Updated: 9/11/06; 6:55:40 AM.
Gil Friend
Strategic Sustainability, and other worthy themes of our time
        

Thursday, October 21, 2004

'Things can be wrong without being important.'
Fran Leibowitz, in a typically curmudgeonly interview (mostly about church and state) on Hardball.

9:00:28 PM    comment []  trackback []

From a Physicist and New Nobel Winner, Some Food for Thought. The history of physics is, like the universe, a story of expansion. By DENNIS OVERBYE. [The New York Times > Science]

Fresh from a new Nobel Prize, with a smile as wide as the Pacific Ocean only a Frisbee throw away, Dr. David Gross...[declared] 'The most important product of knowledge is ignorance.' And without much more ado than that, Dr. Gross proceeded to enumerate what he considered to be the most enticing items that physics had learned enough to be ignorant about in 25 different areas.

Fascinating munching. Worth a read.

(Dr. Gross, of the Kavli Insitute, just won the Nobel Prize in Physics, along with Dr. Frank Wilczek of the Massachusetts Institute of Technology and my good ol' high school buddy Dr. H. David Politzer of the California Institute of Technology. Are we proud? You betcha!)


8:41:38 PM    comment []  trackback []

Those Brilliant Fall Outfits May Be Saving Trees. As trees across the northern United States turn gold and crimson, scientists are debating exactly what those colors are for. By By CARL ZIMMER. [The New York Times > Science]

The scientists do agree on one thing: the colors are for something. That represents a major shift in thinking. For decades, textbooks claimed that autumn colors were just a byproduct of dying leaves. 'I had always assumed that autumn leaves were waste baskets,' said Dr. David Wilkinson

It turns out that the carotenoids and anthocyanins that produce those beuatiful yellows and reds aren't just 'unmasked' by the breakdown of chlorophyll; production of anthocyanin actually increases in autumn.

'Why' is less clear. One theory: the vivid colors warn insect pests to stay clear. Another: the anthocyanins protect the leaves from damage from too much sunlight. The article summarizes research in support of both positions.

'People sometimes say that science makes the world less interesting and awesome by just explaining things away,' Dr. Wilkinson said. 'But with autumn leaves, the more you know about them, the more amazed you are.'

Another reminder that 'waste' is very rare in nature -- perhaps non-existent. Another reminder that it needs to become obsolete in human affairs as well.



8:28:43 PM    comment []  trackback []


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