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If greed is good, as Gordon Gekko proclaimed in the 1987 movie Wall Street, then economics ought to be a superlative science.
After all, at the core of economic theory sits a greedy idealization of human nature known as Homo economicus. It’s a fictitious species that represents the individual economic agent, motivated by selfishness. H. economicus is completely rational, by which economists mean it’s out for itself. And selfishness is supposedly the smart strategy when competing for the resources needed to survive. As Gordon Gekko also mentioned, greed “captures the essence of the evolu...
Published:
2013-05-06 10:10:00
Found in: Numbers and Science & Society
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Science is an oddly successful enterprise. On the whole, it provides an impressive guide to reality. From antibiotics and atomic bombs to laser beams and X-rays, science enables humans to forge powerful tools from nature’s secrets.
Yet many aspects of science are deeply flawed, from the politicization of research funding to widespread misuse of math in analyzing data.
In this respect science is not so different from human biology. Magnificent organisms capable of composing symphonies, calculating quantum energy levels and dunking basketballs are built from DNA molecules containing 90 perce...
Published:
2013-04-08 09:22:00
Found in: Biology and Science & Society
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Time after time, physicists have tried to explain time. Many claim to have succeeded. But they haven’t. Otherwise everybody would quit trying to explain it all over again.
One of the most recent such efforts comes from the mathematician/cosmologist George F.R. Ellis. He thinks solving the time mystery involves figuring out the difference between the past and the future.
That’s not as obvious as it sounds. Physical laws governing motion make no distinction between future and past. Equations describing the scattering of billiard balls on a pool table work equally well if all the balls retr...
Published:
2013-03-21 14:00:00
Found in: Numbers
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Fight Club had its First Rule (don’t talk about Fight Club). The Transporter enforces Rule Number 1 (never change the deal). And NCIS Special Agent Leroy Jethro Gibbs observes Rule 1 (never mix the suspects together in the same room).
Physics has the second law of thermodynamics.
It’s weird when you think about it. Movies and TV shows always give their prime rule top billing. But the physics rule alleged by Sir Arthur Eddington to hold the “supreme position among the laws of Nature” is only Number 2. Nevertheless, scientists generally consider it the most unbreakable law of all. It i...
Published:
2013-03-07 09:03:00
Found in: Numbers
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Science is not a democracy. Nature’s laws are not subject to the whims of popular vote. A scientific theory succeeds by providing logical explanations for puzzling phenomena and making correct predictions about the outcomes of new experiments. It doesn’t matter how many scientists believed in the theory beforehand (or even afterward, for that matter).
In fact, revolutionary new theories are seldom very popular. As Max Planck, the founder of quantum theory, once noted, sometimes a theory doesn’t get widely accepted until its opponents die. Nevertheless, in certain scientific matters it...
Published:
2013-02-20 10:26:00
Found in: Numbers
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SN Prime | February 11, 2013 | Vol. 3, No. 6
Science is not a democracy. Nature’s laws
are not subject to the whims of popular vote.
A scientific theory succeeds by providing logical explanations for puzzling phenomena and
making correct predictions about the outcomes of new experiments. It doesn’t matter how many scientists believed in the theory beforehand
(or even afterward, for that matter).
In fact, revolutionary new theories are seldom very popular. As Max Planck, the founder of quantum theory, once noted, sometimes a theory doesn’t get widely accepted until its oppon...
Published:
2013-02-11 11:09:00
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For all the deference to “laws” of nature that supposedly govern everything that happens, the truth is that randomness rules the world.
Everywhere you look, randomness is at work, in all the processes described by the mathematics of probability. The temperature of the air and the capriciousness of the weather all depend on random collisions of molecules. Computers operate on the principles of information theory, which is rooted in quantifying probabilities. Time rushes onward and disorder replaces order by virtue of the probabilistic second law of thermodynamics. Randomness determines eve...
Published:
2013-01-23 19:29:00
Found in: Numbers
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In olden days, before the Star Trek holodeck and movies like TRON and The Matrix, philosophers used to wonder whether life was but a dream. Nowadays they’re more concerned that reality could be just a computer simulation.
Sure, that’s not very likely. But you can’t rule out the possibility. Computers simulate all sorts of things, and some scientists have seriously suggested that nature’s supposedly rock-solid reality is really just some smart alien teenager’s science fair project.
Most people respond to that suggestion with a shrug. What does it matter? You have to row, row, row yo...
Published:
2013-01-11 14:43:00
Found in: Computers and Numbers
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For decades, astronomers have grappled with their inability to decipher the universe’s darkest secret: the identity of most of its matter.
It’s not the same stuff as the ordinary atomic variety of matter common on Earth. Atoms or their parts — such as protons and neutrons — make up less than 17 percent of the mass in the cosmos. All the rest is “dark” — invisible to eyes and telescopes, its presence deduced by its gravitational tug on stars and galaxies (SN: 8/28/10, p. 22). This mystery matter apparently consists of tiny particles of some exotic species, but efforts to trap the... (p. 18)
Found in: Atom & Cosmos
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SN Prime | December 10, 2012 | Vol. 2, No. 45
In olden days, before the Star Trek holodeck and movies like TRON and The Matrix, philosophers used to wonder whether life was but a dream. Nowadays they’re more concerned that reality could be just a computer simulation.
Sure, that’s not very likely. But you can’t rule out the possibility. Computers simulate all sorts of things, and some scientists have seriously suggested that nature’s supposedly rock-solid reality is really just some smart alien teenager’s science fair project.
Most people respond to that suggestion with a shrug....
Published:
2012-12-10 16:00:00