Sunday, July 31, 2005

New Scientist Breaking News - Calls to end US domination of the internet

New Scientist Breaking News - Calls to end US domination of the internet
Calls to end US domination of the internet
10:00 31 July 2005
NewScientist.com news service
Paul Marks
WHENEVER you surf the web, send emails or download music, an unseen force is at work in the background, making sure you connect to the sites, inboxes and databases you want. The name of this brooding presence? The US government.

Some 35 years after the US military invented the internet, the US Department of Commerce retains overall control of the master computers that direct traffic to and from every web and email address on the planet.

But a group convened by the UN last week to thrash out the future of the net is calling for an end to US domination of the net, proposing that instead a multinational forum of governments, companies and civilian organisations is created to run it.

The UN's Working Group on Internet Governance (WGIG) says US control hinders many developments that might improve it. These range from efforts to give the developing world more affordable net access to coming up with globally agreed and enforceable measures to boost net privacy and fight cybercrime.

US control also means that any changes to the way the net works, including the addition of new domain names such as .mobi for cellphone-accessed sites, have to be agreed by the US, whatever experts in the rest of the world think. The flipside is that the US could make changes without the agreement of the rest of the world.

In a report issued in Geneva in Switzerland on 14 July, the WGIG seeks to overcome US hegemony. "The internet should be run multilaterally, transparently and democratically. And it must involve all stakeholders," says Markus Kummer, a Swiss diplomat who is executive coordinator of the WGIG.

So why is the internet's overarching technology run by the US? The reason is that the net was developed there in the late 1960s by the Pentagon's Advanced Research Projects Agency (ARPA) in a bid to create a communications medium that would still work if a Soviet nuclear strike took out whole chunks of the network. This medium would send data from node to node in self-addressed "packets" that could take any route they liked around the network, avoiding any damaged parts.

Today the internet has 13 vast computers dotted around the world that translate text-based email and web addresses into numerical internet protocol (IP) node addresses that computers understand. In effect a massive look-up table, the 13 computers are collectively known as the Domain Name System (DNS). But the DNS master computer, called the master root server, is based in the US and is ultimately controlled by the Department of Commerce. Because the data it contains is propagated to all the other DNS servers around the world, access to the master root server file is a political hot potato.

Currently, only the US can make changes to that master file. And that has some WGIG members very worried indeed. "It's about who has ultimate authority," says Kummer. "In theory, the US could decide to delete a country from the master root server. Some people expect this to happen one day, even though the US has never abused its position in that way."

Unilateral US action is unlikely, however. The DNS system is managed on behalf of the Department of Commerce by the Internet Corporation for Assigned Names and Numbers (ICANN), a not-for-profit company. "Our job is to make sure internet addressing happens stably and securely," says Theresa Swinehart, ICANN's general manager for global partnerships. And it does so, she says, in conjunction with its government advisory committee (GAC), which includes members from 100 countries to ensure diversity of opinion.

Even Kummer admits that ICANN does a good job on achieving international consensus, at least regarding changes to the DNS. "ICANN scores quite highly on involving all stakeholders. Anyone can go to a meeting, take the microphone and give a view," he says. The problem? It's an ad hoc process. And with the internet now a critical global resource, some governments, particularly in developing countries such as China, India and Brazil, want a forum where vast swathes of internet policy - from cybercrime to spam to privacy protection - can be both discussed and acted on.

Only then, they say, can vital non-DNS issues such as the high cost of net connections to many developing countries be made fairer. Right now, the WGIG report notes, internet service providers based in countries that are remote from the internet backbone links - the large "fat pipes" connecting continents - must pay the full cost of connecting to these networks. This can be prohibitively expensive for developing nations and there is no "appropriate and effective global internet governance mechanism to resolve it".

The WGIG put forward a number of options for change, all of which include enhancing the roles of ICANN and the GAC or the formation of a new all-embracing internet policy body that would be in charge of ICANN instead of the US. The WGIG's proposals will now go to the vote at the International Telecommunication Union's World Summit on the Information Society in Tunisia this November.

Whatever the WGIG decides, it will have a tough time changing the US government's opinion. Only last month, US assistant secretary of commerce Michael Gallagher reasserted America's claim to the heart of the net. "The US is committed to taking no action that would have the potential to adversely impact the effective and efficient operation of the DNS and will therefore maintain its historic role in authorising changes or modifications to the authoritative root zone file."

Battle, it seems, is about to begin.

China and iran to censor the net

The report issued by the UN's Working Group on Internet Governance (WGIG) on 14 July recommends that any future governing body does not restrict the freedom of expression of web users, as enshrined in its universal declaration of human rights.

Yet China and Iran, both of which took part in the working group, are currently building the most heavily censored online infrastructures anywhere in the world, according to recent research from the OpenNet Initiative, which monitors internet filtering and surveillance by governments.

"The main message is that measures taken to fight cybercrime should not lead to human rights violations," says WGIG group coordinator Markus Kummer. "China and Iran were with the group consensus on this matter. They did not object to the wording." He thinks China sees the UN declaration as "open to interpretation".

Researchers at OpenNet, a joint venture of the University of Toronto in Canada, Harvard Law School and the University of Cambridge, have found that China's Communist Party-run internet service providers (ISPs) routinely filter out content they deem politically unacceptable. They also appear to hire fake commentators who post pro-government statements on blogs and message boards.

By remotely accessing computers within Iran via a number of routes, OpenNet also found that 34 per cent of the 1465 weblinks they tried were blocked. Some 15 per cent of blogs and 30 per cent of news sites were inaccessible - as were 100 per cent of porn sites.

But what alarms some is that ISPs might be harnessing western technology to aid and abet this sophisticated censorship. For instance, OpenNet found that Iran's ISPs seem to depend heavily on a package called SmartFilter, made by Secure Computing of Seattle, Washington, to stamp out access to what the government deems unacceptable. But the company says its software is being used illegally.

