this curious life
14
Be who you are and say what you feel because those who mind don't matter and those who matter don't mind. - Dr. Seuss
Curated by Janet Devlin
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Baby boomers fuel $700m skin cancer blowout - ABC News (Australian Broadcasting Corporation)

Baby boomers fuel $700m skin cancer blowout - ABC News (Australian Broadcasting Corporation) | this curious life | Scoop.it
The cost of treating skin cancer is set to rise by more than $700 million over the next five years as the Australian population ages.
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Rescooped by Janet Devlin from Science News
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Physicists Find Evidence That The Universe Is A 'Giant Brain'

Physicists Find Evidence That The Universe Is A 'Giant Brain' | this curious life | Scoop.it
The idea of the universe as a 'giant brain' has been proposed by scientists - and science fiction writers - for decades. But now physicists say there may be some evidence that it's actually true.

Via Sakis Koukouvis
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Mars and the Mind of Man: Carl Sagan, Ray Bradbury and Arthur C. Clarke in Conversation, 1971

Mars and the Mind of Man: Carl Sagan, Ray Bradbury and Arthur C. Clarke in Conversation, 1971 | this curious life | Scoop.it

“It’s part of the nature of man to start with romance and build to a reality.”

 

'Mariner 9 mission reached Mars and became the first spacecraft to orbit another planet, Caltech Planetary Science professor Bruce Murray summoned a formidable panel of thinkers to discuss the implications of the historic event. Murray himself was to join the great Carl Sagan (♥) and science fiction icons Ray Bradbury (♥) and Arthur C. Clarke (♥) in a conversation moderated by New York Times science editor Walter Sullivan, who had been assigned to cover Mariner 9′s arrival for the newspaper. What unfolded — easily history’s only redeeming manifestation of the panel format — was a fascinating quilt of perspectives not only on the Mariner 9 mission itself, or even just Mars, but on the relationship between mankind and the cosmos, the importance of space exploration, and the future of our civilization.'

 

..........'[Carl Sagan] follows [that] with one of the most eloquent portions of the entire conversation — an insistence on the value of embracing ignorance, learning to live with ambiguity, and choosing the unknown over answers that might be wrong, alongside a call for balancing skepticism with openness — something he’d articulate formally more than a decade later'

 

 


Via Sakis Koukouvis, Pamela D Lloyd, Mariana Soffer
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