Frozen in Place - Insight - 0 views
Cancel culture: the road to obscurantism - 0 views
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In her view, Ancient Greece's blind master storyteller, Homer, and his works, were guilty of "indulging and spreading sexism, racism, ableism, and Western-centrism". She came to the conclusion that canceling the classics seemed to be the most effective way to make sure that today's young generation could not, again in her view, be poisoned by the entirely fictional and mythical "sins" of Odysseus, Menelaus, and Priam.
The mathematical case against blaming people for their misfortune | Psyche Ideas - 0 views
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The starting point is to note that, for people to be held responsible for their actions, they have to know about certain features of the world. In many cases, even this minimal condition for blameworthiness isn't satisfied. For example, Chow would have struggled to predict that the rise of ridesharing apps would crater the market for taxi medallions in New York City - but so, too, did most of us. By their very nature, technological disruptions are difficult to foresee; if they were easy to predict, early investors in these technologies wouldn't get so rich. Such a low bar for blameworthiness seems too harsh to be plausible; how can any of us be blamed for failing to spot trends that almost no one was able to see, despite the significant material incentives for doing so?
Rogue antibodies could be driving severe COVID-19 - 0 views
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More than a year after COVID-19 emerged, many mysteries persist about the disease: why do some people get so much sicker than others? Why does lung damage sometimes continue to worsen well after the body seems to have cleared the SARS-CoV-2 virus? And what is behind the extended, multi-organ illness that lasts for months in people with 'long COVID'? A growing number of studies suggest that some of these questions might be explained by the immune system mistakenly turning against the body - a phenomenon known as autoimmunity.
Reverse Engineering the source code of the BioNTech/Pfizer SARS-CoV-2 Vaccine - Articles - 0 views
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RNA is the volatile 'working memory' version of DNA. DNA is like the flash drive storage of biology. DNA is very durable, internally redundant and very reliable. But much like computers do not execute code directly from a flash drive, before something happens, code gets copied to a faster, more versatile yet far more fragile system.
Natural hazard events and national risk reduction measures unconnected - 0 views
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Natural hazard events, such as storms, floods, and wildfires, entail huge and growing costs all over the world, but they can also be occasions for countries to implement risk-reducing changes. There is no research consensus on whether natural hazard events lead to policy modifications or, instead, contribute to stability and preservation of existing solutions. Knowledge in this area to date has been based on individual case studies, and global trends have not been studied.
Management implications of long transients in ecological systems | Nature Ecology & Evo... - 0 views
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Natural hazard events, such as storms, floods, and wildfires, entail huge and growing costs all over the world, but they can also be occasions for countries to implement risk-reducing changes. There is no research consensus on whether natural hazard events lead to policy modifications or, instead, contribute to stability and preservation of existing solutions. Knowledge in this area to date has been based on individual case studies, and global trends have not been studied.
Irrigation schemes in sub-Saharan Africa are consistently falling short of their promises - 0 views
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Large-scale irrigation infrastructure projects are back on the development agenda in sub-Saharan Africa after a near 30-year hiatus, despite projects having had disappointing results, with social and environmental side effects outweighing benefits. Such projects are planned in response to water scarcity pressures and are seen as a solution to intensify agricultural production, support rural economic development and enhance resilience to climate change.
Study: Folklore structure reveals how conspiracy theories emerge, fall apart | Ars Tech... - 0 views
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There's rarely time to write about every cool science-y story that comes our way. So this year, we're once again running a special Twelve Days of Christmas series of posts, highlighting one science story that fell through the cracks in 2020, each day from December 25 through January 5. Today: the structure of folklore can help explain how unrelated facts and false information connect into a compelling narrative framework that can then go viral as a conspiracy theory.
Of Two Minds - How the Fed Fails - 0 views
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