Meanwhile, networking and routing company Cisco Systems of San Jose, California, has come under fire for supplying routers with site blocking, filtering and logging functions to China.

But Cisco's Asia-Pacific spokesman Terry Alberstein, says the technology it sells is the same as that used the world over. "The router technology that lets some countries restrict access to certain information is the same as that which lets our public libraries limit access to unsuitable content. And the blocking technology has other uses, in combating viruses, worms and denial of service attacks."

In any case, blocking access to websites is not rocket science, and nor is logging who is viewing what. China now produces thousands of computer science graduates every year, and Iran has a new religious hard-line president in Mahmoud Ahmadinejad. If there is the will to censor and watch people's internet activity, it will happen with or without outside help.

Wednesday, July 27, 2005

Four myths about evolution...

From Mensa Yahoo Archeology group
Subject: Getting the Monkey off Darwin's Back

A long text - way too long - but interesting food for thought...

Getting the Monkey off Darwin's Back Four Common Myths About Evolution
Evolution is poorly characterized by certain commonly used phrases. Properly communicating how evolution works requires careful attention to language and metaphor.
Charles Sullivan and Cameron Mcpherson Smith
---------------------------------

Nearly 150 years after Charles Darwin published On The Origin of Species, the theory of evolution is still widely misunderstood by the general public. Evolution isn't a fringe theory, and it's not difficult to understand, yet recent surveys reveal that roughly half of Americans believe that humans were created in their present form 10,000 years ago (Brooks 2001, CBS 2004). The same number reject the concept that humans developed from earlier species of animals (National Science Board 2000).
But the evidence is clear that no species, including humans, simply "popped up." Each life form has an evolutionary history, and those histories are intricately intertwined. If we don't understand that complex evolution, we will make poor decisions about our future and that of other species. Should we genetically modify humans? How about our food crops? What effects will global warming have on human biology? None of these questions, nor many others of immediate concern to humanity, can be usefully addressed unless we understand the evolutionary process.
In examining how evolution is portrayed in the mass media, we found many problems; chief among them was the use of inaccurate expressions. In this article we examine the commonly-used phrases "evolution is only a theory," "the ladder of progress," "missing links," and "only the strong survive."
These expressions are misleading at best, and simply wrong at worst. Most of these phrases have ancient roots, describing biology as it was understood centuries ago. They lead to a distorted picture of what evolution is and how it works. Evolution Is Only a Theory
Have you ever heard people challenge evolution by claiming that "it's only a theory?" The Cobb County School District in Georgia did just that when it sought to put stickers on high school biology textbooks stating that, "Evolution is a theory, not a fact, regarding the origins of living things." [1] The problem with this claim rests with two different uses of the word theory. In popular usage the word refers to an unsubstantiated guess or assumption, as when someone theorizes that a light moving across the night sky must be an alien spaceship. When scientists use the word theory, however, they're referring to a logical, tested, well-supported explanation for a great variety of facts. [2] In this sense the theory of evolution is as well supported as the theory of gravitation or other explanatory models in fields such as chemistry or physics. While it's true that much of the evidence for evolution is not obtained by laboratory experiments, as in chemistry and physics, the same can
also be said for geology and cosmology.
A geologist cannot travel back in time to observe first hand the formation of Earth's crust, and a cosmologist cannot witness the collapsing of a star into a black hole, but this doesn't mean that scientific theories about the nature of these phenomena are simply unsubstantiated guesses. Some scientific theories do a better job of accounting for the facts than others, and in biology there is no competing scientific theory with more explanatory power than evolution. Biologist Theodosius Dobzhansky put it best when he said, "Nothing in biology makes sense except in the light of evolution."
Many people confuse evolutionary theory with Lamarckism, named for the French naturalist Jean-Baptiste Lamarck (1744-1829). In one sense Lamarck was an evolutionist in that he favored the view that new species had evolved from ancestral species, but he was mistaken about the mechanism by which species change, and about the time required for these changes. Lamarck thought that the mechanism for biological change was the transmission to the next generation of characteristics acquired during the life span of an individual. His most famous example is that of the giraffe. According to Lamarck, the giraffe's ancestors had shorter necks, and they would stretch their necks to reach higher foliage in trees. Their descendants then inherited longer necks because the characteristics of these newly stretched necks of the parents were passed down to their offspring. Moreover, Lamarck thought that the evolution of a new species could occur within a few generations or even one. His position was
reasonable for its time, yet it happens to be incorrect.
But acquired characteristics are not passed on. [3] If you lose your arm in an accident, your offspring will not be born with a missing arm. If you lift weights to gain muscle mass, you will not transmit larger muscles to your offspring. Jews have been practicing circumcision for hundreds of generations, yet there is no evidence that this acquired feature is biologically inherited.
The position of modern evolutionary theory (Neo-Darwinism [4]) is that some ancestors of giraffes acquired slightly longer necks through random mutation. These animals could eat food that was a little out of reach of others of their species, and so they tended to be healthier, to live longer, and have a better chance than their fellows at mating and passing on to the next generation their genes for longer necks. Many such incremental changes over a long period of time are required for a new species-or a neck as long as a giraffe's-to arise.
The evolution of giraffes or other life forms should not be thought of as a singular process. There are at least three independent processes that, when taken together, form our idea of evolution. These are replication, variation, and selection. Replication is essentially reproduction. Variation refers to the random changes-typically mutations-arising in offspring, making them different from their parents. Selection refers to the process whereby those individuals best adapted to their environment tend to be the ones that survive, passing on their genes. These three processes occur every day in nature, and it is their cumulative effect that we call evolution.
If an entirely new scientific theory with more explanatory power is formulated, then Neo-Darwinism will have to be swept aside just as Lamarckism was. Creationism and Intelligent Design don't qualify as competing scientific theories because they're not scientific. They don't offer natural explanations for biological phenomena, but rather supernatural explanations which cannot be tested scientifically. Neo-Darwinism offers a natural explanation to account for the facts of evolution, and rejects supernatural explanations.
When discussing the theory of evolution it's important to realize why it's misleading to say that evolution is only a theory. Evolution is indeed a theory, but it's a theory with a lot of evidence on its side, and with more explanatory power than any competing theory in biology. The Ladder of Progress
The word evolution is sometimes used to mean progress. People speak of moral evolution when discussing certain cultural changes that have been for the better, such as the increased recognition of the rights of women. Or they speak of technological evolution when comparing present-day technology with that of ancient hunter-gatherers. This sense of the word evolution implies a progressive development toward better or more advanced stages. It is this non-biological sense of evolution that influences people to think of biological evolution as involving ladder-like progress from lower to higher stages.
