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Bill Fulkerson

How to understand cells, tissues and organisms as agents with agendas | Aeon Essays - 0 views

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    But when cognitive science turned its back on behaviourism more than 50 years ago and began dealing with signals and internal maps, goals and expectations, beliefs and desires, biologists were torn. All right, they conceded, people and some animals have minds; their brains are physical minds - not mysterious dualistic minds - processing information and guiding purposeful behaviour; animals without brains, such as sea squirts, don't have minds, nor do plants or fungi or microbes. They resisted introducing intentional idioms into their theoretical work, except as useful metaphors when teaching or explaining to lay audiences. Genes weren't really selfish, antibodies weren't really seeking, cells weren't really figuring out where they were. These little biological mechanisms weren't really agents with agendas, even though thinking of them as if they were often led to insights.
Bill Fulkerson

Opinion | Why You Can't Rely on Election Forecasts - The New York Times - 0 views

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    Voting models are not as scientific or certain as they may seem.
Bill Fulkerson

The next-generation bots interfering with the US election - 0 views

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    Data scientist Emilio Ferrara tells Nature that fake social-media accounts are harder to detect than ever before.
Bill Fulkerson

Random Effects - 0 views

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    To control an epidemic, authorities will often impose varying degrees of lockdown. In a paper in the journal Chaos, scientists have discovered, using mathematics and computer simulations, why dividing a large population into multiple subpopulations that do not intermix can help contain outbreaks without imposing contact restrictions within those local communities.
Bill Fulkerson

Robots help to answer age-old question of why fish school - 0 views

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    A fish school is a striking demonstration of synchronicity. Yet centuries of study have left a basic question unanswered: Do fish save energy by swimming in schools? Now, scientists from the Max Planck Institute of Animal Behavior (MPI-AB), the University of Konstanz, and Peking University have provided an answer that has long been suspected but never conclusively supported by experiments: yes.
Bill Fulkerson

Shipwrecked by Rents | naked capitalism - 0 views

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    The Spanish Crown had a monopoly on the trade route between Manila and Mexico for more than 250 years. The ships that sailed this route were "the richest ships in all the oceans", but much of the wealth sank at sea and remain undiscovered. This column uses a newly constructed dataset of all of the ships that travelled the route to show how monopoly rents that allowed widespread bribe-taking would have led to overloading and late ship departure, thereby increasing the probability of shipwreck. Not only were late and overloaded ships more likely to experience shipwrecks or to return to port, but the effect is stronger for galleons carrying more valuable, higher-rent cargo. This sheds new light on the costs of rent-seeking in European colonial empires.
Bill Fulkerson

The World Is Losing the Vaccine Race - 0 views

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    "Each crisis will demand a combination of far-reaching responses-political, economic, social, cultural, & technical. ... Seen in these terms, the race to develop a vaccine is a test run for the political economy of the future."
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