mander.xyz

Pistcow, to science_memes in I do it all for the stickies.
z500, to science_memes in Physics.
@z500@startrek.website avatar

How to math:

  1. Be expected to somehow already know 50,000 trigonometric identities
  2. Cry
threelonmusketeers,

Be expected to somehow already know 50,000 trigonometric identities

But you can derive the other 49,994 from a half-dozen key ones though.

david, to science_memes in fucking fool

When you find out about Dunning-Kruger and realise that that’s why everyone else in the world is so stupid apart from you.

Conradfart,

Unlike most people, I see what you did there.

sharkfucker420,
@sharkfucker420@lemmy.ml avatar

I sometimes genuinely expect people to know “basic quantum mechanics” and I’ll start ranting about it as if they have some background knowledge and then my roommate looks at me like I’m crazy.

Dr_Cog,
@Dr_Cog@mander.xyz avatar

I do the same with psychology. Except it’s worse because people think they DO know psychology when they absolutely don’t

sharkfucker420,
@sharkfucker420@lemmy.ml avatar

I’m so glad I don’t have to deal with people pretending to know physics that often. Usually I just get “why the fuck did you major in physics” and then I go cry

starman2112,
@starman2112@sh.itjust.works avatar

The funniest part of this comment to me is that it could be said unironically either by someone educated in college or on tiktok

I sometimes expect people to know “basic physics,” which is apparently a bit much to ask sometimes. I don’t mean having a firm grasp on what e=mc² actually means, I don’t even have that. I’m talking about a firm grasp on energy simply being the capacity to do work, and the basic fact that there is no free energy device.

No, you cannot charge an electric car while it’s driving by putting wind turbines on it. No, you cannot use gear ratios to achieve overunity. No, magnets can’t solve the problem either.

PS, if you firmly believe that crystals vibrate on higher frequencies (eta: and that vibration can somehow heal you or something), but can’t describe what frequency amethyst vibrates at in hertz, you are what Dunning and Kruger set out to study

starman2112,
@starman2112@sh.itjust.works avatar

I got curious, so I googled it. There’s a company that sells amethyst that claims it vibrates at 32,876 Hz. They do not describe anything about the physical characteristics of the particular rock they measured, which would have an impact on the frequency at which it vibrates.

Another source claims amethyst resonates with the Crown chakra, which has a frequency of 768 Hz. They do not explain how they derived this frequency. 32,876 is not a multiple of 768, and would not resonate with something that vibrates at that frequency.

Yet another source claims that amethyst vibrates at 963 Hz. It does not list any physical characteristics of the rock they measured, and this is not a multiple of either of the other numbers.

Credit to Beadworks Philadelphia for explaining that different objects have different resonant frequencies, even if they’re made of the same material! Unfortunately, that credit is revoked because they immediately claim that amethyst crystals can cure or treat medical conditions. Shame.

emergencyfood,

if you firmly believe that crystals vibrate on higher frequencies, but can’t describe what frequency amethyst vibrates at in hertz

I’m not a physicist, but I think crystals can vibrate at a fixed frequency? Isn’t that how quartz watches work?

starman2112,
@starman2112@sh.itjust.works avatar

Yes and no. The quartz in watches needs to be tuned to a specific frequency. They do this by either adding material or taking some away, just like a normal tuning fork. Here’s a video explaining it better than I possibly can, and it’s Steve Mould, so you know it’s worth the watch

EpeeGnome,

A crystal’s resonant frequency is determined by its size and shape as well as it’s material. The quartz crystals used in watches and other precision crystal oscillators are machined very exactly. Even then it’s not that they can’t vibrate at other frequencies, they’re just not good at it.

Endorkend,
@Endorkend@kbin.social avatar

"You ever notice how stupid the average person is? Now realize that half of them are dumber than that!"

pooberbee, to science_memes in Who needs GitHub when you can just email the author?

For some reason, the smug “python 2.7” guy makes me so irrationally angry.

ruffsl, to science_memes in Who needs GitHub when you can just email the author?
@ruffsl@programming.dev avatar

Pain… This too painful to be posted as just a meme…

CareHare, to science_memes in fucking fool

Same problem in the abstract art business. Too many artists publish only a summary of their painting or song, instead of the whole deal.

gronjo45, to science_memes in Who needs GitHub when you can just email the author?

Well given that I remember my professors barely knew how to code when they were the ones teaching us, I’m never surprised computational papers are like this…

That’s what you get when people never learn alternatives to MacOS or Windows

Azzu, to science_memes in geopilled af
BluJay320, to science_memes in Remove all barriers in the way of science
@BluJay320@lemmy.blahaj.zone avatar

Well, I wouldn’t say all barriers…

Ethical matters, such as experimentation on animals and especially humans, need barriers in place. We don’t need another Josef Mengele

But I agree with the intended sentiment

Tar_alcaran,

Also, we need barriers related to quality, otherwise you get shit like Andrew Wakefield trying to sell his alternative vaccine, and in the process creating the modern antivax movement

Karlos_Cantana, to mildlyinteresting in This fast food order kiosk accepts cash
@Karlos_Cantana@sopuli.xyz avatar

We had a storm recently that caused power and Internet outages across our city for about a week. Many businesses opened up with no power and just accepted cash while writing down sales with a pen and paper. If you didn’t have cash on you, you were screwed. None of the ATMs worked. Nobody’s credit card machines worked. The banks didn’t have power, so they were closed. Going cashless leaves you in a heap of trouble in an emergency.

DocCrankenstein,

Only in a society that requires cash. They could have just handed people a meal when the walked up and asked for one. there would be no difference except a few executives don’t get their cut.

