AIP Probes Bush, Kerry On Science Issues 54
martensitic writes "Physics Today (the 50-year-old monthly publication of the American Institute of Physics) continues their election-year tradition with this special report, posing nine questions 'in an effort to get the candidates to specifically address questions of interest to the science community'. The 'sometimes direct and sometimes vague' written responses 'show fundamental differences on several key issues.'"
The Average Voter (Score:3, Insightful)
It is also safe to say that after reading this article, an average voter would have lost interest in the first few sentences, wiped the drool from the corner of their mouth, and gone back to finding porn site passwords.
Of course I can only speak for myself...
mean voters (Score:3, Interesting)
Re:mean voters (Score:3, Insightful)
This is true and I think it goes for all intelligentsia, not just computer geeks and nerds. But on the same side I believe we are the ones that are most likley to change other peoples minds on some of these issues.
No where in the debates will a moderator ask about the science of stem cell research - just the policy because they can't answer on that. Basically it will stick to "moral" questions. However, we are the ones that can inform our fellow citizens that this or that cand
Bush's science positions (Score:5, Funny)
'Show fundamental differences ...' (Score:5, Insightful)
Kerry:
Seems like the most important difference is in their interpretations of reality itself.
Re:'Show fundamental differences ...' (Score:1, Insightful)
Re:'Show fundamental differences ...' (Score:1)
They have some similarities too (Score:1, Insightful)
Re:They have some similarities too (Score:1)
I have also proposed creating the Presidential Math and Science Scholars Fund to provide $100 million in grants to lowincome students who study math or science. This will ensure that America's graduates have the training they need to compete for the best jobs of the 21st century.
I call bullshit on Bush (Score:3, Informative)
Re:I call bullshit on Bush (Score:3, Insightful)
Re:Science Is Not A Priority (Score:3, Funny)
I can always use extra money.
Re:Science Is Not A Priority (Score:2)
From Time
Most important issues: When asked what they consider are the most important issues, 25% of registered voters cited the economy as the top issue, followed by 24% who cited the war on terrorism as the top issue. The situation in Iraq was rated the top issue by
Re:Science Is Not A Priority (Score:1)
Both political parties depend on people making decisions based on how they feel, not on what they know and can prove true.
So the Administration fails that test. (Score:4, Interesting)
Another forum for science issues... (Score:2)
http://www.hitechtownhall.org/ [hitechtownhall.org]
Has anyone heard whether the campaigns answered the invitations?
Ahem (Score:3, Funny)
Fact Check (Score:3, Interesting)
Re:Fact Check (Score:3, Insightful)
1. Should we be wasting money on missile defense when scientists have shown it is ineffective?
Bush: we're doing it no matter what anyone says.
Kerry: it would be nice, but it's lower priority than stopping the spread of WMDs.
Physicist: a previous article in Physics Today [physicstoday.org] discussed the issues and showed that it's silly to think that a missile defense system would provide any safety. The only studies that show it's even close n
Speaking of factchecks... (Score:4, Funny)
During the debate (a few hours ago) Cheney incorrectly referred people to factcheck.com [factcheck.com] instead of factcheck.org [factcheck.org].
It looks like the guy who registered "factcheck.com" was watching the debate. Check out where it redirects! BWAHAHAHAHA
Re:Speaking of factchecks... (Score:1)
~UP
Re:Fact Check (Score:3, Informative)
Very revealing answer on Question #4 (Score:3, Interesting)
Kerry: [A] KerryEdwards administration will stop this administration's program to develop a new class of nuclear weapons.
Uh, what?
Rob (I seem to remember reading something about plans for bunker-busting nukes, but I'll let someone else do the research)
I call bullshit on Bush (Score:2, Informative)
Re:I call bullshit on Bush (Score:1)
True or False (Score:3, Funny)
* Dinosaur bones and the trillions of other fossils showing various evolving species throughout history were put there by God to challenge our faith that evolution is a Satanic principle.
* Gay people don't exist, plus they don't deserve any rights in this Flag-loving nation of ours, unless of course they're lesbians who are willing to let me watch.
* Global warming is helping to speed up the end times so we can get Jesus to come back sooner.
Re:True or False (Score:2)
Nuclear, Energy, and Environment issues for Bush (Score:2, Insightful)
1. Nuclear power is the way to go. It is cheap, affordable, and the waste really isn't that bad. Besides, we are developing ways to handle the waste properly. Managed properly (meaning, freeing the scientists to continue R&D) will mean we won't need coal plants and gas plants and electrical cars may become a reality.
Bush scored spot on. "I am going to begin building a new nuclear
Re:Nuclear, Energy, and Environment issues for Bus (Score:1)
Re:Nuclear, Energy, and Environment issues for Bus (Score:5, Insightful)
If you were a real physicist, you'd know that was wrong. Here's an electron - tell me exactly where it is, where it's going, and how fast.
Re:Nuclear, Energy, and Environment issues for Bus (Score:5, Insightful)
Um. Huh? Physicists are smart enough to know that carbon dioxide is a greenhouse gas, and that the Earth has a limited capacity to absorb it. Long term temperature trends show pretty clearly that the Earth is warming up. Much of it may be due to orbital eccentricity drift, but the problem is that CO2 levels are spiking dramatically (due to human activity) as well. This hasn't happened in any period of Earth's history that we can study.
