Comment on Perils of apocalyptic thinking by Beth Cooper
Cinnamon for memory…mmm. Must remember to buy some….
View ArticleComment on Perils of apocalyptic thinking by Philip Lee
I was tempted to write a reply denying your assertions about our leaders and thermonuclear war, but then I realized that I was old. That threat didn’t arise until my teen years. Back then we didn’t...
View ArticleComment on Education and the Art of Uncertainty by Bart R
Robert I Ellison | April 26, 2012 at 2:13 am | Only 30 years for you? But you’re so much older than I, and I started educating myself in special relativity almost ten years earlier than you. However, I...
View ArticleComment on Evidence of nearby supernovae affecting life on Earth by Bart R
Neil Fisher | April 26, 2012 at 4:15 am | Sorry, no. You’ve mis-guessed the sources of my conclusions; I’ve taken approaches less susceptible to the Salbyist Fallacy, for the simple reason that C12/C13...
View ArticleComment on Perils of apocalyptic thinking by HR
Historically apocalyptic thinking has come out of a sense of oppression or loss. It appeals to the downtrodden or those who are seeing their power fade because it has a sense of ultimate vengeance and...
View ArticleComment on Perils of apocalyptic thinking by Bart R
And amylose for.. uhm.. Well, it’s good. Ask your qualified nutritionist.
View ArticleComment on Perils of apocalyptic thinking by HR
It;s CDC’s job to have us worrying about infectious diseases. And it’s true we’ll all be killed by something one day.
View ArticleComment on Perils of apocalyptic thinking by Bart R
So, is it too offensive to wear: CO2 School Sage, rage Against Denying And de Trite.
View ArticleComment on Perils of apocalyptic thinking by NW
“And it’s true we’ll all be killed by something one day.” Yes, I have it on very good authority that the mortality rate from all causes is unity, with a standard deviation of zero.
View ArticleComment on Perils of apocalyptic thinking by Bart R
huh. NW has a point. There are much better, more educational and relevant answers to what after all wasn’t a very good statement. Especially as there’s worthwhile debate between the two opposed...
View ArticleComment on Perils of apocalyptic thinking by HR
It’s not what the Reformation actually represented but how it impacted on different sections of society. Two versions of Christianity led many to believe that one version represented the Anti-Christ,...
View ArticleComment on Perils of apocalyptic thinking by Scott
http://b612foundation.org/b612/ This is the foundation web site. Actually it is a 60 m one most likely to hit in the next 100 years. That will keep us busyt for a while and then we can worry about the...
View ArticleComment on Perils of apocalyptic thinking by beesaman
We expect our scientists to have definitive answers and an apocalypse is most certainly definitive in its conclusion. Human beings don’t do well with doubt, maybe we need to grow up a bit and get over...
View ArticleComment on Perils of apocalyptic thinking by kim
Ka ka ka Katy, ca ca ca Carrington. =============
View ArticleComment on Perils of apocalyptic thinking by Paul S
3mm/yr is actually consistent, at the lower end, with expected decadal rates at the end of the century, according to the IPCC: http://ipcc.ch/publications_and_data/ar4/wg1/en/ch10s10-6-5.html At the...
View ArticleComment on Perils of apocalyptic thinking by Tom
Thank God, that the owners of Google, were able to place their explosives upon it before it hit the Earth.
View ArticleComment on Perils of apocalyptic thinking by hunter
Joy, *Your* scenarios are fictional. They are driven by disproven claims about slr. It is a nice bit of pathology that has you pretending that those who point this out about the science fiction you are...
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