0110010001100010,
@0110010001100010@lemmy.world avatar

I always carry cash, probably around $100. Not enough that it would be a problem if I got mugged but plenty if I hit a point where I need something essential (food/fuel) to get home or something. I also keep a $20 in the car for fuel if I somehow forget my wallet and run low.

Granted, I only ever use it in a pinch, might as well get the rewards on my credit card instead. But I do on occasion hit a restaurant/store where their internet is down and it’s cash-only.

Rentlar,

In Canada less just over a year ago one major telecom provider’s network went down completely for a couple days… a bunch of businesses couldn’t accept debit or credit, ATMs stopped working, at some places but others running on competitor networks were working. It was still a big annoyance and people got nothing except for sorry! and maybe 20 dollars from carrier at fault (Rogers)

DocCrankenstein, to mildlyinteresting in This fast food order kiosk accepts cash

In a just society these would be allowed to relieve all cashiers from their positions to pursue their passions.

But we must slave away to justify our existence because a few rich fucks don’t want to share and established that mindset as the cornerstone of society.

I just wanted to wail into the void about automation and how our loves could be so much better if people would just lose the chains already.

TauZero,

Yup yup! In a just world, if you have 100,000 workers at a factory, and then they get replaced by robots maintained by 1000 robot technicians, you should have ended up with a Star Trek utopia where 99,000 people now don’t have to work and can pursue culture and passions. In the real world, the factory product price gets halved, the technicians get paid 10x what a worker used to get (20% of total revenue), and the factory owner gets 80% of total. The former workers are now jobless, homeless, and penniless and can’t afford the product they used to make.

They tell us “Replacing jobs is OK! We’ll invent more new kinds of jobs, as old obsolete jobs free up labor. Everyone will be better off!” but the new jobs are mostly “telemarketer”, and “tech support scammer”, and “ornamental hermit” at factory owner’s mansion.

But all that still doesn’t convince me we should be smashing the robots as a job protection scheme. I wish there was a way to keep the automation and have the Star Trek utopia instead!

DocCrankenstein,

I miss the early days of the internet when I was dreaming of gay luxury space communism.

XTL,

I’m thinking of printing some calling cards with the title of Ornamental Hermit.

Or does one just put up a sign?

Jakdracula,
@Jakdracula@lemmy.world avatar
TauZero,

Your mom is covered in fecal bacteria.

Buddahriffic,

I occasionally deliberately put a capsule filled with fecal bacteria in my mouth and swallow it and it makes my pooping better.

Dave,
@Dave@lemmy.nz avatar

Welcome to pretty much every public surface.

Now let me tell you how many of the guys at your business meeting today washed their hands between their last toilet use and shaking your hand.

DocCrankenstein,

So underpaid and overworked entry level laborers aren’t cleaning them to sterile perfection. Oh no. Shocker

Counter point: if the screen is covered, what makes you think the door handle those same hands are touching is sanitary? What about the table and chair you’re sitting at? Other people sit there too, do you really think those tables are getting wiped down after every single patron leaves?

This is why we wash our hands before we eat.

FlyingSquid,
@FlyingSquid@lemmy.world avatar

You’re going to eat McDonalds food.

dan1101,

Out of all the positions at fast food restaurants, cashier seems to most appealing to me.

ladyofthrowaway, to mildlyinteresting in This fast food order kiosk accepts cash

I’m living in Europe now and would like to share my experience with this:

  1. When you proceed to pay, the machines here have 2 options side by side on the screen for you to select how you want to pay - cash at the counter or card at the machine. So I’m quite surprised that your machines work differently
  2. Quite a few European countries actually still rely heavily on cash to the point of cash-only for a lot of shops, for example in Germany and Italy
  3. Besides your list, one other advantage I found was being able to order overseas when the locals didn’t speak English at all and I couldn’t read the menu. In Norway, there’s an option to select English or Norsk. In Poland where I went, there wasn’t a choice but it didn’t matter because the menu is mostly universal so the pictures were sufficient
TauZero,

machines here have 2 options side by side on the screen for you to select how you want to pay - cash at the counter or card at the machine

Good to know, thanks! It used to be this way here too, but they stopped displaying the “cash at counter” option on the screen entirely after one of the interface redesigns. What they really want to force you to do is use the app all the time, so they can have better tracking and would have no need for cashiers OR kiosks.

tiredofsametab,

I've helped people order at various restaurants here in Japan before, and the kiosks definitely help in cases where people need to customize to avoid certain foods, etc. which are often hard when neither party speaks the same language.

freagle, to science_memes in Remove all barriers in the way of science

Uhhhh, the dominant historical source of academy science is race science. We require many barriers to science because science has historically been completely entrenched in oppression and it hasn’t really ever stopped

AllNewTypeFace,
@AllNewTypeFace@leminal.space avatar

Only sound Marxist-Leninist science like Lysenkoism!

Chetzemoka,

Thank you.

freagle,

Lysenkoism

The man was operating at the same time as other scientists who were just starting to create hypotheses that DNA was the physical manifestation of their theorized concept of a “gene”. He denied the existence of the gene because he, correctly, established that his data contradicted the oversimplified view of genetic inheritance. His data showed that somatic changes were part of what an offspring inherited. Lo and behold, he was talking about the current field of study we call “epigenetics”. His “eugenics” theories were nothing like those of race scientists. Instead, his theory was that the state must produce a healthy society in order to produce healthy people. Lo and behold, we find that trauma transmits to offspring and that the traumas of slavery (for example) are passed down from generation to generation. This position cannot be accounted for in the genetic theories of the time, and as such he rejected those theories. In essence, Lysenkoism is actually an attempt at thinking of biology dialectically, and that does indeed make it Marxist-Leninst.

