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[Me]

Geek and nerd Joe D has in the past studied genetics, molecular and cell biology, worked in cancer research, and made contemptuous amounts of money from incompetently composed photographs. The views expressed on this weblog are not his own; rather, he stole them from you through mind invasion.

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Life lessons

Science is not a catalogue of facts, but a search for new mysteries. Science increases the store of wonder and mystery in the world; it does not erode it. The myth that science gets rid of mysteries, started by the Romantic poets, was well nailed by Albert Einstein--whose thought experiments about relativity are far more otherworldly, elusive, thrilling, and baffling than anything dreamt up by poets.

Isaac Newton showed us the mysteries of deep space, Charles Darwin showed us the mysteries of deep time, and Francis Crick and James D Watson showed us the mysteries of deep encoding. To get rid of those insights would be to reduce the world's stock of awe.

I thought I'd put this link on the weblog rather than the "Oh My God" section just to include that quote, from Matt Ridley. It's part of a Guardian article asking scientists what one fact about science everybody should know. Go read it!


[Edit] Edit | [Delete] Delete | [History] History | [Version] Last edited by Joe D, 2007-10-27 18:48:00 | [Views] Viewed 78350 times | [del.icio.us] [Digg thins] [Reddit] [Magnolia] [Spurl] [Searchles]


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