The idea of an evolutionary ladder of progress has its roots in Classical Greek and Medieval European concepts about the nature of the universe. The most common manifestation is known as the Great Chain of Being, which was most influential in Europe from the fifteenth through the eighteenth centuries. The basic idea of the Great Chain of Being is that God and his creation form a hierarchy which is ordered from the least perfect things or beings at the bottom of the chain to the most perfect at the top, namely, God himself. Simply put, the ranking from bottom to top is as follows: rocks or minerals, plants, animals, man, angels, God.
The Great Chain of Being scheme wasn't designed with evolution in mind since the prevailing idea of the time was that God made all existing species, in their modern forms, long ago. The Great Chain of Being is best described as a method of classification. This idea began to lose support before the Darwinian revolution, but Darwin's ideas and their refinement ultimately broke the links of the Great Chain of Being.
The modern biological understanding of evolution does not involve progress in the sense of a natural upward goal toward which life is striving. [5] Genetic mutations arise randomly.
A study of the DNA of Darwin's finches on the Galapagos Islands (Petren et al. 1999) provides a good example of why the idea of progress makes no sense in evolution. The study's findings suggest that the first finches to arrive on the islands were the Warbler finches (Certhidea olivacea), whose pointy beaks made them good insect eaters. A number of other finches evolved later from the Warbler finches. One of these is the Geospiza ground finch, whose broad beak is good for crushing seeds, and another is the Camarhynchus tree finch with its blunt beak which is well adapted for tearing vegetation.
Even though the seed-eating and vegetation-eating finches evolved from insect-eating finches, the former are not "more evolved" than the latter, or "higher" on some evolutionary ladder. Since finch evolution on the Galapagos Islands was driven primarily by diet, the ground finches simply became better adapted at making a living on seeds, the tree finches on vegetation, and the Warbler finches on insects.
If seeds were to become scarce on the Galapagos Islands, it's conceivable that the seed-eating finches-which are a more recent species-could become extinct, while the insect-eating finches-which have been around much longer-would continue to thrive. The concepts of "higher" and "lower" do not apply to the Galapagos finches or anywhere else in evolution. It is fitness or adaptability relative to the environment that matters. Species cannot foretell the future in order to adapt themselves deliberately to environmental changes, and if the environment changes drastically, those adaptations that were once favorable may turn out to be unfavorable.
Even though biologists reject the Great Chain of Being or any similar ladder-of-progress explanation of evolution, the idea still persists in popular culture. A more accurate analogy would be that of a bush that branches in many directions. If we think of evolution over time in this way, we're less likely to be confused by notions of progress because the branches of a bush can grow in various directions in three dimensions, and new branches can sprout off of older branches without implying that those farther from the trunk are better or more advanced than those closer to the trunk. A more recent branch that has split off from an earlier branch-like a species that has evolved from an ancestral species-does not indicate greater progress or advancement. Rather, it is simply a new and different growth on the bush, or more specifically, a new species that is sufficiently adapted to its environment to survive. The Missing Link
"Fossils May be Humans' Missing Link" reported the Washington Post on April 22, 1999. The story states that fossils discovered in Ethiopia ". . . may well be the long-sought immediate predecessor of human beings." But almost fifty years earlier, paleontologist Robert Broom published Finding the Missing Link (1950), about his discovery of fossil "ape men" in South African caves. And since 1950, reports of the discovery of "missing links" have been continuous. What's going on? How is it that the "missing link" has been discovered repeatedly?
The problem lies in a false metaphor. When we say "missing link," we invoke a metaphorical chain, a set of links that stretch far back in time. Each link represents a single species, a single variety of life. Because each link is connected to two other links, each is intimately connected to past and future forms. Break one link, and the pieces of the chain can be separated, and relationships lost. But find a lost link, and you can rebuild the chain, reconnect separated lengths. One potent reason for the attractiveness of this metaphor is that it allows for the drama of the quest, the search for that elusive missing link.
But the metaphor is as misleading as it is attractive. The concept that each species is a link in a great chain of life forms was largely developed in the typological age of biology, when species "fixity" (the idea that species were unchanging) was the dominant paradigm. Both John Ray (1627-1705) and Carolus Linnaeus (1707-1797), the architects of biological classification (neither of whom believed in evolution), were concerned with describing the order of living species, an order they each believed was laid out by God (Ray suggested that the divinely specified function of biting insects was to plague the wicked). But while the links of a chain are discrete, unchanging, and easily defined, groups of life forms are not. [6] We generally define a species as some interbreeding group that cannot, or does not, productively breed with another group. But since species are not fixed (they change through time), it can be difficult to be sure where one species ends and another begins. For
these reasons, many modern biologists prefer a continuum metaphor, in which shades of one life form grade into another. [7] Life is not arranged as links, but as shades. The metaphorical chain is far less substantial than it sounds.
Thus the chain metaphor is wrong. It doesn't accurately represent biology as we know it today, but as it was understood over four centuries ago. The myth persists because of convenience; it is easier to think of species as types, with discrete qualities, than as grades between one species and another. In school, we learn the specific characteristics of plants and animals; this alone is not a problem, except that we are not often exposed to the main ramification of evolution: that those characteristics will change through time.
Clearly, both the Post article and Broom's book describe the discovery of australopithecenes, African hominids [8] that lived well over three million years ago. Australopithecenes walked upright, like modern humans, but they had large, chimp-like teeth, and smallish, chimp-like brains. Australopithecenes made rudimentary stone tools that are more complex than any chimpanzee's termite-mound probe stick, but far less complex than the symmetrical tools made by early members of our genus, Homo. In terms of anatomy and behavior, some australopithecenes really do appear to be "half human." Additionally, it's widely believed that early Homo descended from some variety of late australopithecene. Broom was right after all, but so was the Post; a "missing link" has indeed been found. It is Australopithecus. But there were many varieties of Australopithecus, as well as Homo, and there is no obvious place to draw a discrete line separating a shade of late Australopithecus from an early grade of
Homo. Therefore, it's more accurate to say that we have found some "grade" or "shade," rather than "the missing link." [9]
We can curb the false metaphor by changing our wording. In classes, in textbooks, in discussions with our students, and in press releases (the critical connection between academia and the general public), we have to start saying that we're looking for a missing link, rather than the missing link. Better yet, we should replace the "missing link" stock phrase with something more accurate. Only the Strong Survive
Around a million years ago, an ape so large that it's now known as Gigantopithecus roamed the bamboo forests of South Asia. Standing nine feet tall, weighing from 600 to 1,000 pounds, and with a bamboo-crushing jaw the size of a mailbox, this was a truly strong creature. But today, all that remains of Gigantopithecus are a few fossil teeth and jawbones, quietly resting in museum vaults.
