geologist 1861 - Charles Edouard Guillaume, French physicist and Nobel Prize laureate 1873 - Hans von Euler-Chelpin, German-born chemist and Nobel Prize laureate Deaths 1988 - Richard Feynman, American physicist and Nobel Prize laureate 1999 - Henry Way Kendall, American physicist and Nobel Prize laureate
Events 1961 - Lawrencium is first synthesized at the University of California. 2000 - NEAR Shoemaker enters orbit around asteroid 433 Eros, the first spacecraft to orbit an asteroid. Births 1848 - Benjamin Baillaud, French astronomer 1869 - Charles Wilson, Scottish physicist and Nobel Prize laureate 1898 - Fritz Zwicky, Swiss-American physicist and astronomer Deaths 1975 - Julian Huxley, British biologist 1989 - James Bond, American ornithologist 2003 - Dolly, first cloned mammal
Events 1633 - Galileo Galilei arrives in Rome for his trial before the Inquisition. 1880 - Thomas Edison observes the Edison effect. 2004 - The Harvard-Smithsonian Center for Astrophysics discovers the universe’s largest known diamond, white dwarf star BPM 37093. Births 1672 - Ãtienne François Geoffroy, French chemist 1743 - Joseph Banks, English botanist and naturalist 1910 - William Shockley, American physicist, eugenicist and Nobel Prize laureate Deaths 1787 - RuÄer BoÅ¡koviÄ, Croatian scientist 2005 - Emilios T. Harlaftis, Greek astrophysicist
Events 2001 - NEAR Shoemaker spacecraft touchdown in the "saddle" region of 433 Eros becoming the first spacecraft to land on an asteroid. Births 1637 - Jan Swammerdam, Dutch scientist 1665 - Rudolf Jakob Camerarius, German botanist and physician 1785 - Pierre Louis Dulong, French physicist 1804 - Heinrich Lenz, German physicist 1809 - Charles Darwin, English naturalist 1918 - Julian Schwinger, American physicist and Nobel Prize laureate Deaths 1612 - Christopher Clavius, German astronomer 1799 - Lazzaro Spallanzani, Italian biologist 1958 - Douglas Hartree, English mathematical physicist
Births 1657 - Bernard le Bovier de Fontenelle, French scientist 1839 - Josiah Willard Gibbs, American physicist 1898 - Leó Szilárd, Hungarian-born physicist 1908 - Vivian Ernest Fuchs, English geologist Deaths 1868 - Léon Foucault, French astronomer 1973 - Hans D Jensen, German physicist and Nobel Prize laureate 1976 - Alexander Lippisch, German scientist 1978 - James B Conant, American chemist 1991 - Robert W. Holley, American biochemist and Nobel Prize laureate
As promised, here [pdf, 7.83M] are the slides from today’s Darwin Day talk for the Humanist Society of Greater Phoenix. There were somewhere between 80 and 100 people in attendance, and I think it went quite well. And for any attendees who stop by here [pdf] are the slides from my September talk on Intelligent Design.