The Science & Skepticism Thread

It may also be a problem that we want to view time digitally - break it into discrete chunks if you like
Helps when doing your time sheet though. Nothing quite like billing a client for poo time :)
 
It may also be a problem that we want to view time digitally - break it into discrete chunks if you like - rather than allow it to be analogue and flow.

The smallest unit of time is the Planck Time - Wikipedia gives a nice account of the formal definition of it if you are mathematically inclined. It is approximately equal to
0.00000000000000000000000000000000000000006 seconds .
It is the smallest possible interval that can exist between two related events as predicted by quantum theory. The universe appears to have been created within the first one unit of Planck Time.
Quantum theory makes a multitude of interesting, bizarre and totally unbelievable predictions non of which have ever turned out to be wrong. Frustrating as it is - quantum theory appears to be the most correct model we have at the moment.
James
 
Some podcast recommendations for you.

Planetary Radio. Weekly podcast from the Planetary Society (co-founded by Carl Sagan).
StarTalk Radio. Neil deGrasse Tyson's weekly fusion of comedy, chat and science.
Astronomy Cast. Excellent weekly podcast, a collaboration between the publisher of Universe Today and science educator Dr Pamela Gay.
Big Picture Science. Weekly science and skeptic show from the SETI Institute.
The Jodcast. Excellent monthly show by the team at Jodrell Bank.
The Silicon Valley Astronomy Lectures. Excellent lectures curated by Foothills College in California.
The Skeptic's Guide to the Universe. The leading skeptic podcast. Excellent.
StarStuff. Excellent weekly space show from Australia's ABC.

If anyone else has any recommendation, please let us know.
 
Some podcast recommendations for you.

Planetary Radio. Weekly podcast from the Planetary Society (co-founded by Carl Sagan).
StarTalk Radio. Neil deGrasse Tyson's weekly fusion of comedy, chat and science.
Astronomy Cast. Excellent weekly podcast, a collaboration between the publisher of Universe Today and science educator Dr Pamela Gay.
Big Picture Science. Weekly science and skeptic show from the SETI Institute.
The Jodcast. Excellent monthly show by the team at Jodrell Bank.
The Silicon Valley Astronomy Lectures. Excellent lectures curated by Foothills College in California.
The Skeptic's Guide to the Universe. The leading skeptic podcast. Excellent.
StarStuff. Excellent weekly space show from Australia's ABC.

If anyone else has any recommendation, please let us know.

Excellent - thanks for that
James
 
Some podcast recommendations for you.

Planetary Radio. Weekly podcast from the Planetary Society (co-founded by Carl Sagan).
StarTalk Radio. Neil deGrasse Tyson's weekly fusion of comedy, chat and science.
Astronomy Cast. Excellent weekly podcast, a collaboration between the publisher of Universe Today and science educator Dr Pamela Gay.
Big Picture Science. Weekly science and skeptic show from the SETI Institute.
The Jodcast. Excellent monthly show by the team at Jodrell Bank.
The Silicon Valley Astronomy Lectures. Excellent lectures curated by Foothills College in California.
The Skeptic's Guide to the Universe. The leading skeptic podcast. Excellent.
StarStuff. Excellent weekly space show from Australia's ABC.

If anyone else has any recommendation, please let us know.

Thanks for those.
I quite like BBC 5 Live Science with Dr Karl.
More or less is a good podcast on numbers / statistics - its where I first came across Benfords Law.
Material world with Quentin Cooper is sorely missed but all episodes are available on iPlayer radio.
 
Thanks for those.
I quite like BBC 5 Live Science with Dr Karl.
More or less is a good podcast on numbers / statistics - its where I first came across Benfords Law.
Material world with Quentin Cooper is sorely missed but all episodes are available on iPlayer radio.

Yep, I like 5 Live Science too. Dr Karl also features on another Q&A podcast called Dr Karl on TripleJ.
 
If we did in fact evolve from apes, which apes did we evolve from and why? Evolution would suggest changes for the better, so why do apes still exist and not become extinct?
 
