Tuesday, May 30, 2006

Got an antibiotic-resistant bacterial infection? Go to Tbilisi, where they will cook up a custom virus to eat your infection.
55:16. That's not a spectacular time, but I'm pleased with it. It was my first race ever, after all.

Friday, May 26, 2006

Withdrawal from heroin isn't as big a deal as people say:

When, unbeknown to them, I have observed addicts before they entered my office, they were cheerful; in my office, they doubled up in pain and claimed never to have experienced suffering like it, threatening suicide unless I gave them what they wanted. When refused, they often turned abusive, but a few laughed and confessed that it had been worth a try.

Thursday, May 25, 2006

They've found what's probably the ancestor to HIV in chimps. Even better news: the chimps don't seem to get AIDS from the virus.
A negative, but thoughtful, review of Al Gore's An Inconvenient Truth.

Wednesday, May 24, 2006

Medically induced happiness. Why am I okay (mostly) with Prozac, but electrodes in the brain give me the creeps?
Tipping is a dumb tradition.

Tuesday, May 23, 2006

Happiness; it's all about the small stuff:

He has found that small pleasures like coming home to a house no worse than the neighbour's is more likely to yield long-term joy than inheriting $1 million, getting a big promotion or being elected president.

"It's the frequency and not the intensity of positive events in your life that leads to happiness, like comfortable shoes or single malt scotch," he says.

Monday, May 22, 2006

Gattaca comes to life:

Clinics take sperm and eggs, make embryos in lab dishes, and screen them for genetic flaws. Embryos without flaws are implanted in the mother's womb. Those with flaws are frozen or discarded.
A step toward making fusion efficient.
Michael Barone thinks the world is actually a pretty good place to live, and maybe even getting better.

Thursday, May 18, 2006

The Truman Show comes to life:

The project started recording nine months ago when Professor Roy's newborn son left hospital. Since then a "big brother" network of 14 microphones and 11 omni-directional cameras has been recording his son's waking hours.

The idea is to figure out how babies acquire language. I have to say that calling it the Human Speechome Project seems just a bit over the top.
You can learn to control pain by watching a fMRI brain scan.
Andrew Sullivan seems more upset about the hate hotline in Boulder than I am, and it's not his taxes that are paying for it.

Tuesday, May 16, 2006

Ha.
Sex selection will lead to the next big war:

The spread of sex selection is giving rise to a generation of restless young men who will not find mates. History, biology, and sociology all suggest that these "surplus males" will generate high levels of crime and social disorder.

Monday, May 15, 2006

Independent bookstores:

Patronizing indies helps us think we are more literary or more offbeat than is often the case. There are similar phenomena in the world of indie music fans ("Top 40 has to be bad") and indie cinema, which rebels against stars and big-budget special effects. In each case the indie label is a deliberate marketing ploy to segregate, often artificially, one part of the market from the rest.
High gas prices are not changing people's behavior, in terms of how much they drive or how fast:

The federal government says that every five miles per hour you drive above 60 miles per hour is like paying an extra 20 cents a gallon for gasoline. Yet people aren't slowing down, at least in any broad sense.

Ronald Bailey talks about some of the problems with using ethanol or other biofuels. In particular:

Burning food for fuel raises some interesting moral questions in world in which 800 million people are still malnourished.

Of course, you could say the same about spending money on hybrid cars or ice cream or anything.

But don't worry, because nuclear power will solve all our energy problems.

Friday, May 12, 2006

Michael Kinsley discusses authority, obedience and defiance, and which of those is really heroic.
The chart of the day.

Wednesday, May 10, 2006

Andrew Sullivan defines Christianism, in analogy with Islamism. He doesn't like it:

What to do about it? The worst response, I think, would be to construct something called the religious left.

Ramesh Ponnuru has this reply to Sullivan, of which you should skip the first two paragraphs.
You can take the bureaucrat out of the corrupt country, but you can't take the corruption out of the bureaucrat.
When I was your age, kids had respect, and we didn't have anybody to protect us from soda and ice cream. No sir, we had to walk to school through six foot snow drifts and deal with the ice cream man.

Monday, May 8, 2006

MSG may not be so bad, after all. How else are you going to be able to experience the fifth taste?
Talent, hard work, and why soccer players are born in January:

The trait we commonly call talent is highly overrated. Or, put another way, expert performers — whether in memory or surgery, ballet or computer programming — are nearly always made, not born.

Saturday, May 6, 2006

Americans live in an "increasingly mobile society," everyone agrees. Too bad everyone is wrong:

In 2004 less than 14 percent of U.S. residents moved—the lowest figure since the Census Bureau began collecting the data in 1948.
Again:

Never again? What nonsense. Again and again is more like it. In Darfur, we are witnessing a genocide again, and again we are witnessing ourselves witnessing it and doing nothing to stop it.

Thursday, May 4, 2006

Jeff Jacoby writes about Lech Walesa, one of the heroes of the cold war.

Wednesday, May 3, 2006

Americans are unhealthy.
Keith Devlin talks about why it takes so long to board an airplane.

Tuesday, May 2, 2006

I hear only good things about microfinance programs. They may be the best tool we have in fighting global poverty.

Monday, May 1, 2006

Time has come out with their list of a hundred people who shape the world. I'll draw your attention to Mike Brown, professional planet discoverer; Nancy Cox, saving us from bird flu; Jim Yong Kim, saving us from drug-resistant tuberculosis; Jan Egeland, "the world's conscience"; Geoffrey West, the closest thing to a mathematician on the list; and Peter Akinola, the archbishop of Nigeria who

personifies the epochal change in the Christian church, namely that the leadership, influence, growth and center of gravity in Christianity is shifting from the northern hemisphere to the southern.