Knowmads, Infocology of the future
74
Exploring the possible , the probable, the plausible
Curated by Wildcat2030
Follow
Scooped by Wildcat2030 onto Knowmads, Infocology of the future
Scoop.it!

Fragile intellect or fragile arguments?Why Gerald Crabtree's speculations about declining human intelligence are wrong

Fragile intellect or fragile arguments?Why Gerald Crabtree's speculations about declining human intelligence are wrong | Knowmads, Infocology of the future | Scoop.it
Bob O'Hara and GrrlScientist: Why Gerald Crabtree's speculations about declining human intelligence are wrong...

-

It has often been observed that scientists, some rather brilliant, can get things hopelessly wrong when they stray outside their field. Examples are legion, and it has been dubbed the Linus Pauling effect:

"The phenomenon is a familiar one: let's call it "the Linus Pauling effect." A highly respected and honored senior scientist, largely out of the mainstream and not up to date with the recent developments (and perhaps a bit senile), makes weird pronouncements about their pet ideas – and the press, so used to giving celebrities free air time for any junk they wish to say, prints and publishes it all as if it is the final truth."

Normally this happens when, say, a physicist starts thinking too hard about brains, but embarrassingly for me (one of my many sins is to be a geneticist), geneticists have a penchant for this too. What is really embarrassing is that more than one has made this mistake with a pet idea about genetics. I will now admit that I am going to step outside of my area of expertise (particularly with respect to human evolution and psychology), so if you are more knowledgeable in these areas, you can have some fun correcting my mistakes.

One classic case is John Sanford and his ideas about genetic entropy. Sanford was a well respected geneticist, most famous for working out that one way of creating GM crops was to shoot them with gold (I was involved – briefly – in a project trying to do this to mildew). He steadily converted to a literal Christian position, including young earth creationism. Being a geneticist, he was faced with the problem of evolution, and wrote the book, Genetic Entropy, where he argued that the human gene pool was degenerating. Amongst the evidence he used for this conclusion was the reduction in the reported ages of people from the Old Testament.

No comment yet.
Wildcat2030 is also curating
Cyborg Lives Philosophy everywhere everywhen The future of medicine and health The Future of Water & Waste
Discover Topics Wildcat2030 is following
The 21st Century Content Curation World Science News Digital Presentations in Education Erotic Comics Digital Delights
and 277 others
Your new post is loading...
Rescooped by Wildcat2030 from Science News
Scoop.it!

Catching A Mood On Facebook -Positive and negative emotions spread on social network Science News

Catching A Mood On Facebook -Positive and negative emotions spread on social network Science News | Knowmads, Infocology of the future | Scoop.it
Positive and negative emotions spread on social network...

SAN DIEGO — Facebook users can spread emotions to their online connections just by posting a written message, or status update, that’s positive or negative, says a psychologist who works for the wildly successful social network.

This finding challenges the idea that emotions get passed from one person to another via vocal cues, such as rising or falling tone, or by a listener unconsciously imitating a talker’s body language, said Adam Kramer on January 27 at the annual meeting of the Society for Personality and Social Psychology. Kramer works at Facebook’s headquarters in Palo Alto, Calif.

“It’s time to rethink how emotional contagion works, since vocal cues and mimicry aren’t needed,” Kramer said. “Facebook users’ emotion leaks into the emotional worlds of their friends.”


Via Sakis Koukouvis
No comment yet.