Physicists would also be smart enough to know that the question isn't whether or not global warming is happening (it clearly is - the top five warmest years on record have happened since 1997, and if you look at the average global temperature, it's clearly going up) but whether or not human activity is causing it. And the problem with this is that we don't know enough about Earth to say it. We don't have a "control Earth". We know that humans are dumping huge amounts of CO2 into the atmosphere - far more than natural causes. We don't know what that will do. Any physicist worth his or her salt would know that this is, to quote a paleoclimatologist from Ohio State, "is a dangerous, uncontrolled experiment."
Bush is saying "well... we don't know what dumping huge amounts of CO2 is going to do
If there's one thing Physicists love to talk about it is energy. No one understands what energy is better than physicists. Energy is the end-all idol they worship, if they worship any idol at all. How do we exploit the energy out there? How do we get more and more of it delivered to the masses? If it were up to physicists, we would be doubling our energy production every ten years. There are so many useful things you can do if only you had enough energy! Even time travel is possible with enough energy!
What in the heck are you talking about?? Physicists would also know that any energy you produce has to go somewhere. And unless we start moving off this planet (which is one thing where Bush is correct - if he wasn't saying it just to be politically correct, as is evidenced by the fact that he didn't back it up in NASA's budget) that energy is going to be dumped somewhere on Earth. I could probably do a back of the envelope calculation figuring out how long it would take to incinerate Earth if our energy production doubled every ten years, but it's not worth the effort. Given that it's exponential growth, though, that number would be well less than probably 100-200 years.
And I really, really challenge you to find a real physicist who honestly believes that time travel is possible with enough energy.
Bush is willing to shovel the money they need into their labs.
News to all of the physicists I know. Well, those that aren't working on weapons programs.
Re:Nuclear, Energy, and Environment issues for Bus (Score:4, Funny)
Re:Nuclear, Energy, and Environment issues for Bus (Score:3, Informative)
I have to admit, the original parent isn't being a complete lunatic on this one - genuine physicists have come up with papers on this - see "Closed timelike curves produced by pairs of moving cosmic strings: Exact solutions" J.R. Gott, III, Physics Review Letters, v.66, p.1126 (1991).
I don't know if he's since accepted the complaints that he's wrong (see S. Deser, R. Jackiw
Re:Nuclear, Energy, and Environment issues for Bus (Score:1)
Re:Nuclear, Energy, and Environment issues for Bus (Score:2)
There are plenty of theoretical possibilities for time travel within GR, but none of them are really tractable.
One of the big problems is the fact that people have basically ended up playing with odd metrics in GR, coming up with bizarre geometries, and then finding out that the matter requirements to gen
Re:Nuclear, Energy, and Environment issues for Bus (Score:2)
Re:Nuclear, Energy, and Environment issues for Bus (Score:2)
Trust me, I know quite a bit about general relativity. I know that GR doesn't forbid closed timelike loops - but I also know that any solution involving closed timelike loops also must involve matter of exotic type, or objects where GR may break down (like black holes, etc.).
But it's naive to say that time travel might be possible with enough energy. Time travel, if it exists, will require significantly more than just
Re:Nuclear, Energy, and Environment issues for Bus (Score:3, Informative)
Scientists: Bush Distorts Science
The Bush administration has distorted scientific fact leading to policy decisions on the environment, health, biomedical research and nuclear weaponry, a group of about 60 scientists, including 20 Nobel laureates, said in a statement on Wednesday.
The Union of Concerned Scientists, an independent organization, also issued a 37-page report, "Scientific Integrity in Policymaking," detailing the accus
Re:Nuclear, Energy, and Environment issues for Bus (Score:3, Interesting)
You sure don't sound like a physicist.
3. Energy. If there's one thing Physicists love to talk about it is energy. No one understands what energy is better than physicists. Energy is the end-all idol they worship, if they worship any idol at all. How do we exploit the energy out there? How do we get more and more of it delivered to the masses?
Do you even know any physicists? If scientists (physicists, etc..) worship anything it's truth and knowledge. The only time we talk about delivering anything t
Re:Nuclear, Energy, and Environment issues for Bus (Score:2)
Note how jgardn starts out by saying, "I am a physicist," but soon lapses and refers to physicists as "they" for most of the rest of his rant.
Re:Nuclear, Energy, and Environment issues for Bus (Score:2)
Guys like this are trying to systematically hijack the Slashdot mod system. See here. [slashdot.org]
Looks like the system still works, though...
favorite quote (Score:3, Insightful)
Well duh, wasn't that the whole point of the end of the cold war? Nuclear disarment?
Science? (Score:1)
From a pure science standpoint, it's a no brainer. Research that could lead to new nuclear weapons could also result in new methods to make new artificial elements.
Only when you involve politics does it get complicated.
LK
how american it is (Score:1)
Would anyone intelligent enough to walk and chew gum at the same time actually think that the candidates themselves even saw the questions ?