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Ideafication

Ideafication

Steve: Futurist, Political Commentator, & Philosopher
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Tag Archive: Science


The Credibility of Wikipedia

Filed Under: Internet, Philosophy by Steve — 1 Comment
April 28, 2010

I can understand why my teachers aren’t happy with Wikipedia being quoted as a source, but it eventually brought up the question: If the individual can edit a Wikipedia page and it’s not acceptable, why is it that an individual that wrote a book is more credible?

WikipediaThe first thing that comes to mind is the numbers of people that can edit Wikipedia and the number that can write a book. Anyone can write a book, but getting it published is just a matter of knowing the right people or having enough money, neither of which is a quality that defines a credible person.

Another thing that would be brought up is the number of people that go into making/publishing a book serve as a safeguard of sorts against false claims and the like. This could also be contested because there is always the chance that they could select a group of people to do this that also believe in things (see: religious books, political publications, product advertisements, etc.) and will allow them to go through.

Abraham LincolnThe main thing you really need to watch out for is blatant edits of falsehood. If you read on Wikipedia that Abraham Lincoln owned a Harley, you’d be able to assume this isn’t true simply by looking up when he lived, which is before the motorcycle was invented. You’d have to assume that the majority of what you check is correct, though. For instance, on a topic such as abortion, there is likely to be “scientific evidence” supporting both sides of the argument; this evidence could have been rounded in favor of the scientist’s personal preference. The average person doesn’t get the opportunity to study a fetus or talk to Abraham Lincoln about the biker gang he rolled with, so it’s hard for them to check facts.

As far as a source goes, however, when Wikipedia is used correctly, it is merely a reaffirmation of the sources it used, just as those sources are an updated version of what they were referencing. If you were truly submitting an assignment based on what actually happened/happens, the goal would be to discover the source of the information and channel it through your work in the best possible way. Would anything that wasn’t source-direct even matter in any way other than being a route to the original information?

Tags: Abortion, Abraham Lincoln, Ads, Book, Credibility, Edit, Evidence, Facts, Information, Known, Motorcycle, People, Philosophy, Politics, Religion, School, Science, Scientific, Source, Truth, Unknown, Wiki, Wikipedia
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The Future of Genetics & Discrimination

Filed Under: Future, Personal, Psychology by Steve — 1 Comment
April 21, 2010

I remember from both my high school biology class and a show I saw on either the Science or Discovery Channel that we initially thought every nucleotide in DNA represented a single genetic “idea”, like how binary code works for computers. When they looked into it more, they discovered that changing just one could affect more than one trait in the creature the DNA represented.

This was big news in biology when it was discovered. It explains why when you grow a larger fruit, it could become more prone to disease at the same time. When it was discovered, however, they weren’t able to test everything. After all, one chromosome is incredibly long and tiny; it wasn’t something everyone could test. Remember how long the Human Genome Project took? Even now it’s not something we get hands-on experience with in high school.

Every single trait you have could potentially be linked to at least one other. What concern arises from this? If knowledge is gained about trait connections, there will be scientific basis for discrimination. Genetic code that decides your skin color or gender could also mean you are more likely to do things a certain way, or do something different than someone with a different “unrelated” trait. This could cause employers to not hire “risky” people based on scientific findings.

Discrimination from the past was just a matter of  ”I don’t like this different thing I see before me”. In the future it could be “Your DNA isn’t designed for this job, sorry!”.

On the other hand, what if this just keeps you from having a job you don’t like? I guess it all depends on if someone with the resources wishes to be honest about it or bend the human race to their will. Or maybe we’ll just discover not all the codes do more than one thing.

Tags: Biology, Discovery Channel, Discrimination, DNA, Experience, Future, Genetics, High School, School, Science
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Wisdom Teeth Removed & Making New Music

Filed Under: My Music, Personal, Psychology by Steve — 1 Comment
April 16, 2010

Whoever said technology is evil had their wisdom teeth removed in the 70s. I just had mine removed a few hours ago. Amazingly painless! Well, there was pain in the process, but very, very little. Now, however, I’m dealing with some pain due to the after effects. I’m on some pain killer now and it’s doing its job pretty well.

When I heard I was going to have to take it, I jokingly thought to myself “I should make some music while I’m on this since I don’t do recreational drugs; a lot of big-time musicians use drugs for inspiration!”, but then I got more serious about it, and now I’ve started working on an EP called Creativity Placebo, a musical experiment of sorts. I’ll get to see for myself if drugs actually change the creative process or outcome of the music. As you might have guessed by the title, I’m quite skeptical.

I’m doing it for science!

My skepticism of the effects reminded me briefly of the claim that Socrates was unaffected by alcohol. I thought about that, and then I thought about Socrates for a bit, and I arrived at the possibility that this is a lesson in disguise. Socrates is obviously against assuming things, and when it came time for people to drink, odds are he was seen holding a cup, possibly even drinking from it. The drunk people around him probably assumed that the contents were alcoholic, or, had it been, that he had actually been drinking it. He would then appear to be able to drink it and not get drunk.

Why am I elaborating? You understand.

Tags: Creativity Placebo, Drinking, Drugs, EP, Experiment, FPFM, Futures Passed, My Music, Pain, Science, Socrates, Technology
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