Thalience — KarlSchroeder.com
25 days ago by deusx
Now maybe you can see how science could have a successor: thalience would use objective truth as an artistic medium and merge subjectivity and objectivity in a creative activity whose purpose is the re-sanctification of the natural world. To believe in an uplifting and satisfying vision of your place in the universe, and to know that this vision is true (or as true as anything can be) would be sublime. Thalience would be an activity worthy of post-scientific humanity, or our own biological or post-biological successors.
thalience
science
ai
cogsci
scifi
fiction
25 days ago by deusx
The fake chemical compound Isaac Asimov invented to punk science writers
february 2012 by deusx
the only way for the compound to be more soluble than it already was would be if it dissolved before it came in contact with the water. He decided this would be a good basis for another short story, and then realized this represented the perfect way to deal with his concerns about scientific writing
thiotimoline
scifi
azimov
chemistry
science
writing
february 2012 by deusx
Cosmic Log - How monkeys handle moral outrage
february 2012 by deusx
When Occupy Wall Street and similar protests played out over the past year, the phenomenon looked familiar to Emory University primatologist Frans de Waal: He's seen similar moral outrage over economic inequity expressed by monkeys and chimps. And he thinks we could learn a lesson or two from our fellow primates.
morality
primates
religion
evolution
science
philosophy
february 2012 by deusx
The Mystery of the Canadian Whiskey Fungus | Magazine
january 2012 by deusx
When he arrived at the warehouse, the first thing he noticed (after “the beautiful, sweet, mellow smell of aging Canadian whiskey,” he says) was the black stuff. It was everywhere—on the walls of buildings, on chain-link fences, on metal street signs, as if a battalion of Dickensian chimney sweeps had careened through town. “In the back of the property, there was an old stainless steel fermenter tank,” Scott says. “It was lying on its side, and it had this fungus growing all over it. Stainless steel!” The whole point of stainless steel is that things don’t grow on it.
mold
biology
science
booze
whiskey
alcohol
january 2012 by deusx
BBC NEWS | Science/Nature | 47 year old television signals bouncing back to Earth
december 2011 by deusx
A BBC team have been working closely with Dr Venn's team to help recover the signals. BBC Television historian Peter Wells, explained "We now know these are original broadcasts. So far we have recovered about 7 weeks of old television signals from space. Every day in our lab is like traveling back in time. And speaking of which we have just started the digital recovery of signals that contain lost Doctor Who episodes.
whoa
scifi
tv
awesome
drwho
seti
cool
science
space
december 2011 by deusx
Banishing consciousness: the mystery of anaesthesia - health - 29 November 2011 - New Scientist
november 2011 by deusx
The development of general anaesthesia has transformed surgery from a horrific ordeal into a gentle slumber. It is one of the commonest medical procedures in the world, yet we still don't know how the drugs work. Perhaps this isn't surprising: we still don't understand consciousness, so how can we comprehend its disappearance?
cogsci
anaesthesia
medicine
mind
brain
consciousness
science
november 2011 by deusx
Matt Mercier: The physics of triangles
november 2011 by deusx
Matt Mercier was failing high school physics, until he started dating a girl whose father was a physics teacher.
funny
podcasts
science
physics
dating
november 2011 by deusx
BBC News - Neutrino experiment repeat at Cern finds same result
november 2011 by deusx
If confirmed by other experiments, the find could undermine one of the basic principles of modern physics.
science
neutrinos
odd
physics
november 2011 by deusx
Neutrino experiment replicates faster-than-light finding : Nature News & Comment
november 2011 by deusx
Physicists have replicated the finding that the subatomic particles called neutrinos seem to travel faster than light. It is a remarkable confirmation of a stunning result, yet most in the field remain sceptical that the ultimate cosmic speed limit has truly been broken.
science
neutrinos
physics
november 2011 by deusx
BBC drops Frozen Planet's climate change episode to sell show better abroad - Telegraph
november 2011 by deusx
Viewers in the United States, where climate change sceptics are particularly strong group, will not see the full episode.