If only the strong survive, how did early Homo-protohuman bipeds that were in the same area at the same time, and were less than half the size of Gigantopithecus-survive? Wouldn't any clash between these creatures result in the strapping Über-ape annihilating the competition?
Yesterday's giants can be today's museum specimens. If only the strong survive, though, how is this possible? Indeed, how is it that humans are now ascendant on Earth, but, when stripped of tools and culture, we are among the most helpless of animals?
The answer, of course, is that strength can be measured in many ways. Brawn is one measure; brain is another. But this distinction is often lost in popular culture. When we say "the strong," or even "the fittest," most people immediately think of competition between individuals. These individuals, we imagine, are pitted against one another in some evolutionary arena, where they fight for survival and mates. The strongest survive, pass on their genes, and propagate their lineage. The loser, and its entire lineage, goes extinct.
But this notion of single combat in a single arena of competition is too simple. In reality, there are dozens of arenas, dozens of problems any organism must face in life. Perhaps direct competition with other individuals is one, but every day individuals are kicked from one arena to the next. If the river dries up, you're now in the Arena of Water Conservation. If the temperature suddenly drops, you're pushed into the Arena of Heat Conservation. If the properties of the vegetation you eat begin to change, you're now in the Arena of Metabolic Versatility.
In short, survival is much more complex than is implied by the single-arena concept of combat between individuals. Life forms struggle against a wide array of factors, and often against more than one factor at a time. In biology, these factors are known as selective pressures.
Selective pressures also change. A certain selective pressure can be particularly hard-pressing for a period, shaping the course of evolution, but later that pressure may ease, and another concern becomes primary. And since the environment is always changing, no species can ever be sure what selective pressures it will have to cope with tomorrow. Indeed, such conscious anticipation of the future is precluded for most species (could deer have anticipated the invention of guns?), and evolution is entirely reactive, shaping species according to past and present environments, but never "looking" into the future. [10]
We humans, and all life forms, exist and struggle not in any single arena, but in an immense web of selective pressures that is incomprehensibly complex and ever-changing. Survival is much more involved than simply beating down your immediate peers.
Why does the single-combatant, evolutionary arena myth persist? The answer is probably deeply intertwined with renaissance values of individualism too complex to examine here [11] but it is clearly related to nineteenth-century Social Darwinism. Social Darwinists grafted Darwin's basic ideas about biological evolution to human society and economy. To them, progress could only be made by eliminating imperfections from humanity, and this was best done by competition. That competition, neatly summarized by Herbert Spencer's term "survival of the fittest," was taken to mean the competition between individuals. It is significant that today's reality-TV programs are steeped in this metaphor, in which the concept of survival via ruthless individual competition is paramount.
The best way to curb this myth is to teach that brute strength does not guarantee long-term success. In fact, no single characteristic does. More importantly, we need to describe why there is no single key to long-term success, because we never know how our selective environment is going to change. For humanity, then, the only hope for success, for survival, is in remaining flexible and adaptive. Real strength is in adaptability, which comes from genetic and cognitive variation. Conclusion
A picture of evolution based on the common myths we've outlined is a mosaic of confusion. It's very important to remedy this confusion, because how we think of ourselves, and every other species on Earth, is directly related to how we understand evolution. We can either see ourselves as separated from a natural world that simply serves as a theater for our evolution,12 or as one of many coevolving species of life on Earth. The former view is more likely to persist if we continue to describe evolution using obsolete or faulty expressions. The latter view, which is accurate, will be promoted by a better use of language, and by acknowledging what we have learned about biology in the past 150 years. [13]
Solutions for conveying this accurate view must include more careful use of language and metaphor to explain exactly what evolution is, and how it happens. Notes
The entire disclaimer reads: "This textbook contains material on evolution. Evolution is a theory, not a fact, regarding the origin of living things. This material should be approached with an open mind, studied carefully, and critically considered." This led to a lawsuit, Selman v. Cobb County School District. On January 13, 2005, a federal judge found this policy unconstitutional.
See, for example, "What's Wrong with 'Theory not Fact' Resolutions." National Center for Science Education. 7 December 2000. Available here.
However, a recent study on fruitflies suggests that some genetic instructions that are not encoded in the DNA may be passed on to offspring by way of material encompassing the DNA (Lin et al. 2004).
Developed in the 1930s, Neo-Darwinism (also called the Modern Synthesis) integrates Darwin's theory of natural selection with the theory of genetic inheritance first proposed by Gregor Mendel and subsequently refined by later biologists.
Biologists disagree about whether there is an evolutionary tendency toward complexity, primarily because there is no consensus on how complexity should be defined and measured.
The species concept is introduced in Strickberger (1985:747-756), but also see Mallet (1995) for the need to review how we define species.
Lions and tigers once coexisted naturally in India, and although they are outwardly very different, they can mate to create tigons or ligers. Since such hybrids were never found in nature, however, it is known that lion and tiger did not interbreed naturally. Thus, genetically, lion and tiger can be classified as one species, but behaviorally, they differed enough to be considered separate species by biologists, and in nature this difference was maintained by the animals themselves (Wilson 1977:7).
Hominids are large primates that walk upright. Those of the genus Australopithecus (which predate the human lineage Homo) are referred to as australopithecenes. They appear over 4 million years ago. Many hominid varieties have existed, but Homo sapiens sapiens is the only living hominid.
The link metaphor also suggests that any given species is represented by only one chain, as when we see a diagram of hominids, first knuckle-walking, then hunched over in a half-stand, then upright as modern man. This depiction does not show several other bipedal hominid varieties to which we are related, such as the robust australopithecenes (appearing over 4 million years ago, disappearing about 1 million years ago) or the Neanderthals (who appear around 300,000 years ago and are extinct by c.30,000 years ago). The depiction suggests that there was one, unbroken chain, from quadruped to biped, but actually there have been bipeds that have gone extinct (as well as quadrupeds that exist today).
Humanity, of course, is uniquely proactive. We can imagine the future, and we prepare for it by controlling our evolution with all sorts of social and biological methods. Social methods include complex kinship and marriage rules that ensure gene flow among different populations. Biological methods include mass vaccination programs against polio and smallpox.
See for example Shanahan (2004), an interesting comment in Commager (1965:82-83), and Butterfield (1965:222-246).
We suggest that this view of humanity contributes to wasteful use of resources; for example, humanity has chronically overfished nearly every fishery ever discovered; see Jackson et al. (2001).
It's not sufficient to constantly explain away old, inaccurate expressions: we must develop new ones. What is the use in keeping old metaphors or phrases that do not point to reality? For example, we may say "The Bush of Evolution" or "The Labyrinth of Evolution,' rather than 'The Ladder of Evolution." A good way to find such new metaphors may be to create a Web site where anyone could suggest them, and, after a time, select new ones to start incorporating into our common speech. Perhaps poets, being familiar with the power of image and metaphor, could be helpful.