If we did in fact evolve from apes, which apes did we evolve from and why? Evolution would suggest changes for the better, so why do apes still exist and not become extinct?

we and apes evolved from a common ancestor
 
Ok - good point.
First - evolutionary changes are mostly detrimental, therefore do not successfully breed and tend to die out.
The small number of evolutionary changes that Benicia the individual can lead to better success at breeding and nance pass that change onto future generations.
Humans are slowly evolving - a study of ancient bones suggests that there were a number of ape groups successfully evolving but competition ( and more controversially - interbreeding) meant the most successful of the group survived ( us) and any close competitors became extinct cure to being out competited. The other great apes ( eg gorillas etc) that still exist are not seen as competitors to the human ape so have survived.
It's interesting that if a new born captive gorilla has difficulty surviving the medical support given to them is based exactly on the care given to human babies that have problems in the first few days after birth. DNA profiles of the great apes ( including humans) is do close it takes real experts to see the differences in their profile.
 
we and apes evolved from a common ancestor
Ok - good point.
First - evolutionary changes are mostly detrimental, therefore do not successfully breed and tend to die out.
The small number of evolutionary changes that Benicia the individual can lead to better success at breeding and nance pass that change onto future generations.
Humans are slowly evolving - a study of ancient bones suggests that there were a number of ape groups successfully evolving but competition ( and more controversially - interbreeding) meant the most successful of the group survived ( us) and any close competitors became extinct cure to being out competited. The other great apes ( eg gorillas etc) that still exist are not seen as competitors to the human ape so have survived.
It's interesting that if a new born captive gorilla has difficulty surviving the medical support given to them is based exactly on the care given to human babies that have problems in the first few days after birth. DNA profiles of the great apes ( including humans) is do close it takes real experts to see the differences in their profile.

So if both apes and man evolved from the same ancestor, why two species instead of just one and why did one evolve more than the other? As a result of our evolution, man learnt a different form of vocal communication to apes, again why? Also as man converses in different languages, do apes communicate in different languages?
 
So if both apes and man evolved from the same ancestor, why two species instead of just one and why did one evolve more than the other? As a result of our evolution, man learnt a different form of vocal communication to apes, again why? Also as man converses in different languages, do apes communicate in different languages?

Because evolutionary "survival of the fittest" means fittest as in best fitted to the ecological niche. There's enough space and enough resource for both species so they don't have to compete as a fight to the death.

As for the development of language, there's a beautifully elegant theory that homo sapiens' symbiotic living alongside packs of dogs meant that the dogs possessed the teeth and jaws to provide the protection of biting so that mutations in human jaw shapes could modify them to permit speech and vocal language!
 
Because evolutionary "survival of the fittest" means fittest as in best fitted to the ecological niche. There's enough space and enough resource for both species so they don't have to compete as a fight to the death.
But if it was necessary for a species to evolve, why evolve into two species as suggested, rather than just one. Has any other species evolved into two or more species?
 
As for the development of language, there's a beautifully elegant theory that homo sapiens' symbiotic living alongside packs of dogs meant that the dogs possessed the teeth and jaws to provide the protection of biting so that mutations in human jaw shapes could modify them to permit speech and vocal language!
And living in such close proximity, it was only natural that a hybrid should occur ;)
I never understood the full moon bit though :D
 
But if it was necessary for a species to evolve, why evolve into two species as suggested, rather than just one. Has any other species evolved into two or more species?

Every single one of them! Evolution is not necessary and is not specifically directed to an end. In every case, the mechanism of random genetic mutation has resulted in a genotype that has conferred an advantage for that species to survive and prosper better in its particular ecological environment
 
But if it was necessary for a species to evolve, why evolve into two species as suggested, rather than just one. Has any other species evolved into two or more species?
I'm guessing you're not familiar with Darwin's work. His theory was borne out of seeing finches and their similarities, then how their differences were adaptations to their environment.
 
Has any other species evolved into two or more species?
In simple terms
Horses / Zebra's / Przewalski's horse.
Even Hippo's are from the same ancestors.

However everything is / was inextricable linked from the moment the first organism climbed out of the primeval ooze
 
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I haven't been out with the dogs you have! :p :D
A few in my time J a few in my time ...
Oh that's not what you meant was it? :D
(or was it? :D )
 
However everything is / was inextricable linked from the moment the first organism climbed out of the primeval ooze

you may need to magnify your screen to read this in full

TreeOfLife.jpg
 
So if both apes and man evolved from the same ancestor, why two species instead of just one and why did one evolve more than the other? As a result of our evolution, man learnt a different form of vocal communication to apes, again why? Also as man converses in different languages, do apes communicate in different languages?