And, like anything else in science, the dominant power structure must do everything it can to dismiss and denigrate anyone that correctly pointed out critiques of their work. For almost 200 years we taught doctors in training that the human body had 78 organs. We finally updated that to 79 in 2012, despite the overwhelming evidence from 3 separate researchers and papers. The doctor who made the claim that stood the test of 100+ years was an English knight. The researchers who contradicted him were Italian and American. The Italian contradicted him 5 years before his own book was published. But, the dominant culture must be correct. The British empire is also the structure that maintained the incorrect science that the brain and lymph system were not connected, despite detailed anatomical sketches from non-English doctors showing otherwise. That position was held for centuries until it was finally overturned in 2015, but not before much controversy that it couldn’t be possible and those other doctors were probably just obsessed with something irrational.

The claim of Lysenkoism being eugenics “just like what the imperialists did” is just completely ahistorical and requires a desire to absolve one’s own national project through the use of projection. Lysenko’s theories, and the policies that were built on them, failed in many ways and caused a lot of harm, none of which holds a candle to child separation, centuries of mass rape, and centuries of forced sterilization (which, we must acknowledge, continued well into the 1960s in the USA).

Lysenko was wrong about a lot of things, and was right about very little. But the idea that his contrarian position to the dominant theories of genetics is to be mocked or even vilified is a completely ideological position firmly seated in the imperialist camp.

captcha,

Do you understand that the primary barriers being referred to here are intellectual property? I suspect you aren’t in favor of propritarian intellectualism. What do you think those racist academies opinions on intellectual property has been?

freagle,

Do you understand that the primary barriers being referred to here are intellectual property?

I understand that anyone who knows what SciHub is about would infer that. It’s not what the slogan says. It says remove all barriers in the way of science. The slogan is problem.

captcha,

Removing the intellectual property barriers necessitates ending the racist academies.

freagle,

But doesn’t do anything to prevent, for example, military science to oppress or genocide.

Chetzemoka,

Thank you for reminding me to reach out to the Boost app dev to ask why I’m still seeing lemmygrad dumbass trash takes even though I blocked the grad the day I downloaded the app.

kristina,

you are literally responding to a scihub post. the founder of scihub is a communist. the founders of lemmy are communist. you are a star trek fan. it was made by A COMMUNIST.

what is going on in your brain?

Chetzemoka, (edited )

I’m sorry, is there something inherent in communism that suggests we should be anti-intellectual because racism exists? There are valid criticisms of racism in all aspects of our society, yes including academia. But “the dominant source of academic science is race science” therefore we need barriers to all science ain’t it

UlyssesT, (edited )

I’m sorry,

smuglord

But “the dominant source of academic science is race science” therefore we need barriers to all science ain’t it

Cut the bullshit and just tell us how badly you enjoy calipers and racism masquerading as science.

Chetzemoka,

I’m very aware of the history of race science. Tell me what that has to do with physics, chemistry, astronomy, geology, and exactly why we should “require many barriers to science” today because the already thoroughly refuted race science existed? Because that is what the other commenter stated.

usernamesaredifficul,

Race science is just an example of how academic science hasn’t always acted responsibly. research should and is subject to ethical considerations and responsible inovation meaning that science should be done in the public interest

it would be science to create a new hyper infectious strain of smallpox and there should be barriers to stop someone doing that

Chetzemoka, (edited )

There are ethical barriers to stop those kind of things. Militaries are going to ignore those ethical considerations, but that doesn’t mean they don’t exist. There was tremendous outcry when irresponsible researchers in China genetically modified fetuses in hopes of making them immune to HIV, without any consideration for the ethics of the situation.

Is academic ethics perfect? Of course not. But it exists and I don’t see any proposals for a better system.

It’s not different from the abortion debate. Abortion is already regulated quite well by medical ethics. Will that prevent 100% of morally reprehensible situations from occurring? Of course not. But that does not mean we need additional legal regulation (which wouldn’t prevent, but only punish anyway.)

There is already effort to improve the racist, sexist barriers to performing academic science and to call out questionable science (particularly medical science, which is probably the worst offender for perpetuating racist and sexist science right now). Those efforts are precisely why we’re seeing such a backlash from the white supremacists these days. Just look at what they’re targeting - critical race theory and intersectional feminism. Those are academic corrections to academic problems.

usernamesaredifficul,

I know there are barriers to unethical research I am in favour of those barriers.

UlyssesT, (edited )

You’re conjuring up a false exaggerated position no one here took (“require many barriers to science”) and making dubious excuses for “shitty” science under pretense of “release all the science, shitty/false or otherwise” idealism.

EDIT: Fine. You quoted one person. That doesn’t justify making dubious excuses for “shitty” science under pretense of “release all the science, shitty/false or otherwise” idealism.

Chetzemoka, (edited )

“requires many barriers to science”

That’s a literal word for word quote from the comment I was originally replying to. I didn’t exaggerate anything.

Is someone still publishing caliper head measurements in 2023 that you’re aware of? No. Just like no one is publishing flat earth “studies” even though some idiot members of the public think that’s fun right now. And no one is publishing about the aether. Who is the arbiter of what compromises junk science, if not the scientific community? The founder of SciHub is a communist. Release all the science.

UlyssesT,

Are you doing a blowhard long winded workaround way of calipers-free-but-still-racist “shitty” science under pious pretenses of it still being scientific enough to get attention?

www.youtube.com/watch?v=xdyin6uipy4

Who is the arbiter of what compromises junk science, if not the scientific community?

Release all the science.

It’s clearly a losing battle within that community if you’re making excuses for “shitty” science getting attention that it both doesn’t deserve and that will actually harm people.

Chetzemoka,

No more than you’re suggesting that there are racist astronomy studies being published, even though I could choose to disingenuously represent your position with that statement.

Racist studies need to be refuted. It’s not that hard. Restricting access to all science (which I see you now notice is what that other commenter was suggesting) isn’t going to magically stop racist studies from being published.

