Nature: October 2003 Archive Page

29 Oct 2003

Butterfly

The butterfly effect has, until now, been cited only as an illustration, but Professor Jim Spanners of the Pennsylvania Institute for Making Stuff Up takes it seriously, and believes that butterflies are directly responsible for most of the world's major problems. --Butterfly (The University of the Bleeding Obvious)
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Will the human genome diminish humanity by taking the mystery out of life?
(The third of five questions I may be asked tomorrow as part of a panel on DNA and ethics.)

We've had the human genome all along; its been here all along, just like gravity existed before Newton. What's new is the Human Genome Project -- is a vast scientific effort to identify and catalogue all 3 billion DNA subunits that describe our genetic blueprint. Techniques for creating "designer babies," if legal, will be available only for the rich and the elite.

The ancients who were curious about the stars and the planets but couldn't comprehend them resorted to their imagination, telling each other stories about gods. Science has more recently turned those heavenly bodies into planets and solar systems, but we still managed to tell each other science-fiction stories about aliens and computers and robots. Now that computers and robots are part of our daily lives, and now that immigration and global communication has brought us into increasigly close contact with "alien" cultures in other parts of the world, our science-fiction has in recent decates been filled with stories of cyberspace and robot-human hybrids. Because I wear glasses and have a filled tooth, I am in some sense part machine; I am a cyborg. In very recent years, we've seen a rise in fantasy/mythology -- a return to magic and a retreat from technology. Are we going full circle? Probably not.

My point is that we are soo good at imagining that I don't think we will run out of unexplainable things that bother us. Case in point -- the rise in conspiracy theories, or reports of crop circles, alien abductions, tabloid sightings of Elvis and JFK, auctions of Beatles memorabilia, people who collect PEZ or structure their whole life around Disney theme parks.

The worst-case scenarious that have long been part of the science-fiction scene will increasingly penetrate to philosophers, who will write densely footnoted tomes, and somebody will write an incomprehensible postmodern epic interpreting the genome, which will be the subject of countless academic conferences and English Lit dissertations. But for the rest of us, making babies the old fashioned way will still be fun, and the information gained from the sequencing project will probably help more of those babies lead long and healthy lives.

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panda.jpgMissed your daily dose of Panda Cam? Don't have the time to watch our pandas sleep? Boss expects you to do work? | Well, we have the solution right here. Our newest feature, the Daily Panda, lets you recap the daily escapades of Hua Mei, Bai Yun and Gao Gao thanks to our Panda Cam time lapse video. So go ahead, get some work done? we'll keep track of the pandas for you.
--Panda Cam Live from the San Diego Zoo (San Diego Zoo)
Thanks for the link, Rosemary.
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A self-taught bear expert who once called Alaska's brown bears harmless party animals was one of two people fatally mauled in a bear attack in Katmai National Park and Preserve - the first known bear killings in the 4.7-million-acre park. --Rachel D'Oro --Bear enthusiast, companion fatally mauled in Katmai National Park (Ancorage Daily News)
Just in case you were wondering, this bear expert isn't the same bear expert I blogged about a few months ago. It's still a sad story, and becomes more newsworthy than usual, in light of the tiger mauling of Roy Horn.
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This page is a archive of entries in the Nature category from October 2003.

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