References
Brooks, D.J. 2001. Substantial numbers of Americans continue to doubt evolution as explanation for origins of humans. The Gallup Organization. Available online here.
Broom, R. 1950. Finding the Missing Link. London: Watts & Co.
Butterfield, H. 1965. The Origins of Modern Science. New York: MacMillan.
CBS News Polls. 2004. Creationism trumps evolution. CBSNEWS.com. Available online here.
Commager, H.S. 1965. The Nature and Study of History. Columbus, Ohio: Charles E. Merrill Books.
Dobzhansky, Theodosius. 1973. Nothing in biology makes sense except in the light of evolution. The American Biology Teacher 35:125-129.
Jackson, J., M. Kirby, W. Berger, K. Bjorndal, L. Botsford, et al. 2001. Historical overfishing and the recent collapse of coastal ecosystems. Science 297:629-637.
Lin, Q., Q. Chen, L. Lin, and J. Zhou. 2004. The Promoter Targeting Sequence mediates epigenetically heritable transcription memory. Genes & Development 18: 2639-2651.
Mallet, J. 1995. A species definition for the modern synthesis. Trends in Ecology and Evolution 10:294-299.
National Science Board. 2000. Science and Engineering Indicators. Washington, D.C. US Government Printing Office. Available online here.
Petren, K., B.R. Grant, and P.R. Grant. 1999. A phylogeny of Darwin's finches based on microsatellite DNA length variation. Proceedings of the Royal Society of London B266: 321-329.
Shanahan, T. 2004. The Evolution of Darwinism: Selection, Adaptation and Progress in Evolutionary Biology. New York: Cambridge University Press.
Strickberger, M.W. 1985. Genetics. New York: Macmillan.
Suplee, C. 1999. Fossil find may be that of humans' immediate predecessor. The Washington Post, April 23. pp. A3, A11.
Wilson, E.O. 1977. Sociobiology. Harvard, Massachusetts: The Belknap Press of Harvard University Press.

