Announcing the Brand New LIFT Site
Our community of more than 400 LIFT users around the world just got richer! I wrote this announcement post for … Continue reading Announcing the Brand New LIFT Site
Our community of more than 400 LIFT users around the world just got richer! I wrote this announcement post for … Continue reading Announcing the Brand New LIFT Site
Wired, it should be obvious if you’ve ever opened the magazine or been to the website, is a magazine for technologists. That is, for people who turn to technology to solve humanity’s problems. Or, as is the case with Wall Street Journal columnist and Wired‘s September cover story author Matt Ridley, people who believe in the omnipotence, and apparently, the omniscience, of technology.
Ridley calls himself a “rational optimist,” (it’s the title of his most recent book) which is actually an accurate description of the basic editorial position of Wired and the Wall Street Journal. As a rule, these publications are bullish on science and technology (which they would shorthand as “progress”), and dismissive or hostile toward warnings that every bacchanal brings a hangover. This idea springs directly from the sort of rational optimism Ridley speaks of. If we just stop freaking out, Ridley claims, the ur-technologist, or simply technology itself, will solve our problems. Freaking out seems to mean demanding that the government do something, though he never makes it clear what negative impacts he thinks this fretting or fear actually has. The idea of being a “rational optimist” isn’t really remarkable at all. After all, this worldview under-girds the entire apparatus of global capitalist society.
What is remarkable is that rather than use current examples of problems where political intervention in the market, spurred by all this apocalyptic thinking, is hindering solution-making (here’s one possibility), Ridley decides to use historical examples. The examples he picks all curiously undermine his point. That’s because they all demonstrate just how effective alarmist predictions can be at creating important policy changes.
Continue reading “Wired’s Matt Ridley: Don’t Panic, We Can Dig Ourselves Out of this Hole.”
National Geographic recently featured a story about a global project, started by Canadian evolutionary biologist Paul Hebert, to “barcode” all known species.
Barcodes are derived from the CO1 gene that produces ATP, an energy carrying molecule found in every multicellular organism on earth. The barcodes are made up of sequences of 4 colors, one for each of the DNA bases (G,T,C and A, you all remember Gattaca, right?) that make up the unique 600+ character chain of the portion of the CO1 gene that Hebert selected for its commonality. Continue reading “Can Barcoded Species be Good for Science and Monsanto?”
California’s Independent System Operator, otherwise known as CalISO, has added two graphs to its Today’s Outlook page that increase the … Continue reading California’s Energy Grid Operator Starts Displaying Green Energy
It sounds like the beginning of a bad infomercial, and it may eventually become one, but in the meantime, a … Continue reading $3 Suction Pump Speeds Healing