Author Archives: alistair

48% of Americans are either ignorant, stupid, or insane

Newsweek just published a survey about Americans and faith. Among their results were the following:

  • 48% of Americans do not believe that “evolution [is] well-supported by evidence and widely accepted within the scientific community”.
  • 34% of college graduates accept the Biblical story of creation as fact.

Richard Dawkins once said: “It is absolutely safe to say that if you meet somebody who claims not to believe in evolution, that person is ignorant, stupid, or insane (or wicked, but I’d rather not consider that)”.

A typically controversial statement from Dawkins. I think that most people who deny evolution are indeed ignorant, but there are other important motivations too.

Gravity is ‘just’ a theory

If you drop something – say an apple – it will fall right? But how do you know that it will fall? In fact, you don’t actually know that it will fall – but every other time you dropped something it fell, so you are pretty sure that this time the apple will fall too.

This is a (very) simplistic example of how humans have been gaining knowledge for thousands of years. Basically we follow a simple process:

  1. We observe things in the world around us. Every time I drop something, it falls to the ground.
  2. We propose a hypothesis explaining what we see. I propose that every time I drop something it will fall. (As an aside this is not the theory of gravity*)
  3. We make predictions according to the hypothesis. I predict that every time I drop something… down it will go.
  4. We use the predictions to create and repeat experiments. Drop a bunch of things to check that our prediction holds.

One day we could disprove the theory by dropping something that doesn’t fall. But, no matter how many experiments we conduct, we can never prove our theory. We just amass a lot of evidence that we are right, but the point is our idea remains a theory. It could be proven wrong at any time.

Evolution is also ‘just a theory’ – but so is gravity, and our theory about dropping things. And like gravity, evolution has a HUGE amount of evidence behind it. Don’t dump it because it’s just a theory – otherwise you should be dumping everything that humans have learned over the last 13,000 years!

* The theory of gravity, at a very simple level, states:

  • Any two objects will attract each other. For example the earth exerts a force of attraction on you – and you exert a force of attraction on the earth.
  • The force of that attractions is proportional to the mass (size) of the objects. The earth is really massive so the force between you is enough to hold you down!

Cycling the length of Africa – awesome!

A guy I know from Knysna is busy doing something so awesome that I go green with envy just thinking about it. He and a mate are cycling from Morocco, through West Africa, across to East Africa, down through Central Africa, and all the way home to sunny South Africa. His route is about 22,000 km (about 13,600 miles) and they are budgeting on taking about a year.

They started in early February so they are are still (last time he posted to his site) making their way across the Sahara. He has already had some awesome experiences and his stories really tempt me to pack up the corporate life and do something crazy.

Until then I will have to make to with Cecil’s diary and pics. Click to the thumbnails to view higher res images.

Cecil on a windy cliff in Morocco

Dragging his massive pack up a mean hill in the Sahara

Time for some well-earned rest. Somewhere in Morocco

Africa is GDP anorexic

World map showing relative GDP’sI just came across a cool site called World Mapper which generates statistical maps of the world. They warp the sizes of countries to show relative statistics. For instance the image on the left (click for full size) shows world GDP (at purchasing parity). As you can see countries in the northern hemisphere are a lotter richer than us in the south. Most of Africa has all but disappeared in this view! Also have a look at the size of Japan!

 

Africa is a lot more prominent in the next map. Unfortunately that’s because it shows relative homicide rates (murder and manslaugther but excluding war). And look at South Africa – a fat blob even compared to the rest of Africa!

World map showing relative homicide rates

John McCain’s MySpace page ‘hacked’

John McCain’s MySpace page hackedYou might have heard of MySpace. It’s a social networking site – everyone has their own page and they link to friends’ pages, put up links to other sites, etc, etc. A recent fashion in American politics is to get a MySpace page and then collect as many MySpace friends as possible. All of the presidential hopefuls have MySpace pages – obviously they don’t personally work on them, they pay people to maintain their pages.

The guys who set up John McCain’s page for him just used a template that someone else (Mike Davidson) had designed. They didn’t give Mike credit for the template design even though he had requested it. He didn’t really mind – but he soon realized that the McCain page was loading an image from his own server. This was chewing up his bandwidth and annoyed him, so the time for revenge was at hand.

He replaced the image on his server with a message saying that John McCain had decided to “come out in support of gay marriage… particularly between passionate females.” So until it was spotted, anyone visiting Mr McCain’s MySpace page saw the message. Awesome.

Link to the story on Mike Davidson’s own web site.

Wild Card – get into

Wild Card - Get into hundreds of South African national parks for freeIf you live in (or are visiting) South Africa and you enjoy going to our national parks then a Wild Card is well worth it. A once-off purchase gives you a year of free entry to lots of national parks around South Africa. It isn’t particularly expensive – mine paid itself off ages ago.

You can check out the details for all pricing options for yourself, but I went for the couple membership which costs R335 (about $45) for the year. We were in Kruger for 5 days which added up to R300 – so the card had already almost paid for itself after one trip.

Also note that if you are not South African the card could really save you money. Kruger will cost you R120 (about $17) per day so the Wild Card pays for itself almost immediately! And you can apply online too.

RSS explained

RSS logoYou have probably seen the logo on the left all over the internet – trust me, its all over the place. It’s the RSS logo, and when you see it you know that the site you are reading supports one of the most useful standards evolving on the internet.

So, what is RSS?

RSS is a standard format used to let people (and programs) know about updates to a website. Because it is a standard (everyone agrees on a common format) programs can be written to do useful things with RSS publications – more about that later.

An example

This site actually has an RSS feed. You can see a link to it at the bottom of the page – “Entries (RSS)“. The link is to a file in a standard format (XML) which has information about the 10 most recent articles published on alistairpott.com. For each article there is a title, link, and description (in my case the whole article).

RSS readers – Google Reader

This is where RSS becomes useful to you and I. There are lots of RSS tools and readers out there, but the one that I use and recommend is Google Reader. Instead of manually checking each of my favorite sites for updates I just open up Google Reader. It downloads the RSS file from each of the sites I have subscribed to and lets me know if there are any updates that I haven’t seen yet. I can then read the articles from within the program – or link to the original articles if I want. Below is an example of a recent alistairpott.com post shown in Google Reader.

alistairpott.com in Google Reader If you regularly visit sites to check for updates, then I strongly recommend that you give Google Reader a try. And if you do, then subscribe to alistairpott.com!

Two Oceans Aquarium

Kelp tank at the Two OceansJules and I hit the Two Oceans Aquarium at the Waterfront yesterday. They have some really cool displays (including this one with hundreds of clown fish) and plenty of super-keen volunteers. We were lucky to be there for shark feeding time. Two divers popped into the predators tank which has hundreds of fish. The sharks weren’t hungry but most of the other fish including tuna, rays and one cheeky turtle had a ball.

Clown fish at the Two Oceans Aquarium

Why I don’t like rap

I often wonder why people like some of the music I dislike – or why I like the music that I do.  Turns out that some of it might just be a matter of liking what you are used to.  I read about a study in which the guys were trying to show that people like what they know – the ‘familiarity effect’.  They took a batch of rats and raised half listening to Schoenberg, the other half listening to Mozart.  Later, they put the adult rats into a cage in which they could choose the music playing by moving to a certain side of the cage.  Guess which music they preferred…

The familiarity effect has also been shown to be present in humans.  So maybe if I listened to enough hip-hop then I could actually learn to like it.