Friday, July 08, 2005

Attends une seconde!

La seconde qui vous manquait
Plus besoin d'attendre, elle arrive finalement en 2005...
L'année 2005 sera plus longue que prévu. Le Bureau international de l'heure, qui coordonne à Paris l'activité des horloges atomiques du monde, a décidé d'ajouter une seconde à l'année 2005.
ll s'agit de compenser le ralentissement de la rotation de la Terre. Les experts pensent que le récent tremblement de terre de Sumatra peut avoir légèrement contribué à ce ralentissement.

Le dernier ajout du genre remonte à 1998. La seconde sera à la toute fin du 31 décembre,juste avant l'arrivée du Nouvel An.

Les ordinateurs branchés à Internet feront la correction automatiquement.

Wednesday, July 06, 2005

Hi Art! Blogs are fun and flexible...

Sitting on top of the world...

Brave people on mountain top

Our two friends from the Boston area, Art and Marina, were brave and crazy enough to climb Mont St-Hilaire on very hot and humid day. It must have been over 100 F that day!

Tuesday, July 05, 2005

Creation and evolution

Un texte du groupe Mensa Archeology. Bien que ça déborde allègrement du domaine de l'archéologie, ce sujet m'intéresse beaucoup. J'aime particulièrement cette partie:
...all living creatures on Earth are relatives, even if some are cousins untold billions of times removed. We living things are all family, and wherever we look, it is abundantly clear that our differences are a matter of degree, not substance....

Creation and evolution: Reconciling faith and reason.

`Men never do evil as completely and cheerfully as when they do it
from religious conviction' – Blaise Pascal.

There had been a growing realisation that the old school biology
curriculum, hitherto little more than an unedifying `naming of the
parts', has yet to enter the twentieth century. The Department of
Education now wants to do something about it, by introducing the
theory of evolution. Just in time for the twenty-first century.
Predictably, across the print media spectrum, this has prompted a
flurry of indignant `letters to the editor' from the anti-evolution
lobby. A recurring theme in these letters is exquisitely ironic: from
a platform based on purely doctrinal belief, comes a shrill demand
for `proof'. This betrays a misunderstanding of scientific method
that needs correcting.

No theory can be proven conclusively, nor does it need proving.
Proof is an abstract concept for mathematicians or a legal one for
lawyers, but the basis of scientific method lies exclusively in
refutation, or disproof. Formal reasoned enquiry is nothing more
than an extension of what we all do from the moment we are born:
building mental models of physical causes and effects, which inform
our responses to fresh events in the quest to stay alive. These
models are continuously discarded, replaced and adapted with
experience. So it is with science: An hypothesis is proposed to
explain the mechanisms underlying observed facts and events, and as
long as the hypothesis remains in keeping with the observed causes
and effects it purports to explain, it gains the status of a theory,
provisionally accepted as a working explanation for the time being.
Where facts emerge in conflict with a theory, it is discarded or
corrected to admit the new facts, improving its predictive power. Or
if another hypothesis is proposed that more efficiently (that is,
more simply) explains everything the old theory explained and more
besides, the old theory might be tossed on the scrap heap altogether.
This process has over the centuries been enormously useful. Even
obsolete theories can remain powerful: Newton's equations are still
used by airline pilots every day, despite Einstein's comprehensive
refutation. Yet from the moment this process of rational enquiry
ventured beyond mere survival, it has had to contend with the most
dogmatic and hysterical persecution whenever its discoveries came
into conflict with entrenched doctrine. Doctrine that turned out to
be just plain wrong. Just recall the treatment meted out to
Copernicus for suggesting, on fairly solid observational grounds,
that the sun might not revolve around the earth after all.

In the case of evolution, no credible refutation has yet emerged.
Granted, Darwin has been shown to have been wrong in most of his
speculative details as to the mechanisms of inheritance and
variation. And it seems he was over-focussed on competition, whereas
a more modern understanding reveals as much co-operation as
competition* . But the last century and a half of careful research
and analysis has only strengthened the broad sweep of the theory, and
has filled in more consistent and rigorous detail, across a multitude
of disciplines, than Darwin ever dreamed of. This only magnifies the
scale of his achievement - it takes rare insight to perceive the
workings of the big and complex without knowing its small and
detailed components. Much constructive debate as to details
continues, but our entire understanding of life on this planet and
how it works would make no sense at all without the evolutionary
framework to give it a coherent structure. As with all scientific
theories, for a criticism of evolution to be valid, the onus lies
squarely on the critic to disprove it. Nothing remotely close has
been forthcoming to date, still less a proposal for a more efficient
and robust theory to replace it: Indeed, the entire creationist
thesis lies in one or two pages of allegorical mythology, whose
literal interpretation has been completely and comprehensively
disproved.

The circumstantial evidence for the theory of evolution is
overwhelming, but if `proof' is required, it would have to be argued
from first principles. The following basic observations might serve:

1. Each individual of a species is unique (except perhaps
clones, rare enough to ignore here).
2. The progeny of two individuals exhibits some similarities to
each of its parents, but is also unique, not being identical to
either parent.
3. The environment changes with the passage of time.
4. Some individuals live long enough to reproduce, others do not.

Given these four indisputable facts and a little bit of logical
thought, evolution, the diversification of organisms through time and
space, is simply inevitable, there can be no other outcome.
Evolution is the mechanism which gives life as a whole its wonderful
capacity to `go forth and multiply' in the fullest sense of the
phrase, to expand and adapt itself to its changing surroundings, and
to ever more efficiently fill the spaces which allow it to thrive and
diversify. An omnipotent creator could not possibly have arranged it
any other way. A world in which all the known species were
separately brought into being ab initio, without the capacity to
adapt and develop, would be a bleak and stunted world of decay and
stagnation, and it wouldn't have lasted long. Our world is clearly
not like that. As long as life exists, it stands on the thresholds of
unlimited possibility.

Philosophically, a profound pause for reflection that evolution opens
up is the recognition that all living creatures on Earth are
relatives, even if some are cousins untold billions of times removed.
We living things are all family, and wherever we look, it is
abundantly clear that our differences are a matter of degree, not
substance. It was this implication that sparked the initial Western
hostility towards Darwin, as the sheer hubris of that society would
not permit them to accept that they might have been descended from
the same ancestors as mere monkeys. Indeed, many could not even
accept other races as their brethren! It is sad and ironic that this
anthropocentric arrogance lives on, in small pockets of fearful
bitterness within the ranks of religions that mostly profess goodness
and humility. After all, a religious viewpoint that denies the
essential kinship of life on earth seems a rather mean-spirited one.