climatechange
usa
science
journalism
environment
politics
november 2011 by deusx
Must Watch: Bill Nye, Neil deGrasse Tyson, Pamela Gay, and Lawrence Krauss discuss our future in space
november 2011 by deusx
The video, originally shot back in July at TAM 2011 Las Vegas, is of a panel featuring Bill Nye, astronomers Neil DeGrasse Tyson & Pamela Gay, and theoretical physicist Lawrence Krauss—and the entire discussion is moderated by Bad Astronomy's Phil Plait. The subjects raised are consequential, the discussions thought provoking, and the opinions of the panelists refreshingly diverse (and often conflicting).
science
space
astronomy
videos
november 2011 by deusx
Radar-like sensors bring touch sensitivity to everyday items | The Verge
november 2011 by deusx
Utilizing a technology known as time domain reflectometry, a pulse is sent through a wire every time it's touched until it hits a detector, which reflects the pulse back. Based on the speed of the pulse and the time it takes to return, software can pinpoint the starting point of the pulse. The touch-sensitive wire can be placed onto any regular item — the wire can even take the place of a guitar string, while a wire pattern can be embedded inside deformable objects like clothes.
science
tech
tdr
touch
november 2011 by deusx
City lights could reveal alien civilizations | ExtremeTech
november 2011 by deusx
New research conducted by Abraham Loeb from Harvard and Edwin Turner from Princeton shows that electric, artificial lights on remote planets could be detected using next-generation ground and space telescopes. The basic approach is simple: planets that are exclusively illuminated by a local sun will have one “light signature,” while a planet with artificial lights will have another. Loeb and Turner say that this technique, with our current telescopes, would be able to pick out a major terrestrial city on the edge of the Solar System, in the Kuiper belt (50 AU) — but future telescopes, or the telescopes belonging to advanced, alien races, could see farther.
aliens
space
science
civilizations
november 2011 by deusx
Every Child Is A Scientist | Wired Science | Wired.com
september 2011 by deusx
I have an unwritten blog post in my head about this, re: religion & faith vs science & doubt. If you have faith in a bunch of answers, the universe is boring. If you have doubt about many things, you have room for adventure.
science
kids
nerd
from google
september 2011 by deusx
Merlin W. Donald - Queen's University
april 2011 by deusx
Merlin Donald is a Emeritus Professor in the Department of Psychology and Faculty of Education, Queen's University, Kingston, Ontario, Canada. A cognitive neuroscientist with a background in philosophy, he is the author of many scientific papers, and two influential books: Origins of the Modern Mind: Three stages in the evolution of culture and cognition (Harvard, 1991), and A Mind So Rare: The evolution of human consciousness (Norton, 2001).
cogsci
mind
science
psychology
april 2011 by deusx
Scratch the Salvation Army off your charity lists, everyone : Pharyngula
december 2010 by deusx
RT @faseidl: Scratch the Salvation Army off your charity lists, everyone -
science
from twitter
december 2010 by deusx
Scratch the Salvation Army off your charity lists, everyone : Pharyngula
december 2010 by deusx
RT @faseidl: Scratch the Salvation Army off your charity lists, everyone -
science
from twitter
december 2010 by deusx
The Great Principles of Computing » American Scientist
september 2010 by deusx
"The great-principles framework reveals a rich set of rules on which all computation is based. These principles interact with the domains of the physical, life and social sciences, as well as with computing technology itself."
computing
computer
science
compsci
from delicious
september 2010 by deusx
BBC News - 'Artificial life' breakthrough announced by scientists
may 2010 by deusx
"Scientists in the US have succeeded in developing the first synthetic living cell.<br />
<br />
The researchers constructed a bacterium's "genetic software" and transplanted it into a host cell. "
bacteria
genetics
dna
science
artificiallife
biotech
from delicious
<br />
The researchers constructed a bacterium's "genetic software" and transplanted it into a host cell. "
may 2010 by deusx
Skepchick » “Fuckin’ magnets, how do they work?”
april 2010 by deusx
RT @dreid: "Did you just show me an ICP video?" "Yes"
awesome
icp
science
magnets
music
from twitter
april 2010 by deusx
ScienceDirect - Journal of Forensic and Legal Medicine : Are full or empty beer bottles sturdier and does their fracture-threshold suffice to break the human skull?
