by Colossus on Tue Mar 13, 2007 9:04 am
to me the most fascinating things about quantum mechanics are that
1. the entire universe is basically one huge-ass incredibly complicated orbital
2. nothing is really totally defined at any point in time; everything is based on probability
This means that alll is linked, there is no real division between things or between us, everything is inexorably connected. This means that every action we choose to take alters the entire universe in an infinitesimally small, but real, way.
As for An Inconvenient Truth, it is fraught with scientific exaggerations. I love that it is bringing more public attention to the problems of pollution and global warming, but it, as noted by others in this thread is all too common to the global warming alarmists, has a far too doomsday approach to really reach the masses. I think that the best argument for true change in environmental policy must be made in dollars and cents to be effective, at least in America. And there are lots of great economic reasons for change. Equilibrium is the Natural Law, and there is NO WAY that the Earth will be uninhabitable in 40 years. Just ain't gonna happen. In An Inconvenient Truth, they show CO2 data for the past 600,000 years. The Earth is 4.5 billion years old, and life has been on this planet for about 4 billion years. Multi-cellular life has been here for about a billion years, and mammals for about 200 million. So 600,000 years is not really a comprehensive record of CO2 levels over this planet's history.
And a little note for any students or pre-college teachers out there. Half of what is in biological science (including environmental sciences) textbooks will be proven to be wrong in the next 50 years. I work in scientific academia, and I can tell you that the one universal truth is that scientists don't really know as much as the public thinks they do. The biological and environmental sciences are being revised daily, so be careful of believing all of what you read or see on TV.