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  What is science and why should I care about it? Science is a reliable, reproducible, and verifiable process by which facts, and explanations of those facts, are established. The outcome of the scientific method is a useful and universally applicable framework of knowledge about the natural world. Knowledge gleaned […]

Texas Science Textbook Adoption: A Glimpse into Anti-Science Forces in …

I saw this headline in my Google News feed this morning: “Acupuncture Reduces Pain in Lung Cancer Patients – New Findings” [1]. The article was posted on a credulous site that promotes acupuncture, a practice that has never been proven to yield any benefit over the placebo effect. So I […]

Bad Science Watch: acupuncture and lung cancer pain

2 comments

This morning, I was sent a direct notice on Twitter indicating that something called “FoodIDTheft” had aggregated one of my tweets into some automated news feed. I was intrigued – since “FoodIDTheft” sounded like an inflammatory name intended to convey that this site helps people keep their food’s identity from […]

A scientist in pseudoscientist’s clothing

The Discovery Institute posted a long and painful defense of Intelligent Design as a “scientific idea” today [1]. It was painful because it seemed based on a pre-college level of understanding of the scientific method. Their primary defense was founded on shoe-horning intelligent design into a scientific method-looking structure, but […]

What’s that whining?

Getting the “science” right in “science policy”: labeling food as “GMO”

I’ve been engaged in a small conversation on a social network regarding the labeling of food as “genetically modified.” I’ve written specific thoughts about the scientific problems with that labeling recently in this blog [1]. I thought it might be useful to explain here how I got engaged in this […]

Getting the “science” right in “science policy”: labeling food as …

Claim Assessment: Does an iPhone need more power in a year than a refrigerator?

Editorial Note (9/1/13): The program “Marketplace” recently looked into Mr. Mills’ claim. They found it to be nonsense. See: http://www.marketplace.org/topics/sustainability/no-your-phone-doesnt-use-much-electricity-refrigerator. I like that they put the answer right in their headline: NO. Editorial Note (8/23/13): since originally posting the article, a commenter (“Jay”) pointed out that the number I pulled from […]

Claim Assessment: Does an iPhone need more power in a …

4 comments

After owning a Honda Civic since 1998 that was new in 1998 – the only car that persisted in my household after my 2002 marriage to Jodi – Jodi and I decided last year to start saving for a new car. After checking out a Chevy Volt at the Texas […]

The Physics of an Electric Car – Cost per Mile …

2 comments

Why people think what they think is just as important, if not more so, that what they think. The time when I resume teaching, after a one-semester leave from teaching to focus on research, is rapidly approaching.  I’ve started paying closer attention to material that might be useful as supplementary […]

Why you believe what you believe

Why I will no longer post on Google+

I won’t be posting on Google+ anymore. There are a few reasons why. The first is that I feel about Google+ the same way – if not more – than I felt about Twitter and Facebook: a company should not be the sole vault and arbiter of my data. I […]

Why I will no longer post on Google+

2 comments

Three pin pricks from a vaccination injection before you become sexually active, or the risk of contracting a cancer that will require drugs, radiation, or surgery to control? What would you choose, for yourself or your child? The FUD over the Human Papilloma Virus (HPV) vaccine has been high, so […]

FUDWatch: HPV vaccination

I saw an article from National Geographic entitled “How much do you really know about science?” The article contains a quiz to test your science knowledge. However, the author of this article makes a typically fatal mistake: mistaking facts about the natural world obtained through the scientific process with the […]

How much do you know about science?

I saw on Facebook today some repeats of a CBS article from Atlanta entitled “Study: 70 Percent Of Americans On Prescription Drugs” [1]. The news article cites this actual scientific article from the Mayo Clinic’s “Mayo Clinic Proceedings,” entitled “Age and Sex Patterns of Drug Prescribing in a Defined American Population” [2]. […]

Bad science reporting on Mayo Clinic Proceedings “Prescription Drug Use” …

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Follow this blog on Mastodon or any other ActivityPub-enabled social media system. This blog’s identity (webfinger) is @steve@steve.cooleysekula.net.

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  • (no title)
    July 5, 2025
    One of my favourite things was the specially labelled bottle of champagne my colleague, Aidan, put together in anticipation of this day. It was […]
  • (no title)
    July 5, 2025
    … here is a group of us, probably marking the 10th - 25th people in line, in the morning just before the #Higgs discovery […]

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