february 2010 by deusx
"Beer bottles are often used in physical disputes. If the bottles break, they may give rise to sharp trauma. However, if the bottles remain intact, they may cause blunt injuries. In order to investigate whether full or empty standard half-litre beer bottles are sturdier and if the necessary breaking energy surpasses the minimum fracture-threshold of the human skull, we tested the fracture properties of such beer bottles in a drop-tower."
beer
bottles
fights
science
skulls
from delicious
february 2010 by deusx
RANDOM.ORG - True Random Number Service
february 2010 by deusx
"Perhaps you have wondered how predictable machines like computers can generate randomness. In reality, most random numbers used in computer programs are pseudo-random, which means they are a generated in a predictable fashion using a mathematical formula. This is fine for many purposes, but it may not be random in the way you expect if you're used to dice rolls and lottery drawings."
random
nifty
entropy
math
numbers
statistics
science
mathematics
security
from delicious
february 2010 by deusx
Unorthodox - Opinionator Blog - NYTimes.com
february 2010 by deusx
"This has three odd consequences. The first is that, by the end of sex, the two individuals have become genetically identical. It’s as if you and your mate began coitus as yourselves and finished as identical twins. The second odd consequence is that, partway through its life, a ciliate can radically alter its genetic make-up; genetically speaking, the transformation is so extreme that it’s as if you changed into one of your children. Talk about being reborn."
evolution
clilates
biology
reproduction
sex
dna
genetics
science
from delicious
february 2010 by deusx
Measure the Speed of Light Using Your Microwave | Orbiting Frog
february 2010 by deusx
"The fact that microwaves are now readily available to most of us in the western world and they are only a few centimetres in length, means that you can measure the speed of light in your very own home.The quickest and tastiest way to perform this little experiment is with marshmallows, but chocolate chips also work. You’ll obviously need a microwave oven as well, and a large, microwaveable dish. You will need a ruler, too."
microwaves
science
marshmallows
light
physics
experiments
from delicious
february 2010 by deusx
Turkey: Archeological Dig Reshaping Human History - Newsweek.com
february 2010 by deusx
"Standing on the hill at dawn, overseeing a team of 40 Kurdish diggers, the German-born archeologist waves a hand over his discovery here, a revolution in the story of human origins. Schmidt has uncovered a vast and beautiful temple complex, a structure so ancient that it may be the very first thing human beings ever built. The site isn't just old, it redefines old: the temple was built 11,500 years ago—a staggering 7,000 years before the Great Pyramid, and more than 6,000 years before Stonehenge first took shape. The ruins are so early that they predate villages, pottery, domesticated animals, and even agriculture—the first embers of civilization. In fact, Schmidt thinks the temple itself, built after the end of the last Ice Age by hunter-gatherers, became that ember—the spark that launched mankind toward farming, urban life, and all that followed."
history
prehistory
evolution
culture
religion
ruins
archaeology
science
anthropology
from delicious
february 2010 by deusx
Contrary Brin: The Real Struggle Behind Climate Change - A War on Expertise
february 2010 by deusx
"Of course, to typify any lawful profession as across-the-board corrupt or cowardly is absurd, but to so besmirch the one professional cohort that is unambiguously the most brave, individualistic, honest, curious and smart of all, well, there has to be an agenda behind such drivel -- and there is one. The good old Boffin Effect. "
science
globalclimatechange
waronscience
boffins
brin
globalwarming
from delicious
february 2010 by deusx
Carbonating at Home with Improvised Equipment and Soda Fountains
december 2009 by deusx
"Carbonating tap water to make seltzer is easy, fast, and absurdly inexpensive with my improvised apparatus. All that is required is to place CO2 (carbon dioxide) gas in agitated contact with chilled water for a few seconds. In this essay, I'll show you how it is done with easy-to-find parts and common PET (polyethylene terephthalate, sometimes called PETE) soda bottles. I'll also explain the kinetic chemistry of why it works so well. And in the second half of this essay, I'll explain how I progressed from this improvised apparatus to installing a complete soda fountain in my home.
