Saturn and Associates

Someone posted a few pictures of one of our nicest heavenly bodies. This one is my favorite (remember, “up” and “down” are relative terms):

http://www.dailykos.com/story/2012/10/02/1138721/-No-Words-Just-bask-in-Awe

Big Science, Low Taxes

The physicist Steven Weinberg wrote an article in the New York Review of Books a few months ago about “big science” — the kind of science that requires large amounts of money. The two main examples of such science are particle physics and cosmology, the sciences of the very small and the very large. In each case, scientific progress has made the problems to be investigated more difficult and more expensive. One of the stories he tells is how concern over federal spending resulted in the death of the Superconducting Super Collider in the early 90s.

Instead of simply calling for the government to devote more money to particle accelerators and space-based telescopes, however, Weinberg puts spending on big science in the context of overall government spending and taxation.

In the last part of his article, he calls attention to the need for more spending on a number of important priorities (education, infrastructure, drug ย treatment, patent inspectors,ย regulation of the financial industry,ย etc., etc.).ย Professor Weinberg concludes:

“In fact, many of these other responsibilities of government have been treated worse in the present Congress than science….It seems to me that what is really needed is not more special pleading for one or another particular public good, but for all the people who care about these things to unite in restoring higher and more progressive tax rates, especially on investment income. I am not an economist, but I talk to economists, and I gather that dollar for dollar, government spending stimulates the economy more than tax cuts. It is simply a fallacy to say that we cannot afford increased government spending. But given the anti-tax mania that seems to be gripping the public, views like these are political poison. This is the real crisis, and not just for science.”

The anti-tax mania isn’t gripping the public as a whole, but he makes an excellent point.

http://www.nybooks.com/articles/archives/2012/may/10/crisis-big-science/?page=1

2012 Ig Nobel Prizes Awarded

My favorite is the prize for medicine, awarded to researchers working on reducing the number of colonoscopy patients who explode. I worry about exploding every time I have a colonoscopy.

http://www.improbable.com/ig/winners/#ig2012

Hello, My Name Is Rags

A company called Boston Dynamics is developing a robot “Alpha Dog” for the military. It’s supposed to be used as a pack animal for the infantry, so it might better be called a robot burro.

It’s also known as the LS3, or Legged Squad Support System. Whatever they call it, it’s kind of creepy.

The Prediction of Henry Adams

The historian Henry Adams, grandson of John Adams,ย wrote this around 1905, looking back over his life:

“Science now lay in a plane where scarcely one hundred or two hundred minds in the world could follow its mathematical processes; but bombs educate vigorously, and even wireless telegraphy and air-ships might require the reconstruction of society…. At the rate of progress since 1800, every American who lived into the year 2000 would know how to control unlimited power. He would think in complexities unimaginable to an earlier mind. He would deal with problems altogether beyond the range of earlier society. To him the 19th century would stand on the same plane as the 4th — equally childlike”ย (Chapter 34,ย The Education of Henry Adams).

It’s remarkable how the future always turns out to be stranger than we could imagine in some ways and not so different in other ways.