The fear and loathing inspired by the concept of evolution among
these critics is based on a mistaken interpretation of what the
theory is about: a vague idea that it is somehow an explanation of
the origin of life, involving an explicit attack on the notion of a
creator. It is nothing of the kind, despite Darwin's misleading use
of the word `origin' on the cover of his book (And despite Richard
Dawkins's own loudly-claimed atheistic belief which sometimes
contaminates his otherwise splendid scientific reasoning).
Evolutionary theory is (thus far) silent on origins, and it has even
less to say about the existence of deities: it only describes the
mechanisms of life's diversification, given its existence. Indeed,
most scientific theory can only explain events as consequences of
previous events within time and space. It loses all relevance in
matters metaphysical, or as a physicist might say, beyond the
singularities which mark the analytical boundaries of the observable
universe. Granted, science does not permit the invocation of a
divine influence as an answer in its analysis of causes and effects,
because that is just another way of saying we don't know, and it
yields no useful predictions. But equally, science does not rule out
a `prime mover' either. It simply has nothing to say on the subject.
Whether there is a grand design set in motion by a creator, within
which the known `laws of nature' (that is, the sum total of all
theories in current use) operate with observable consistency, or
whether the same body of natural law is all just a gigantic
coincidence with no purpose or meaning, are questions that cannot be
answered from within the scientific paradigm.

These questions remain in the realm of metaphysics, the domain of
faith. And faith itself is a concept that demands an absence of both
proof and disproof. In the metaphysical world, one is free to believe
whatever one wants. But there is no such luxury in the physical
world of how things work. If the best available evidence and reason
points in one direction, whether one likes it or not, believing it
isn't so is not an option. Clearly, no amount of faith will stop a
brick from falling on your foot if you drop it there – although it
might help in transcending the pain.

Reason and faith are each unintelligible from within the other's
frame of reference, and neither has any business in the other's
domain. Yet both are paradoxically complementary. Just as reason
informs our understanding of the physical world, faith informs the
use to which we put that understanding, whatever it is we believe in.
Our power over the world is now such that the things we humans do
will largely determine the future directions life will take – an
awesome responsibility that we do not always use wisely. In our
actions lie the intersection of both faith and reason, where the
concepts of right and wrong, good and evil take on concrete reality –
after all, the final arbiter of what constitutes right and wrong lies
exclusively in the potential for actions taken by humans to create or
alleviate suffering. Honest use of the scientific method is the only
way we have available to understand the likely consequences of our
actions before we act, in making those choices wisely.
The `creationist' agenda that actively seeks to suppress,
misrepresent, or deny the abundantly confirmed and reconfirmed
conclusions of the most detailed and painstaking research is simply
the wilful fostering of ignorance, a form of dishonesty wholly
incompatible with the compassionate tenets of the religion on which
it is based.

* Herbert Spencer's phrase `Survival of the fittest', is arguably the
most misunderstood soundbite of all time. Spencer ( And Darwin) did
not mean that the biggest muscliest nastiest specimens kill or
overrun the small weak ones. In his time, `fit' did not have the
athletic meaning used nowadays. The use of the term here was in the
sense of a key `fit'ting a lock – the organism that best `fits' its
environmental context will thrive and have more offspring than one
not so well attuned to its surroundings - and THAT is the engine of
evolution.

New Scientist Breaking News - Footprints rewrite history of first Americans

New Scientist Breaking News - Footprints rewrite history of first Americans
Encore une fois, ce qui était vrai ne l'est plus... On remplace l'histoire par des nouvelles données - jusqu'à la prochaine découverte. Fascinant!
Footprints rewrite history of first Americans
10:59 05 July 2005
NewScientist.com news service
Robert Adler
Human footprints discovered beside an ancient Mexican lake have been dated to 40,000 years ago. If the finding survives the controversy it is bound to stir up, it means that humans must have moved into the New World at least 30,000 years earlier than previously thought.

“If true, this would completely change our view of how and when the Americas were first colonised,” says Chris Stringer, head of human origins at the Natural History Museum in London, UK. But like several US experts, he is reserving judgement until the dates can be independently confirmed.

The discovery was made by an international team led by Silvia Gonzalez, a geoarchaeologist at Liverpool John Moores University in the UK. She found the fossilised footprints in 2003 in a quarry near the city of Puebla, 100 kilometres southeast of Mexico City. “I walked 1 metre and started to see them,” Gonzalez says. “It felt like a thunderbolt.”

In just two days, Gonzalez and her colleagues found hundreds of human and animal footprints preserved in a layer of ash from a nearby volcano. The footprints were made along the shore of a lake and were submerged after the water level rose, preserving them under sediments.

“They are unmistakably human footprints,” says team member Matthew Bennett at Bournemouth University in the UK. “They meet all the criteria that were set up after the Laetoli prints were found [in Tanzania in 1976].” The sizes suggests that about one-third of them were made by children.

Sand and shells

But when were they made? It has taken the team two years, using a panoply of high-tech dating techniques, to determine that the prints are about 40,000 years old.

The key date came from shells in the lake sediments, which the team carbon-dated to 38,000 years ago. Sand grains baked into the ash and dated using optically stimulated luminescence corroborated the finding.

The researchers also used argon-argon, uranium series and electron spin resonance techniques to date the layers. “The footprints are clearly older than 38,000 years,” says team member Tom Higham of the carbon-dating lab at the University of Oxford, US.

The conventional view is that humans arrived in the Americas via Beringia around 11,000 years ago, when a land bridge became available between Siberia and Alaska. There have been claims about earlier waves of settlers, who must have made the crossing over water, based mainly on sites with signs of habitation dated up to 40,000 years ago, but these claims have drawn intense criticism.