"
carbonation
water
diy
homebrew
howto
soda
science
projects
hacks
from delicious
"
december 2009 by deusx
No Moods, Ads or Cutesy Fucking Icons (Re-reloaded) » PRISMs, Gom Jabbars, and Consciousness
october 2009 by deusx
"You are never more alive, more awake, more conscious, than when in excruciating conflict with yourself. If self-awareness is the hallmark of humanity, then Sophie’s Choice may be its most mind-expanding exemplar."
consciousness
cogsci
psychology
science
from delicious
october 2009 by deusx
Reasons to be optimistic for the future - opinion - 09 September 2009 - New Scientist
september 2009 by deusx
"Now, more than ever, science and reason must prevail. The scale of the challenge is hard to overstate, but New Scientist is optimistic that we can succeed: our boundless doomsaying is more than matched by our boundless creativity and our ability to, eventually, do the right thing."
science
reason
future
creativity
from delicious
september 2009 by deusx
Richard Feynman tells it like it is : Pharyngula
july 2009 by deusx
Richard Feynman tells it like it is: This is the rational view of the universe. Accept no less.
Read the com..
science
from twitter_favs
Read the com..
july 2009 by deusx
Slice a bottle in half ... with string | Wonder How To
june 2009 by deusx
"The ingredients necessary are simple: string, acetone and a match. ... The clean break in the glass occurs when the exact ring of heated glass comes in contact with the cold water. Thermal shock slices the bottle in half."
science
tricks
bottles
acetone
videos
june 2009 by deusx
Rules for Time Travelers | Cosmic Variance | Discover Magazine
may 2009 by deusx
"0. There are no paradoxes.1. Traveling into the future is easy.2. Traveling into the past is hard — but maybe not impossible.3. Traveling through time is like traveling through space.4. Things that travel together, age together.5. Black holes are not time machines.6. If something happened, it happened.7. There is no meta-time.8. You can’t travel back to before the time machine was built.9. Unless you go to a parallel universe.10. And even then, your old universe is still there."
timetravel
science
geek
may 2009 by deusx
Don't Listen to Jenny McCarthy | Cracked.com
may 2009 by deusx
"In one video, I heard her say “Contrary to scientific belief, autism is not genetic and I truly believe it is a genetic vulnerability.” You know why science never says it “truly believes” anything? Because it’s fucking science. Which isn’t to say that science is infallible, just that I respect that science won’t say that a vaccine is good for you because it “believes” in it."
science
jennymccarthy
vaccines
autism
may 2009 by deusx
Women Smell Better Than Men: Scientific American Podcast
april 2009 by deusx
"Research at the Monell Chemical Senses Center finds that women have keener senses of smell than do men, and that men's body odors are harder to cover up than are women's. Christie Nicholson reports"
funny
science
odors
women
men
april 2009 by deusx
Out of this world: British teddy bears strapped to helium weather balloon reach the edge of space | Mail Online
december 2008 by deusx
"It's not often that Britain can claim a win in the space race. But these teddy bears drifting nearly 20 miles above Earth have become the first soft toys to take part in extra-vehicular activity (to use correct NASA jargon) at such an altitude."
space
science
balloons
teddybears
december 2008 by deusx
The GOP ticket's appalling contempt for science and learning. - By Christopher Hitchens - Slate Magazine
october 2008 by deusx
"This is what the Republican Party has done to us this year: It has placed within reach of the Oval Office a woman who is a religious fanatic and a proud, boastful ignoramus. Those who despise science and learning are not anti-elitist. They are morally and intellectually slothful people who are secretly envious of the educated and the cultured. And those who prate of spiritual warfare and demons are not just "people of faith" but theocratic bullies. On Nov. 4, anyone who cares for the Constitution has a clear duty to repudiate this wickedness and stupidity."
politics
election
palin
science
elitism
evolution
biology
fruitflies
religion
education
learning
gop
mccain
republicans
creationism
october 2008 by deusx
BBspot - Evolutionary Acceleration Research Institute Ready to Start “Squirrel Smasher”
september 2008 by deusx
"Scientists currently rely on computer simulations to smash biological units, but simulations can only do so much, and without the visceral enjoyment of seeing two squirrels collide at thousands of miles an hour."
