Religion, Defense Still Stand in Way As European Nations Try to Unite

Friday, July 11th, 2003

Religion, Defense Still Stand in Way As European Nations Try to Unite describes the many parallels between the struggles to from the EU and the US:

Six heavily disputed subjects, which mirror questions that faced the U.S. Constitutional Convention in 1787, will provide the EU Constitution’s biggest tests:
  • How much power should a central government have?
  • How much should individual states and citizens contribute to their common defense?
  • What is the right balance of power between small and big states in the union?
  • Who should represent the union abroad and how?
  • What’s the proper separation of church and state?
  • What happens if a government refuses to ratify the constitution?

That Bully Did Hit You Harder

Thursday, July 10th, 2003

This may explain a lot of sparring sessions. From That Bully Did Hit You Harder:

“Given that I have two small children, I was just curious about when they get into squabbles, when both say the other child hit them harder, whether this could be explained by a predictive mechanism,” said Daniel Wolpert of University College London, who led the study.

He and colleagues set up a series of “tit for tat” experiments in which they asked pairs of volunteers to take turns pressing one another’s fingers with equal force.

They were asked to press back equally, but they didn’t, Wolpert and colleagues report in Friday’s issue of the journal Science. “The forces rapidly escalate and they escalate by around 40 percent per turn,” Wolpert said in a telephone interview.

Interestingly, it’s not all “psychological”:

To see if physical rather than psychological mechanisms were at work, Wolpert’s team did another experiment in which the volunteers were put up against a machine — and the same thing happened.

The team of neurologists and psychiatrists believe there is a reason for this — a mechanism that filters out your own perception of what your body is doing when executing basic movements.

“The key message is our findings show we are not as aware of our actions as we think,” Wolpert said.

Just before making a movement, a signal is sent to the brain to tell it what to expect. If the movement is what the brain anticipated, it filters it out, leaving you not fully aware of the force you are applying.

“It is a way of filtering out uninteresting information. It just happens to lead to this consequence,” Wolpert said.

“This mechanism also explains why you cannot tickle yourself — the brain already knows what sensation to expect and alters the brain activity responsible for the sensation accordingly,” said Dr. Sukhwinder Shergill, who also worked on the study.

“But when someone else tickles you there is no chance to adjust your brain perception, and you feel the full effects.”

Possible Gene Found for Lou Gehrig’s Disease

Monday, July 7th, 2003

A friend’s father recently succumbed to ALS, so this naturally caught my eye: Possible Gene Found for Lou Gehrig’s Disease:

European researchers said on Sunday they had identified a new gene that, when mutated, almost doubles the risk of developing a paralyzing disease.

People with the mutations had 1.8 times the risk of developing amyotrophic lateral sclerosis, also known as motor neuron disease or Lou Gehrig’s disease, they found.

Peter Carmeliet of the Flanders Interuniversity Institute for Biotechnology in Leuven, Belgium, and colleagues also found that mice bred with a similar mutation were unusually prone to paralytic disease.

The gene they looked at, VEGF, had not previously been associated with ALS, which affects between 1 and 2 in every 100,000 people around the world.

ALS usually develops after age 50, causing gradual weakness, then paralysis and death. There is no cure, although some people progress more quickly than others.

Carmeliet’s team had found that mice with a defective version of VEGF, which caused their bodies to produce less VEGF protein than normal, developed a disorder similar to ALS.

They looked at samples from 1,900 people from Sweden, Belgium and Britain and found those with certain mutations of VEGF produced low levels of the protein, too — and had a 1.8 times higher risk of ALS than the general population.

Furthermore, when they gave VEGF to mice with artificially induced ALS symptoms, the mice got better, they reported in the journal Nature Genetics.

The findings suggest that VEGF plays a role in ALS, they wrote. “The findings also raise the intriguing question whether more long-term treatment with VEGF might delay the onset or slow the progression of adult-onset motoneuron degeneration as well,” they wrote.

VEGF, short for vascular endothelial growth factor, is known to play an important role in blood vessel growth and development, so the finding may also shed light on the underlying causes of ALS.