“Accurate and reproducible”

Gonzalez and her team expect the same. “This will be incredibly controversial, there’s no doubt about that,” Higham says. They invite other researchers to scrutinise their findings, due to be published in the journal Quaternary Science Review.

“We have done a year of solid work to make sure it’s accurate and reproducible,” Higham stresses.

How people got to Mexico 40 millennia ago is a matter for speculation. Bennett suspects that they migrated along the Pacific coasts of Asia and North America. But when it comes to the dates and footprints, he says, “those are not speculation at all".

The footprints remain where they were found. The team has used laser scans and rapid prototyping equipment to create highly accurate three-dimensional copies, accurate to a fraction of a millimetre, which can be viewed at the Royal Society's Summer Exhibition in London, UK, which ends on 7 July.

Monday, July 04, 2005

OGM: étiquetage obligatoire à l'automne

OGM: étiquetage obligatoire àl'automne
Excellente nouvelle!
OGM: étiquetage obligatoire à l'automne
Mise à jour le lundi 4 juillet 2005 à 15 h 09
Chose promise, chose due. Le gouvernement du Québec pourrait aller de l'avant, dès cet automne, dans le dossier de l'étiquetage obligatoire des aliments contenant des organismes génétiquement modifiés (OGM). Selon le quotidien Le Devoir, le gouvernement de Jean Charest procéderait dès la rentrée parlementaire.
Le principe de l'étiquetage aurait déjà été accepté, et il ne resterait plus qu'à élaborer les modalités d'application du règlement.

Le premier ministre Charest a promis une telle réglementation en campagne électorale, malgré les tensions entre les groupes d'environnementalistes et de consommateurs qui s'opposaient aux industriels de l'agroalimentaire.

Une commission parlementaire a recommandé au gouvernement, en juin 2004, de procéder à un tel étiquetage obligatoire.

L'industrie agroalimentaire s'oppose à cette mesure en raison des coûts qu'elle entraînera et du déséquilibre qu'elle créera pour les producteurs québécois face à leurs concurrents des autres provinces. Les produits québécois seront ainsi désavantagés, selon eux.

That's exciting! - Deep Impact smashes all expectations

New Scientist SPACE - Breaking News - Deep Impact smashes all expectations
Deep Impact smashes all expectations
10:29 04 July 2005
NewScientist.com news service
David L Chandler, Pasadena

Comet Tempel 1 has smashed into the Deep Impact probe, producing a blast of light that prompted the mission control room at NASA's Jet Propulsion Laboratory in California, US, to erupt into cheers and applause.

Scientists and engineers jumped in the air, pumped their fists and hugged one another. Not only had their mission to deliberately collide with a comet for the first time succeeded perfectly, but the prospect of a damp squib - with the impactor passing right through a diffuse, rubbly comet - had fizzled away.

"Geez, and we thought it was going to be subtle," exulted JPL scientist Don Yeomans, one of the Deep Impact science team. "That was considerably brighter, and had considerably more material coming out, than I had expected," he said.

"We are just ecstatic," said JPL director Charles Elachi of the success of the $330 million mission. "It was worth every penny we spent on it."

The aim of the cosmic collision was to punch a hole in the comet's crusty surface to release material from below, revealing details about the interior of comets. These bodies of ice and dust a few kilometres across are believed to contain primordial material, preserved since the formation of the solar system in the deep-freeze of space.

Huge plume

One reason for the spectacular burst could be that puncturing the comet's crust released subsurface pressure, allowing a much bigger plume of ejecta to spurt out, Yeomans said.

However, it will take detailed analysis to confirm exactly what happened 83 million miles from Earth. "How a washing-machine sized impactor could produce such a large disturbance is going to take some explanation," Yeomans said.

Even before the impact itself, the twin spacecraft - the impactor itself, and the flyby craft which moved aside to observe it - were both returning images far more detailed than any previous images of a comet's nucleus. At about 28 centimetres, the maximum image resolution is almost 100 times better than the previous best comet images, taken in 2004 by the Stardust mission.

The pictures show numerous perfectly circular features, which could either be impact craters or sinkholes. They also display long linear features and a varied topography of rough areas and one smooth region - "everything a geologist would love", Yeomans said.

Unidentified spectra

Dozens of observatories on Earth, as well as four in orbit, were also watching the comet at the time of impact, during which the comet brightened to six times its pre-impact level. It will take days to collect and analyse all the measurements, says Deep Impact principal investigator Michael A'Hearn.

But it is already clear that there are some unidentified spectral features in the light reflected from the ejected material, meaning the mission's goal of learning new things about the internal composition of the comet will clearly be fulfilled.

And the amazing images returned by the probe immediately after the impact represent just 10% of the total taken, A'Hearn added: "There are many more spectacular images."

Sandblasting fear

The Deep Impact team were not only delighted by the success of the impact, but also by the survival of the flyby spacecraft after it was spattered by debris from the comet’s tail, or coma.

"It is completely intact," says Keyur Patel, the Deep Impact deputy project manager. And pictures returned since show that the craft's optics survived as well, escaping a feared sandblasting of its lenses.

But there is one possible downside to the spectacular plume produced by the impact, Yeomans told New Scientist. The fan of dust was so large, bright and long lasting that it may have blocked the flyby craft's attempts to take pictures of the resulting crater.

The craft only had a 13-minute window to take such pictures. "The dust we kicked up made things a little more difficult - it's fairly opaque," he says.

Project scientists were so unsure of the impact's effects that they had a betting pool as to how large the crater would be - one of the most important indicators of the structure of the comet nucleus.

You can view a movie here of Deep Impact's approach to comet Tempel 1 between 1 May and 2 July, two days before the impact. It is made up of images from the spacecraft's medium-resolution camera and shows three flare-ups of gas and dust.