funny
squirrels
science
hadrons
september 2008 by deusx
Intel cuts electric cords with wireless power system - Yahoo! News
august 2008 by deusx
"Most importantly, the electricity was transmitted without zapping anything or anyone that got between the sending and receiving units."
wifi
wireless
power
electricity
intel
science
technology
energy
august 2008 by deusx
Judge says UC can deny religious course credit
august 2008 by deusx
"A federal judge says the University of California can deny course credit to applicants from Christian high schools whose textbooks declare the Bible infallible and reject evolution. ... Rejecting claims of religious discrimination and stifling of free expression, U.S. District Judge James Otero of Los Angeles said UC's review committees cited legitimate reasons for rejecting the texts - not because they contained religious viewpoints, but because they omitted important topics in science and history and failed to teach critical thinking."
religion
education
creationism
california
university
law
science
august 2008 by deusx
Overcoming Bias: Joy in the Merely Real
june 2008 by deusx
"You might say that scientists - at least some scientists - are those folk who are in principle capable of enjoying life in the real universe."
science
reason
scientists
joy
reality
philosophy
june 2008 by deusx
Hairy blobs found in acidic hell
june 2008 by deusx
"Kathleen Benison, a geologist at Central Michigan University, Mount Pleasant, led a team that studied the sediments formed by acidic and very salty lakes in modern day Western Australia, and those deposited around 250 million years ago in North Dakota."
cmu
michigan
science
biology
june 2008 by deusx
Op-Ed Contributor - Put a Little Science in Your Life - Op-Ed - NYTimes.com
june 2008 by deusx
"Science is a way of life. Science is a perspective. Science is the process that takes us from confusion to understanding in a manner that’s precise, predictive and reliable — a transformation, for those lucky enough to experience it, that is empoweri
science
life
philosophy
june 2008 by deusx
Einstein writes of 'childish superstition'
may 2008 by deusx
"The word god is for me nothing more than the expression and product of human weaknesses, the Bible a collection of honourable, but still primitive legends which are nevertheless pretty childish. No interpretation no matter how subtle can (for me) change
religion
science
einstein
atheism
may 2008 by deusx
Blocks and Files - Data recovered from Seagate drive in Columbia shuttle disaster
may 2008 by deusx
"The Kroll people managed to recover 90 percent or so of the 400MB of data from the drive with its cracked and burned casing."
hardware
challenger
shuttle
recovery
harddrives
science
may 2008 by deusx
PsyBlog: Why Psychology is Not <em>Just</em> Common Sense
march 2008 by deusx
"Ultimately what really sets psychology apart from common sense is the scientific method."
science
psychology
march 2008 by deusx
Science Text Attempts to Reconcile Religion and Science
january 2008 by deusx
"The point is this: there has never -- never ever ever -- been a single thing that has been taken out of the science basket and put back in the god basket. Not one. Ever."
science
religion
january 2008 by deusx
'Mythbusters' test seeks to determine if cockroaches could survive a nuclear holocaust
october 2007 by deusx
"A team from the Discovery Channel's Mythbusters is at the Hanford nuclear reservation this week to get to the bottom of the nuclear survival myth."
cockroaches
mythbusters
science
nifty
october 2007 by deusx
Scientific Savvy? In U.S., Not Much - New York Times
july 2007 by deusx
"At a time when science permeates debates on everything from global warming to stem cell research, he said, people's inability to understand basic scientific concepts undermines their ability to take part in the democratic process."
science
america
ignorance
july 2007 by deusx
Lick Observatory - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
july 2007 by deusx
"The Lick Observatory is an astronomical observatory, owned and operated by the University of California. It is situated on the summit of Mount Hamilton, in the Diablo Range just east of San Jose, California, USA."
california
science
astronomy
lick
july 2007 by deusx
YouTube - Look Around You - Computer Games
may 2007 by deusx
"Jack then grows a beard with the help of the 'Computashave'"
video
lookaroundyou
funny
pbs
science
may 2007 by deusx
Plastic sheets perform auto-origami - tech - 12 April 2007 - New Scientist Tech
april 2007 by deusx
"Sheets of plastic that fold into tiny pyramids, boxes and spheres when water is added have been created by French researchers."
