Memories do degrade the more we remember them. A number of studies have proven this (http://www.radiolab.org/story/91569-memory-and-forgetting/). The tiniest amount of research would have shown them that their whole model is based an a false premise (lossless memory in humans). Our memories are fantastically-crazy lossy. The act of remembering pretty much rewrites the memory each time.
With a background in Engineering and currently a Biologist I would say that calculus and differential equations are absolutely necessary. Things (objects, fluids, heat, proteins, etc.) move over time. There is no way to describe or model these things without calculus.
Overly inclusive perhaps, but life could generally be defined as the ability to actively resist entropy (maintain low entropy) coupled with a method of passing that ability along. You could say that crystal structure represent a low entropy state, but they have no method to actively propagate it or pass it along other than growing. Throw out counter arguments at will, but I say it's pretty good.
A Ph.D. like all degrees has very little to do with genius. It is a signifier of your ability to work independently for long periods of time (3-6 years), and adapt to changing circumstances. This is the kind of aptitude that employers in nearly any field look for. A high schooler, even a genius, remains unproven in that area. This is why many genius people don't get any degree's yet companies still like to hire Ph.D.'s (even though most of them are not genius).
Yeah, as a Biology Ph.D. I have watched many of my friends go into finance and consulting and a number of other fields. No one gives a crap what your Ph.D. is in. They will look at your publication record (academic jobs) or just interview you to asses your specific skills/reasoning abilities.
Actually efficiency is the fallacy. Because of the huge latency involved in CO2 emissions (what we put up now will be there for ~100 years), the burn rate doesn't matter that much. If we use all of the fossil fuels available it will be the end of the planet as we know it. Whether we draw it out over another 50 years because of increased efficiency doesn't really matter. Increases in efficiency combined with transition away from fossil fuels is the only way to go.
Memories do degrade the more we remember them. A number of studies have proven this (http://www.radiolab.org/story/91569-memory-and-forgetting/). The tiniest amount of research would have shown them that their whole model is based an a false premise (lossless memory in humans). Our memories are fantastically-crazy lossy. The act of remembering pretty much rewrites the memory each time.
This is old news. Using an old (and fun but not novel) technique to confirm what has been known and studied for 20+ years is barely headline news.
Few poll workers lots of voters (many who have no idea what they are doing). Long wait to check in and get ballot to feed the machine.
With a background in Engineering and currently a Biologist I would say that calculus and differential equations are absolutely necessary. Things (objects, fluids, heat, proteins, etc.) move over time. There is no way to describe or model these things without calculus.
They are all old (former heads of whatever) engineers or weathermen. Not a single one is a climate scientist.
If said refrigerator could independently make more of itself, then yes. Inclusion of non organic systems is partly the idea.
Overly inclusive perhaps, but life could generally be defined as the ability to actively resist entropy (maintain low entropy) coupled with a method of passing that ability along. You could say that crystal structure represent a low entropy state, but they have no method to actively propagate it or pass it along other than growing. Throw out counter arguments at will, but I say it's pretty good.
A Ph.D. like all degrees has very little to do with genius. It is a signifier of your ability to work independently for long periods of time (3-6 years), and adapt to changing circumstances. This is the kind of aptitude that employers in nearly any field look for. A high schooler, even a genius, remains unproven in that area. This is why many genius people don't get any degree's yet companies still like to hire Ph.D.'s (even though most of them are not genius).
Yeah, as a Biology Ph.D. I have watched many of my friends go into finance and consulting and a number of other fields. No one gives a crap what your Ph.D. is in. They will look at your publication record (academic jobs) or just interview you to asses your specific skills/reasoning abilities.
Actually efficiency is the fallacy. Because of the huge latency involved in CO2 emissions (what we put up now will be there for ~100 years), the burn rate doesn't matter that much. If we use all of the fossil fuels available it will be the end of the planet as we know it. Whether we draw it out over another 50 years because of increased efficiency doesn't really matter. Increases in efficiency combined with transition away from fossil fuels is the only way to go.