Black Belt Priest to Watch Indian Shrine

Wednesday, July 2nd, 2003

One more link between Buddhism and Hinduism, from Black Belt Priest to Watch Indian Shrine:

Armed guards are forbidden inside one of India’s most revered religious shrines. So authorities want to assign its security to a trusted insider: a Hindu priest with a black belt in karate.

K. Seshadri, 42, has been asked by officials at the Venkateswara temple in the southern city of Tirupati to teach younger priests to defend themselves and the temple from terrorists and other attackers, The Hindustan Times reported Tuesday.

The temple, located in Andhra Pradesh state, is visited each day by some 30,000 devotees who worship the Hindu god Venkateswara.

The state government’s security adviser asked Seshadri to train the young priests, who will form an inner ring of protection around the idol, Seshadri said.

Really though, the priests should be learning kung-fu. You’d think they’d know that.

Giant Sea Creature Baffles Scientists

Wednesday, July 2nd, 2003

There’s creepy stuff down there, deep under the water, and sometimes it surfaces. From Giant Sea Creature Baffles Scientists:

Chilean scientists were baffled on Tuesday by a huge, gelatinous sea creature found washed up on the southern Pacific coast and were seeking international help identifying the mystery specimen.

The dead creature was mistaken for a beached whale when first reported about a week ago, but experts who went to see it said the 40-foot-long (12-meter) mass of decomposing lumpy gray flesh apparently was an invertebrate.

“We’d never before seen such a strange specimen, We don’t know if it might be a giant squid that is missing some of its parts or maybe it’s a new species,” said Elsa Cabrera, a marine biologist and director of the Center for Cetacean Conservation in Santiago.

Photographs showed a round leathery substance like a mammoth jelly fish, about as long as a school bus.

Cut on the Bias

Tuesday, July 1st, 2003

Cut on the Bias describes the infuriatingly “politically correct” guidelines for textbook publishers and exam writers (here in the US):

In Michigan, the state does not allow mention of flying saucers or extraterrestrials on its test, because those subjects might imply the forbidden topic of evolution. A text illustrator wrote to say that she was not permitted to portray a birthday party because Jehovah’s Witnesses do not believe in celebrating birthdays. Another illustrator told me that he was directed to airbrush the udder from his drawing of a cow because that body part was “too sexual.”

A review of my book in “The Scotsman” (Edinburgh) said that a well-known local writer for children sold a story to an American textbook company, along with illustrations. The U.S. publisher, however, informed her that she could not show a little girl sitting on her grandfather’s lap, as the drawing implied incest. So, the author changed the adult’s face, so that the little girl was sitting on her grandmother’s lap instead. A contributor to a major textbook series prepared a story comparing the great floods in 1889 in Johnstown, Pa., with those in 1993 in the Midwest, but was unable to find an acceptable photograph. The publisher insisted that everyone in the rowboats must be wearing a lifevest to demonstrate safety procedures.

She could not show a little girl sitting on her grandfather’s lap, as the drawing implied incest. What is wrong with these people? And expecting everyone in a photo from 1889 to wear lifevests?

All lessons, test questions, and illustrations must reflect the following ratios: 50-50 male-female; 45% Caucasian; 25% African American; 22% Hispanic American; 5% Asian American; 5% American Indian and others; and 3% “persons with disabilities.” These figures do not total 100%, nor do they represent actual U.S. Census numbers, but the principle of representation is well understood by writers and editors. American society, as represented in the textbooks, is perfectly integrated by race, ethnicity, gender, age, and disability.

These figures do not total 100%. That kind of thing is always good for a chuckle.

When it comes to illustrations in textbooks, certain images — women cooking, men acting assertive, scenes of poverty, and old people walking with the aid of a cane or a walker — are likewise considered unacceptable. The specifications for photographs, I have learned, are exquisitely detailed. Men and boys must not be larger than women and girls. Asians must not appear as shorter than non-Asians. Women must wear bras, and men must not have noticeable bulges below the waist. People must wear shoes and socks, never showing bare feet or the soles of shoes, and their shoelaces must be solid black, brown, or white. People must never gesture with their fingers, nor should anyone be depicted eating with the left hand. Things to avoid: holiday decorations and scenes in which a church or a bar appears in the background.

Men and boys must not be larger than women and girls. Asians must not appear as shorter than non-Asians. We’ll just check reality at the door.