origami
nanotech
nifty
science
april 2007 by deusx
I Believe In Science
april 2007 by deusx
"The Tree of Life design celebrates the theory of evolution and was created to give a voice to those who favor traditional biology and oppose the growing American support of various forms of creationism."
clothing
wishlist
creationism
science
evolution
april 2007 by deusx
Bush Finds Error In Fermilab Calculations | The Onion - America's Finest News Source
january 2007 by deusx
"President Bush met with members of the Fermi National Accelerator Laboratory research team Monday to discuss a mathematical error he recently discovered in the famed laboratory's "Improved Determination Of Tau Lepton Paths From Inclusive Semileptonic B-M
bush
funny
science
january 2007 by deusx
xkcd - The tribulations of Bill Nye
december 2006 by deusx
Bill Nye, the disgruntled hungry science guy
comics
billnye
science
funny
december 2006 by deusx
Wired News: So. Many. Letters
december 2006 by deusx
"You all just started calmly talking. And talking. And talking. We got more responses to this article than to any piece in memory. Brimstone quotient: low."
via:revgeorge
wired
atheism
religion
science
december 2006 by deusx
Damn Interesting - Outer Space Exposure
november 2006 by deusx
"Though an unprotected human would not long survive in the clutches of outer space, it is remarkable that survival times can be measured in minutes rather than seconds, and that one could endure such an inhospitable environment for almost two minutes with
space
science
medicine
november 2006 by deusx
The Flicker Fusion Factor
november 2006 by deusx
"When we get behind the wheel of a car, we may think we gain a bird's power of flight, but actually we are poor, pathetic imitators of birds."
science
vision
physiology
cars
driving
november 2006 by deusx
British scientists grow human liver in a laboratory | the Daily Mail
november 2006 by deusx
"British scientists have grown the world's first artificial liver from stem cells in a breakthrough that will one day provide entire organs for transplant."
medicine
stemcells
science
liver
november 2006 by deusx
The Onion: Mars Rover Beginning To Hate Mars
october 2006 by deusx
The conceit, originating on LJ, that Spirit is a disgruntled goth, while Opportunity is an what we'd call in High School days - a "social" has gone mainstream.
via:whump
funny
humor
mars
science
space
onion
october 2006 by deusx
related tags