Lot of questions - so let's deal with the first one.
All apes have a common ancestor somewhere deep in the past. It is highly likely that small variations in the offspring over many generations led to multiple differences - anything which disadvantaged the animal died out and successful variation survived. Over millions of years this led to multiple splitting from the original ancestor species. As long as these different new species did not directly compete with each and found a successful yet different niche to exploit then survival was possible. For example a close relative to modern man was the Neanderthals ( if you type this into google asking why they died out Wikipedia gives a highly readable explanation). One definition of evolutionary successful is to say that is an organism that is highly adapted to changes in its environment. Humans are successful because they inhabit all five continents plus parts of outer space. But we are new on the scene - many species ( eg sharks) have been around a lot longer than us so you could rate them as even more successful - if we survive and evolve is open to question and the test of time.
Probably the most successful organisms on our planet ( in terms of abundance, robust strength against change, numbers, the ability to adapt quickly within a few generations etc) is not humans but indeed the microbes.
 
Evolution would suggest changes for the better,

If it helps, the example I was taught was about moths in the British Midlands. After the Industrial Revolution, there was a genetic advantage for black spotted, blotchy moths who were better disguised against predators. Moths don't live long so they have lots of generations in a relatively short human timescale. After the Clean Air Act, the white moths were observed to predominate again because they no longer benefited from their disguise and there was some other survival advantage linked to the non-spotted gene.
 
If we did in fact evolve from apes, which apes did we evolve from and why? Evolution would suggest changes for the better, so why do apes still exist and not become extinct?

I'm sorry but surely this is a wind up?
 
If it helps, the example I was taught was about moths in the British Midlands. After the Industrial Revolution, there was a genetic advantage for black spotted, blotchy moths who were better disguised against predators. Moths don't live long so they have lots of generations in a relatively short human timescale. After the Clean Air Act, the white moths were observed to predominate again because they no longer benefited from their disguise and there was some other survival advantage linked to the non-spotted gene.

As you say, because of their short lives, we can see quite a fast change over many generations, whereas changes in humans would take a very long time, relatively speaking, yet the human `bite` has changed over the past couple of hundred years. Not that many generations in reality & occurred in a short (ish) time scale.

We used to have teeth which lined up, top & bottom more like a guillotine, but because of changes in diet & using utensils, these days we now tend to have an overbite.
 
but because of changes in diet & using utensils, these days we now tend to have an overbite.
And pay £100's if not £1000's ( largely through the NHS) to have it corrected :D
Nature is there to be interfered with :thumbs:
;)
 
As you say, because of their short lives, we can see quite a fast change over many generations, whereas changes in humans would take a very long time, relatively speaking, yet the human `bite` has changed over the past couple of hundred years. Not that many generations in reality & occurred in a short (ish) time scale.

We used to have teeth which lined up, top & bottom more like a guillotine, but because of changes in diet & using utensils, these days we now tend to have an overbite.

The widespread use of dummies in infancy accounts for many an overbite.
 
And pay £100's if not £1000's ( largely through the NHS) to have it corrected :D
Nature is there to be interfered with (y)
;)

Aye. :rolleyes:
Do away with knives & forks & we could save a fortune. :LOL:

It's more to do with not needing to use muscles in the jaw like we used to, to cut and tear off lumps of meat from a carcass.
 
Do away with knives & forks & we could save a fortune. :LOL:
What are they :thinking:
:D

It's more to do with not needing to use muscles in the jaw like we used to, to cut and tear off lumps of meat from a carcass.
And of course our canine teeth have been slowly retracting over the centuries and we no longer have need to grip our prey :D
 
What are they :thinking:
:D


And of course our canine teeth have been slowly retracting over the centuries and we no longer have need to grip our prey :D

The vegans are waiting patiently ;)
 

I wish that you was right but unfortunately climate change is happening and future generations will have to deal with the mess that we have left for them as there's no real will to do something about it
 
I wish that you was right but unfortunately climate change is happening and future generations will have to deal with the mess that we have left for them as there's no real will to do something about it

I'm not saying the climate isn't changing, as it always has & will continue to do, I'm just very sceptical about man's contribution to it & how much difference we can make in the future. My biggest annoyance though, is all the money we are being taxed, the limitations which will imposed on us all & the vast amounts of money big business are/will make out of it all.
 
The only reason anything exists is to validate the concept of nothing.
 
I'm not saying the climate isn't changing, as it always has & will continue to do, I'm just very sceptical about man's contribution to it & how much difference we can make in the future. My biggest annoyance though, is all the money we are being taxed, the limitations which will imposed on us all & the vast amounts of money big business are/will make out of it all.

I am confused by this post. You say that taxes are increased, and also business will make a lot of money out of it? Not certain how both of these can both be true, unless the current strategy will act as an economic stimulus, which can only be a good thing.
 
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