And again, who are you suggesting should be the arbiter?

UlyssesT,

And again, who are you suggesting should be the arbiter?

Are you suggesting there should be no arbiter?

Chetzemoka,

I’ve said exactly what I think. The scientific community is the arbiter, as it is now.

UlyssesT,

That arbiter is not doing a good job considering the proliferation of antivax, race “science,” and climate change denialism, among other things.

Feel as above the fray as you like, but normalizing the mass distribution of junk/shit or otherwise false science under some lofty ideal of “the free marketplace of ideas will select for the correct data” is clearly, demonstratively, and repeatedly not doing that and hasn’t in the past either.

Chetzemoka,

You have utterly no idea what’s even present in scientific publications. Antivax and climate change denialism are not rampant in published science. They’re rampant amongst ignorant members of the public. That’s not even remotely the fault of science.

And here’s a summary of the current state of race science:

“Race does not stand up scientifically, period.”

scribd.com/…/What-Both-The-Left-And-Right-Get-Wro…

UlyssesT,

Someone else responded better than I could to what amounts of your wall of arrogance that was toward someone with an opinion and a take so similar to yours that it applies to you as well.

Every single time someone does a report on crime and breaks down data by race you’re seeing racist social science in action. The way we do clinical trials. Decisions about what to study, like the impacts of lead, or education, or pharmaceuticals, all of it lies on top of and interpermeates racist superstructure. Recent? Forced hysterectomies. Public statements from researchers that genetics are not politically correct. Mauna Kea. Environmental impact studies in Guam. I mean, it’s never ending.

Chetzemoka,

It’s not never ending. We’re very critical of the racism and sexism in medical research. And the younger generations of doctors are far more aware of it.

We used to butcher women in radical mastectomy surgeries and we don’t do that anymore. We used to do medical experiments on black Americans without telling them and we don’t do that anymore. For everything that you can point to as a current problem, I can point to another thing that used to be a problem and now has been corrected.

And still none of that has anything to do with physics, chemistry, materials science, geology, oceanography. You can’t just say “racism impacts some sciences therefore we shouldn’t do science at all”

UlyssesT,

We’re very critical of the racism and sexism in medical research.

You’re demonstratably actively and overtly ignoring examples given to you, right now, showing just how flawed your claimed “critical” status is of such issues.

And still none of that has anything to do with physics, chemistry, materials science, geology, oceanography.

Yes, you have that ivory tower of yours crammed so high that you’re willfully ignoring intersectional issues that do affect the application, interpretation, even the funding and political will to allocate resources to such fields.

For everything that you can point to as a current problem, I can point to another thing that used to be a problem and now has been corrected.

That only demonstrates that correcting the process and actively rejecting bad/false science requires ongoing vigilance, not smug and arrogant dismissal of concerns.

therefore we shouldn’t do science at all

No one said that and you’re willfully ignorant at this point.

Chetzemoka,

And you’re an anti-intellectual ideologue.

UlyssesT, (edited )

You think it’s anti-intellectual to address intersectional society-wide concerns? Is it truly “intellectual” to pretend that they didn’t happen or that they only happened in the past? ok

It is the pinnacle of ideological arrogance to believe that scientific fields, as practiced by scientists, exist in perfectly sealed vacuums that require no interaction with government or society and that every experiment that is funded, all research undertaken, is powered by sheer scientific purity instead of the unfortunate material realities of funding and decisions made of “what” is researched and for how long.

It does affect all of the above fields if funding and resources are wasted in pursuit of junk science. Announcing that such junk should be “free” and distributed out there under the belief that it will magically be banished by the light of truth and cease being distributed entirely because it is wrong with no other actions necessary is willful ideological ignorance.

Chetzemoka,

Lord in heaven above, this child. You haven’t listened to a single word I’ve said and you’re just repeating yourself. Have a good night.

UlyssesT, (edited )

this child

Assuming people that disagree with you are children, and using that for insult purposes only demonstrates your contempt, even hatred, of children.

You failed to address what I talked about so of course I repeated myself. You had nothing to respond to but your own arrogant dismissal of issues and your empty sense of superiority.

Chetzemoka,

You’re hilarious. Thank you for the entertainment. Have a good night

UlyssesT,

So much for your fedora-tipping farewell. You needed to add just how not mad you are at having uncomfortable issues brought up that you failed to address.

https://hexbear.net/pictrs/image/e76337d8-3bfc-412b-9066-5936af17bfe6.png

Chetzemoka,

No I’m just amusing myself at this point because I can tell you’re one of those people who needs to have the last word

UlyssesT,

No I’m just amusing myself

You’re trying to win a last word game while demonstrating how very not mad you are in the most transparent way possible.

You had nothing from the start but your bloviating arrogance, and now you have nothing left but enraged immaturity after calling me a child (because children are contemptible to you, Redditbrained as you are).

Since you’re not posting anything of value (and didn’t do so before) I’ll just repost a reflection of what you’re continuing to do.

https://hexbear.net/pictrs/image/ab1d0964-8887-464c-81f9-8d093a60c19c.png

freagle,

You’re ignoring the history of academic science.

legacyofslavery.harvard.edu/report

slaveryandjustice.brown.edu

slavery.virginia.edu

…app.box.com/…/nzo1tx4elaerg13akjwxuve3pv9sb03a

news.emory.edu/features/2021/09/…/index.html

And on and on.

And that’s just the university system. Then you have actual laboratories. Los Alamos is notorious for being a massive “consumer” of indigenous women and girls of the slave trade. Current astronomy observatories on Mauna Kea are there against the will of the colonized Hawaiians and for years have destroyed their environment, their sovereignty, their health, and have contributed massively to the sex trade in Hawaii. The indigenous are a barrier to the planned 30m telescope there. Are you arguing that this barrier should be removed? Are you saying astronomy cannot possibly intersect with the structures of racism, settler colonialism, and genocide?

We do not need to be anti-intellectual to erect barriers to settler violence that impinge on science. Those barriers are important, and we need more of them. If we are to undo the harm of centuries of European imperialism, it will be a massive project that will hinder scientific inquiry in many ways. Establishing a “no barriers to science stance” creates an ideological commitment to the already existing conflict between justice and science that has been raging for centuries upon centuries.

Chetzemoka, (edited )

I am very aware of all of this and it does not have anything to do with the output of most scientific endeavors. The colonialist history of the building of those telescopes doesn’t make the astronomical data collected with them somehow racist, and putting up barriers to sharing that data isn’t going to fix the racism involved in the administration of those institutions.

We need to change the way we practice academic science just like we need to change the way we practice at every other institution that was built by colonialist “enlightenment.” But saying somehow that SciHub is wrong and wet shouldn’t promote open sharing of scientific output isn’t going to change those institutions.

Also the entire history of academic science is one of evolving standards of practice based on updated ethical standards. In the beginning, experiments were performed without regard for the harm done to human, animal, or environment, and these days we have many ethical standards against those harms. In fact, I will point out that you’re sharing data from academic sources who are criticizing academic history which is how it always has been done.

UlyssesT,

it does not have anything to do with the output of most scientific endeavor

It does when you keep proclaiming the distribution of “all” science, false/shitty and whatnot, if you’re arbitrarily in favor of it under some pious ideal of “set it all free.”

freagle, (edited )

it does not have anything to do with the output of most scientific endeavors

Don’t try to equivocate your way out of this. The practice of science does harm. Setting “remove all barriers to science” as your slogan is problematic. If you want to equivocate, advocate for a slogan change to “Remove all barriers to distributing the outputs of scientific research to any and all people free of charge”.

The colonialist history of the building of those telescopes doesn’t make the astronomical data collected with them somehow racist

Don’t strawman. No one claimed the data was racist. The 30M is not history, it’s the future. The US occupation of Hawaii is still illegal under US and UN law. It’s not historical colonialism, it’s present day colonialism. The indigenous people who were disenfranchised are still there, still occupied, still dying from water pollution, land pollution, and destruction of their food sources and ways of living. And the way we conduct science is actively playing a part in that occupation.

But saying somehow that SciHub is wrong and wet shouldn’t promote open sharing of scientific output isn’t going to change those institutions.

I have been very clear that the slogan is problematic. Scihub’s missing of free information flow is not.

In fact, I will point out that you’re sharing data from academic sources who are criticizing academic history which is how it always has been done.

Brown University was the first, and it happened because the president they chose was both the first black person and the first woman to ever be president at any Ivy League institution. Harvard University didn’t do - its undergrads did all the work and went public with it. The process of dismantling is ongoing, it’s very slow, and all the while the white supremacist structure that undergirds the academy remains and continues to dominate decision making.

In one big voice all of the university trustees have linked arms and established that any students and professors speaking and acting tor Palestinian liberation are to be condemned. The academy may do incremental reforms, but their power is not subject to incremental reforms because it is structural. As a communist, you should understand this. If you don’t understand, I’m happy to help you work through it. But don’t give me this incremental ethical reform bullshit. It comes nowhere near addressing the white supremacist structure that the academy participates in.

lol3droflxp,
@lol3droflxp@kbin.social avatar

Are you dumb?

kristina,

i believe this is addressed somewhere on the scihub website. racial hatred and bigotry is a barrier to science. the founder of scihub is a communist

usernamesaredifficul,

I agree with the sentiment in the context of it being a file sharing site for academic texts but it’s not worded so well barriers in the way of science could also include ethical concerns to certain kinds of experiment

freagle,

Racial hatred and bigotry are individualistic barriers to science.

Racialized capitalism is the foundation of the modern university. Harvard resisted getting rid of its slaves and when they did they bought and sold people in the Caribbean outside of the reach of US law. Disgustingly high numbers of medical schools were built on the basis of dissecting and experimenting on black and indigenous people.

Most ivy league schools still have the remains of scores of black and indigenous people in their museums, their libraries, and even their classrooms. Entire skeletons of enslaved people were prepared for classroom demonstrations and used in contemporary memory!

The money for these universities came from the slave trade and from slave labor. The schools themselves were often built with slave labor. The patrons of the university funded race science to justify the structures of racism.

It has nothing to do with racial hatred and bigotry.

The structural racism funded the creation and expansion of universities. MIT would not exist if it weren’t for the need for textile producers to build machines to make more money so the money that got poured into MIT was the money that was extracted from slave labor picking cotton.

Undoing this harm and bringing about justice through reparations is going to really undermine university endowments. It’s going to require removing names of buildings, dishonoring scientific “heroes”, and preventing it from happening again is going to be seen as barriers to science.

Dr_Cog,
@Dr_Cog@mander.xyz avatar

Can you explain what you mean about historical race science? I’ve never heard of it.

Either way, even shitty science should be freely accessible so your point doesn’t make any sense.

UmbraVivi,
@UmbraVivi@hexbear.net avatar

Either way, even shitty science should be freely accessible so your point doesn’t make any sense.

It really shouldn’t. We saw through the COVID vaccine hysteria just how harmful shitty science can be. A lot of people died completely preventable deaths because we live under the illusion that reason prevails under the free marketplace of ideas or some nonsense like that.

Dr_Cog,
@Dr_Cog@mander.xyz avatar

Strong disagree, given the vaccine hysteria was on the part of the deniers. The science supported and continues to support the vaccines effectiveness and safety. It’s primarily people who aren’t scientists and don’t know how to interpret medical studies that are claiming that they are dangerous or ineffective.

Nice to meet you, I’m a medical scientist that specializes in Alzheimer’s research. Absolutely none of my colleagues think vaccines are dangerous.

UlyssesT, (edited )

The media and the general population do not recognize any one single specific scientific organization as an authority to depend upon, so being smug about your claimed place in the ivory tower does nothing to stop people from getting false science from somewhere other than that ivory tower.

EDIT: And how exactly are those masses that you condescend to supposed to distinguish “shitty” science from outright false science? And why should “shitty” science things be given validity and attention (which may well include race science because you never said otherwise in this thread) while you somehow distinguish that away from antivax nonsense? They’re both nonsense but you seem to be making pious excuses for one kind of it.

Stating “post all the science” must feel good to say but it does nothing to stop the posting of false science calling itself science and many people going along with that. You yourself claimed (or feigned) ignorance of race science as false science, which shows just how insidious such things really are.

Dr_Cog,
@Dr_Cog@mander.xyz avatar

Good. There isn’t a single scientific organization, given the whole point of science is democratizing information research.

General populace are supposed to rely on the top researchers in their field to disseminate information. These top researchers are usually the least controversial which is why they are trusted by the (again) democratized scientific community. I’ll say this because a lot of people don’t realize it: if you have any controversy in your past regarding misinformation or “fixing” results, and it ever gets out, you are immediately shunned and your work will never be looked at seriously again. You will lose your job and all credibility immediately. I’m not saying it doesn’t happen, but it is heavily discouraged.

If we want to combat misinformation we should be encouraging people to trust scientists and not get information from organizations with ulterior motives.

UlyssesT,

If we want to combat misinformation we should be encouraging people to trust scientists

That sounds really grand on paper but in reality the societal definition of who a scientist is (and who is a credible scientist) is blurred to the point that you can piously disavow antivax conspiracy theories (some of them pushed by quack scientists with dubious qualifications) but also proclaim that even “shit science” should be freely released for all to see (with “race science” being mentioned in particular with you glibly disavowing knowledge of it) and you still haven’t provided a distinct measurable difference between the two.

You really seem to be more in favor of “race science” than antivax nonsense, and they are both nonsense.

Dr_Cog,
@Dr_Cog@mander.xyz avatar

I’m not saying trust any random person who calls themself a scientist. Myself included.

I’m saying people should trust reputable scientists at the top of their field. Ideally, journalists should do the leg work to identify these people and give them a voice, and describe why they should be trusted.

That doesn’t happen with nearly all right-leaning journalistic publications, unfortunately, resulting in a huge population not knowing who to trust or just mistrusting scientists in general.

Edit: I realize I didn’t answer your point on freedom of access. I do firmly believe all science should be accessible, because no single study should ever be taken as fact. Science works through repetition, and if you have a study that disagrees with nearly everything else then it’s either a brand new way of looking at things (and will be supported in the future) or is junk (and will be ignored). But just because something is junk doesn’t mean we should prevent people from accessing it.

UlyssesT,

But just because something is junk doesn’t mean we should prevent people from accessing it.

Again, after glibly dismissing antivax conspiracy theories as unscientific under the presumption that no one credible would believe them (not that that stopped the spread and distribution of them to the general public) you’re suggestion that all of the harmful prior false science listed at the following:

legacyofslavery.harvard.edu/report

slaveryandjustice.brown.edu

slavery.virginia.edu

…app.box.com/…/nzo1tx4elaerg13akjwxuve3pv9sb03a

news.emory.edu/features/2021/09/…/index.html

should get openly and freely distributed under some idealistic notion of “set it all free” while you already derided the public for buying into antivax nonsense. Your idealism can and will hurt a lot more people because you clearly are more fine with racism than antivax conspiracy theories.

Dr_Cog,
@Dr_Cog@mander.xyz avatar

You’re very good at putting words into people’s mouths (I didn’t even mention antivax theories), and that point is where I end the conversation. Good day

UlyssesT,

You’re very good at putting words into people’s mouths (I didn’t even mention antivax theories)

You previously said:

Strong disagree, given the vaccine hysteria was on the part of the deniers. The science supported and continues to support the vaccines effectiveness and safety. It’s primarily people who aren’t scientists and don’t know how to interpret medical studies that are claiming that they are dangerous or ineffective.

Nice to meet you, I’m a medical scientist that specializes in Alzheimer’s research. Absolutely none of my colleagues think vaccines are dangerous.

If you’re going to complain about “putting words into people’s mouths” don’t be a liar on top of that.

Good day

smuglord

Dr_Cog,
@Dr_Cog@mander.xyz avatar

Ah, yes. Good catch, I did mention that there is no scientific evidence to support any widespread negative effects of the vaccines, and there continues to not be. You’re more than able to put yourself in the running for the Nobel prize for saving millions of lives by finding and publishing this evidence, though, since it seems that you’re so confident in it.

I did not state that “no one credible would believe them”, and your links about slavery are irrelevant because the discussion was about vaccines, not racism.

And I didn’t lie. Literally none of my colleagues thinks there is any merit to antivax scaremongering.

UlyssesT,

Ah, yes.

You should have stuck with your “good day” if you have nothing left to provide but more Reddit tier smug condescension.

And I didn’t lie.

Yes, you did lie. The lie was that, direct quote, you “didn’t even mention antivax theories.”

Dr_Cog,
@Dr_Cog@mander.xyz avatar

K

Posadas,
@Posadas@hexbear.net avatar

Can you explain what you mean about historical race science? I’ve never heard of it.

Basically it boils down to making up any bullshit excuses possible to justify us-foreign-policy

usernamesaredifficul,

and also eugenics

Posadas,
@Posadas@hexbear.net avatar

That’s just us-foreign-policy but for “whites”

freagle,

Race science is the science that emerged to rationalize and justify the structure of racism. It is the science that emerged to justify political race structures. Race science is what allowed black and indigenous children to be ripped away from their parents while other parents watched and participated and said “This is good”.

That race science was funded by the elite or society. They extracted wealth through settler colonialism and racialized capitalism and then donated it to the universities as “philanthropy” and used their influence to direct more research into race science and other endeavors to maximize their profits.

Making research freely available is not removing all barriers to science. It is removing but one barrier to science. There are many other barriers that exist, have existed, or could exist.

In this way, saying that all barriers to science must be removed ignores the historical facts that the origins of academic science in the US are rooted almost entirely in race science. Even medical schools were locations of mass racialized atrocities where black and brown bodies were bought, imported, experimented on, killed, and desecrated in order to meet the demands of donors and chasing more endowment money. That science was used to further establish the schools’ reputation and revenue streams.

Fixing this will be seen as a barrier to science, as fixing it required dismantling major portions of the socio-politico-economic structures that maintain academies of science. Reparations alone would make many scientific institutions disappear overnight.

Dr_Cog,
@Dr_Cog@mander.xyz avatar

I understand the historical context but many of us scientists strive to prevent this kind of thing from happening again. Nearly every grant I apply to has a secondary version that prioritizes racially and ethnically diverse applicants. Half of articles I see published are now acknowledging the racial divide in science and striving to recruit more minority populations.

I’m applying to a federal grant now (K01) and I am required to state my strategy for ensuring representation of gender, race, ethnicity, and socioeconomic status in my recruitment population. I have a section of my grant discussing how the presentation of Alzheimers differs in black communities.

We definitely have more work to do, but it’s not like we’re pretending the racial divide doesn’t exist.

freagle, (edited )

Nearly every grant I apply to has a secondary version that prioritizes racially and ethnically diverse applicants

That’s diversity at best and tokenism at worst and has no impact on what science has inherited. Black people working on chemical warfare doesn’t make it less structurally racist.

Half of articles I see published are now acknowledging the racial divide in science and striving to recruit more minority populations.

Doesn’t reduce the billions of dollars current institutions have extracted by consuming black and brown bodies.

We definitely have more work to do, but it’s not like we’re pretending the racial divide doesn’t exist.

It’s not a racial divide. It’s a racist structure. We ARE pretending like racism doesn’t exist in the way that it does but instead exists as not enough representation. Racism isn’t a lack of representation. It’s much much much bigger than that, and fixing it doesn’t require more representation to happen first.

Dr_Cog,
@Dr_Cog@mander.xyz avatar

Intentional racism is no longer an issue due to nearly every (reputable) publication’s requirement of a institutional review board. This is to prevent exactly what you describe.

Unintentional racism, yes I agree that’s a problem.

But come on. We’ve made huge strides in this over the past few decades.

freagle,

Intentional racism is no longer an issue due to nearly every (reputable) publication’s requirement of a institutional review board. This is to prevent exactly what you describe.

This is LAUGHABLE

Unintentional racism, yes I agree that’s a problem.

You really gotta study what’s been written about racism. It’s not what you think it is, apparently.

But come on. We’ve made huge strides in this over the past few decades.

Nah, we really haven’t. Representation is better. White supremacy is still killing millions.

Dr_Cog,
@Dr_Cog@mander.xyz avatar

So your response is “no, u?”

I’m happy to have this conversation but you really need to contribute more. I’ve described numerous ways we currently combat racism in science. Would you like to provide a recent example of racist science that we can discuss?

UlyssesT,

So your response is “no, u?”

You’re very good at putting words into people’s mouths

freagle,

I’ve described numerous ways we currently combat racism in science.

No you didn’t. You described how we currently combat bigotry in the academy and somewhat in sampling for research. If you think the 1800s isn’t recent enough, then you’ve got a real problem. Imperialism and racism weren’t built in a couple of decades, they’re not going to be dismantled by asking people to identify as a goddamned racialized group. Every single time someone does a report on crime and breaks down data by race you’re seeing racist social science in action. The way we do clinical trials. Decisions about what to study, like the impacts of lead, or education, or pharmaceuticals, all of it lies on top of and interpermeates racist superstructure. Recent? Forced hysterectomies. Public statements from researchers that genetics are not politically correct. Mauna Kea. Environmental impact studies in Guam. I mean, it’s never ending.

Dr_Cog,
@Dr_Cog@mander.xyz avatar

Every single time someone does a report on crime and breaks down data by race you’re seeing racist social science in action

Maybe I’m misinterpreting but… is your solution to ignore race and pretend it doesn’t exist? That we should be ignorant of how different groups are being treated and pretend everyone is the same? I think we both agree that minorities in many countries are more likely to be poor and have lower social mobility, and so it’s important to study them. As an example from my field: Alzheimer’s is significantly more likely if you’re a minority, especially black or hispanic, due to their reduced ability to access healthy food (food deserts) and quality healthcare due to past redlining. The only way we know this is by studying it.

Forced hysterectomies

That’s not science, that’s horrible treatment of minority groups and medical malpractice. No scientist with any degree of repute supports that shit.

I’m unfamiliar with the others: genetics being politically correct (this statement makes no sense to me), Mauna Kea, or Guam.

freagle,

Mauna Kea is a sacred mountain in Hawaii that is colonized by astronomers and the proposed site of the very large 30M telescope. Indigenous Hawaiians who are illegally occupied are resisting it. Scientists are saying that they’re being anti-science.

In Guam, environmental impact studies are used to justify the continued destruction of habit because the study doesn’t reveal sufficient impact. This is because the definition of impact is politically motivated and informed by white supremacy.

I will try to find right-wing geneticists who go out and try to justify racism with genetics. It happens all the time. Richard Dawkins was someone who attempted to use science and neo-atheism to justify bombing brown people.

Forced hysterectomies come from the academy. They aren’t merely just bad behavior, they are the legacy of eugenics and white supremacist social policies informed and crafted by the academy. You can’t just stay science doesn’t do anything wrong - that’s a “no true Scotsman”.

Just because you aren’t informed of the prevailing critique of science as a continuous tool of oppression doesn’t mean it’s not. It just means you likely have a vested interest in not believing it. If you’re not making oodles of profit from science, then your vested interest is likely your self-concept.

Dr_Cog,
@Dr_Cog@mander.xyz avatar

Thanks for the information. Each of these are indeed troubling. But I think it’s disingenuous to say “science” is at fault for these. Shitty people doing shitty things for their own shitty reasons seems to be at play. Some of those reasons are for scientific funding or clout, but I think I comfortably speak for a lot of scientists when I say the scientific output is not worth it.

I think we’re mainly on the same page with a lot of this, we just have different descriptions of who we think the bad guy is. My view is that humans have the capacity for great evil, especially when motivated by profit or fame, but that science itself isn’t the root cause of this evil but is instead a catalyst enabling people to become famous as a result of it. It’s the fame, in my opinion, that drives people to do these terrible things. Science itself doesn’t really benefit, and is arguably hurt, by these actions, since there are likely other less harmful ways to research these topics.

Of course, I am biased. I have a career in science, after all. But I do genuinely believe that science does not require these terrible actions to thrive.

freagle, (edited )

But I think it’s disingenuous to say “science” is at fault for these

I think it’s disingenuous to say that this is what I said. Science participates in the dominant social structure and is interpermeates the processes and structures of violent oppression.

Shitty people doing shitty things for their own shitty reasons seems to be at play.

That is an incredibly farcical representation of how liberals conceive of society. It’s just not true. These are systemic and structural outcomes, not simply morally reprehensible individual choices.

we just have different descriptions of who we think the bad guy is

Yup.

My view is that humans have the capacity for great evil

I don’t believe in good and evil at all. Morality is a socially constructed technology for influencing humans. It’s not real.

science itself isn’t the root cause of this evil

No one said it was.

is instead a catalyst enabling people to become famous as a result of it

The desecration of Mauna Kea has not made anyone famous. I dare you to name anyone involved in it without looking it up.

It’s the fame, in my opinion, that drives people to do these terrible things

What an incredibly unscientific perspective.

Science itself doesn’t really benefit, and is arguably hurt, by these actions, since there are likely other less harmful ways to research these topics.

Now you’re moving way into the abstract by saying that science can be hurt. What you mean is that the process of “science” exhibits suboptimal outcomes, in part, because of things like oppression and colonization. I agree. That doesn’t mean science doesn’t participate in it all the same. You’re crafting your worldview entirely from ideals and not actually engaging with reality.

Of course, I am biased. I have a career in science, after all

When you say you’re biased, it’s really important to understand what that means. I don’t think you actually mean it in the literal sense. You actually mean to say that you are “prejudiced” - meaning that you have a tendency to make judgments prematurely and stick to those judgments even in the face of evidence.

Bias is a statistical concept about outcomes. When I attempt to throw a dart at a bullseye, if my darts end up to right of the bullseye more often than not, then we can say I have a bias in my throwing behavior towards the right hand side of the dart board. What bias does your behavior exhibit, statistically? Is it that your prejudice biases your cognitive behaviors towards denying the harms of science, to fallaciously attribute harm to anything except science, to abstract science to its ideals more often than actually examine how it functions in society?

This is important, because if you think of your prejudice as bias, then you can’t ever examine what your actual bias is. Own that you’re prejudiced. It’s fine. We all have prejudices. I am prejudiced towards believing people who self-identify as communists have a better grasp of history and of dialectics. I am often wrong, but I still judge prematurely. My biases are fundamentally different than my prejudices. My network is biased towards white suburban men. My work is biased towards tech work. My friend-set is biased towards people who are often late to social events.

So, what is your prejudice, and what bias does it cause in your behavior?

Be scientific about this.

DrSleepless, to mildlyinteresting in This fast food order kiosk accepts cash

Haha, you eat at McDonalds!

TauZero,

Shhh, don’t tell them!

norbert,
@norbert@kbin.social avatar

McDonalds ketchup contains heroin.

Rentlar, to mildlyinteresting in This fast food order kiosk accepts cash

12 pt font on the tableau

Just putting it out there fast food everywhere that have overhead menu screens seem to LOVE to keep swapping the displayed items, or cover up half the screen with random seasonal product ads which makes this problem 10x worse.

I like the order kiosks when they run fast and are no bullshit steps to order. A Costco hotdog I can order in 2 quick taps and one more with my card. Others are more annoying for one reason or another, some to the point where I’d rather someone do the cashier work for me.

krellor,

Yeah, the Costco food kiosks are the gold standard. One screen with all items, big buttons, responsive, and obvious checkout process. I can literally order for the family in under thirty seconds with the receipt in hand. It's like magic.

Buddahriffic,

Yeah, I’m in the drive thru and about to order when suddenly the list of items is replaced by a fucking ad. I’m already here and ordering, calm down with the fucking marketing.

  • All
  • Subscribed
  • Moderated
  • Favorites
  • localhost
  • All magazines
  • Loading…
    Loading the web debug toolbar…
    Attempt #

    Fatal error: Allowed memory size of 134217728 bytes exhausted (tried to allocate 2097152 bytes) in /var/www/kbin/kbin/vendor/symfony/http-kernel/Profiler/FileProfilerStorage.php on line 171

    Fatal error: Allowed memory size of 134217728 bytes exhausted (tried to allocate 294912 bytes) in /var/www/kbin/kbin/vendor/symfony/error-handler/Resources/views/logs.html.php on line 38