abortion ⊕ acetone ⊕ ai ⊕ alcohol ⊕ algorithms ⊕ aliens ⊕ alzheimers ⊕ america ⊕ anaesthesia ⊕ animals ⊕ anthropology ⊕ appendix ⊕ archaeology ⊕ artificiallife ⊕ arxiv ⊕ astronomy ⊕ atheism ⊕ audio ⊕ autism ⊕ awesome ⊕ azimov ⊕ bacteria ⊕ balloons ⊕ beer ⊕ billnye ⊕ biology ⊕ biotech ⊕ boffins ⊕ books ⊕ booze ⊕ bottles ⊕ brain ⊕ brin ⊕ bugs ⊕ bush ⊕ caffeine ⊕ california ⊕ carbonation ⊕ cars ⊕ challenger ⊕ cheese ⊕ chemistry ⊕ christianity ⊕ christians ⊕ civilizations ⊕ clilates ⊕ climate ⊕ climatechange ⊕ clothing ⊕ cmu ⊕ cockroaches ⊕ coffee ⊕ cogsci ⊕ coke ⊕ colbert ⊕ comics ⊕ compsci ⊕ computer ⊕ computing ⊕ consciousness ⊕ cool ⊕ creationism ⊕ creationists ⊕ creativity ⊕ crypto ⊕ culture ⊕ darwin ⊕ dating ⊕ dawkins ⊕ decafbad ⊕ detroit ⊕ diamonds ⊕ dino ⊕ disabilities ⊕ disaster ⊕ diy ⊕ dna ⊕ driving ⊕ drwho ⊕ dumb ⊕ earth ⊕ education ⊕ einstein ⊕ election ⊕ electricity ⊕ elitism ⊕ energy ⊕ entropy ⊕ environment ⊕ evolution ⊕ experiments ⊕ exploratorium ⊕ fiction ⊕ fights ⊕ fnord ⊕ food ⊕ foxnews ⊕ fruitflies ⊕ funny ⊕ fusion ⊕ future ⊕ gadgets ⊕ games ⊕ gaming ⊕ geek ⊕ genetics ⊕ geo:lat=37.804128 ⊕ geo:long=-122.447582 ⊕ geology ⊕ geotagged ⊕ girls ⊕ globalclimatechange ⊕ globalwarming ⊕ gop ⊕ graphics ⊕ gravity ⊕ hacks ⊕ hadrons ⊕ harddrives ⊕ hardware ⊕ health ⊕ history ⊕ homebrew ⊕ honeymoon ⊕ hotwater ⊕ howto ⊕ humor ⊕ icp ⊕ id ⊕ ignorance ⊕ information ⊕ intel ⊕ intelligentdesign ⊕ iraq ⊕ iwin ⊕ javascript ⊕ jennymccarthy ⊕ journalism ⊕ joy ⊕ katrina ⊕ kids ⊕ kittens ⊕ kooks ⊕ kurzweil ⊕ language ⊕ lasers ⊕ law ⊕ learning ⊕ lhc ⊕ lick ⊕ life ⊕ light ⊕ liver ⊕ lookaroundyou ⊕ loons ⊕ magnets ⊕ marine ⊕ mars ⊕ marshmallows ⊕ math ⊕ mathematics ⊕ mccain ⊕ media ⊕ medicine ⊕ memory ⊕ men ⊕ mentos ⊕ michigan ⊕ microwaves ⊕ mind ⊕ mold ⊕ moon ⊕ morality ⊕ morons ⊕ mrwizard ⊕ museums ⊕ music ⊕ mythbusters ⊕ nano ⊕ nanotech ⊕ nasa ⊕ nature ⊕ nerd ⊕ nerds ⊕ neutrinos ⊕ neworleans ⊕ news ⊕ nifty ⊕ nonfiction ⊕ npr ⊕ numbers ⊕ nutrition ⊕ nutters ⊕ odd ⊕ odors ⊕ oldschool ⊕ onion ⊕ optics ⊕ origami ⊕ pain ⊕ palin ⊕ pbs ⊕ philosophy ⊕ photography ⊕ photos ⊕ physics ⊕ physiology ⊕ planb ⊕ podcasts ⊕ politics ⊕ posse ⊕ power ⊕ prehistory ⊕ primates ⊕ projects ⊕ psychology ⊕ publishing ⊕ random ⊕ rant ⊕ reality ⊕ reason ⊕ recovery ⊕ relationships ⊕ religion ⊕ reproduction ⊕ republicans ⊕ research ⊕ rip ⊕ ruins ⊕ sanfrancisco ⊕ science ⊖ scientificmethod ⊕ scientists ⊕ scifi ⊕ sea ⊕ security ⊕ seti ⊕ sex ⊕ shrimp ⊕ shuttle ⊕ sight ⊕ sights ⊕ skulls ⊕ society ⊕ soda ⊕ space ⊕ squirrels ⊕ startrek ⊕ statistics ⊕ stemcells ⊕ sudoku ⊕ surgery ⊕ swearing ⊕ tdr ⊕ tech ⊕ technology ⊕ teddybears ⊕ television ⊕ terrorism ⊕ thalience ⊕ theories ⊕ thiotimoline ⊕ timetravel ⊕ touch ⊕ tovisit ⊕ train ⊕ transhuman ⊕ transhumanity ⊕ travel ⊕ trebuchet ⊕ tricks ⊕ tshirts ⊕ tv ⊕ underage ⊕ universe ⊕ university ⊕ usa ⊕ vaccines ⊕ via:coty ⊕ via:revgeorge ⊕ via:whump ⊕ video ⊕ videos ⊕ vision ⊕ vocabulary ⊕ war ⊕ waronscience ⊕ water ⊕ weather ⊕ webdev ⊕ weird ⊕ whiskey ⊕ whoa ⊕ wifi ⊕ wired ⊕ wireless ⊕ wishlist ⊕ women ⊕ words ⊕ writing ⊕Copy this bookmark: