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Archive for July, 2007

Changing from Tacit to Explicit Requirements

Posted: Saturday, July 14th, 2007 @ 12:03 pm in Business, Health, Politics | 2 Comments »

An episode of Freakonomics embodied the concept that creating explicit requirements replaces prior tacit requirements. In this episode, a day-care center in Haifa imposed an explicit fine for late pick-ups by parents. In contradiction to the expected decrease in late pick-ups, the explicit fine replaced the tacit penalty of parental guilt and the number of [...]

Can we “save” science in a culture of anti-intellectualism?

Posted: Saturday, July 14th, 2007 @ 1:01 am in Politics, Science, Technology | 1 Comment »

In his Times Eye on Science Blog of 11 July, Michael Lemonick addresses the issues of Saving American Science, the theme of a recent meeting by the Aspen Science Center. The theme of lagging U.S. innovation in science and technology has been rising as a concern for several years now. Congressman Frank Wolf provides some [...]

The Book Review as an Essay Venue

Posted: Thursday, July 12th, 2007 @ 10:42 pm in Politics, Science, Writing | No Comments »

One of the interesting things mentioned at this year’s Santa Fe Science Writing Workshop was the use of writing a book review as a venue for one’s own essay. John Horgan, who was the leader of my small group at the workshop, did this with his review of Chris Mooney’s The Republican War on Science.
The [...]

Recent Quiescence

Posted: Wednesday, July 11th, 2007 @ 5:47 am in Embodiment, Politics, Writing | No Comments »

I’ve been quiet on this blog lately, but not dormant. The end of May, I was off to the Santa Fe Science Writing Workshop. This allowed me to learn from the faculty and presenters with a great diversity of backgrounds and experience, including NY Times, Scientific American, Knight Media, and freelance work. It was a [...]