I'm up late again tonight. In fact, I'm still sobering up from a few drinks a few hours ago - but I must post. I have a screaming sound in my ears, my palms are sweating and I am twitching. Desmond Morris, as much as I hate to pick on him, said something absolutely absurd about genetics, that, if taken seriously, would have anxious men accusing
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To start, you're right, most intelligent beings will probably take it as low-brow pinch-of-salt pop science, even though it doesn't come with a sticker on the front warning to this effect - but what of those who buy it, and buy the non-science in it, too... And from a man who talks about being passionate about communicating science without distorting it, it quite takes the biscuit.
To be honest, I think he'd actually be more insulted if I said what you're saying on my blog, rather than just effortlessly mowed down his argument. If I do that, then I'm implying simply that his argument is flawed. If I do as you say, then I'm ( ... )
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As for peer-reviewing - it is a commendable scientific practice, but it isn't absolutely always necessary. Something can be self-evidently true, and it doesn't necessarily need ten of your pals to concur on the matter. And as a lot of Desmond's ideas are neither falsifiable nor quantifiable, the men in the science faculty want nothing to do with them.
A weakness of Desmond's is that his degree of watertightness in thinking is inconsistent throughout his books. He'll cast a very healthy scepticism on one hypothesis on one page, and on the very next page he'll quite heavily endorse some piffle conjecture and and offer some tenuous "evidence" for it. It goes without saying that this stems from subjectivity and not objectivity - and it certainly isn't the ideal fruit of someone who likes to think they take science seriously. Plus, he appears in need of spending ( ... )
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*I'm* Vikki. Meeee.
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