Books, Brochures, and Chapters>Book:  Asimov, Burke, Bergman (1985), The Impact of Science on Society, Langley Research Center, Washington, DC, Retrieved on 2011-06-18
Folksonomies: science society benefits scientific progress

Memes

No Memes Found


Child Reference

 The Legacy of Science
Books, Brochures, and Chapters>Book Chapter:  Burke, James (1985), The Legacy of Science, Langley Research Center, Washington, DC, Retrieved on 2011-06-19
  • Source Material [history.nasa.gov]
  • Folksonomies: science society progress
    Child Reference Memes
    19 JUN 2011

     What Makes Something a Distinct Object?

    Let me look at the envelope from a very basic point of view, that of the neurophysiology of raw perception itself. Forgive me if it’s a bit oversimple. Take me-on the back of your retina I’m upside down, focused at the center but fuzzy at the edges, two-dimensional, a barrage of photons releasing rhodopsin and triggering neural impulses along the visual nerve. At the same time, the pressure wave I’m setting up right now with all this talk is causing little hairs inside the cochlea, in your in...
    Folksonomies: perception
    Folksonomies: perception
      1  notes

    Our perceptions are built on photons hitting our retinas and pressure variations tickling the folicles in our cochleas... so how does all that become something distinct in our mind's eye?

    19 JUN 2011

     Cultural Differences

    The Italian model has a sign like a wave, meaning, “Come here.” Greek girls cause problems for non-Greek boys by saying “No” with a nod, not a shake, of their head. In New Zealand you can do one kind of V-sign but never the other. Americans look posh when they look neat; Europeans look posh when they look as if they’ve just come through a hedge backwards. A very fine linguistic example of model difference lies in the way the Irish and the English express themselves. Where the British will say...
      1  notes

    Examples of differences between various European countries in expressiveness.

    19 JUN 2011

     How Science Changes Society

    Change is one of mankind’s most mysterious creations. The factors that operate to cause it came into play when man produced his first tool. With it he changed the world forever, and bound himself to the artifacts he would create in order, always, to make tomorrow better than today. But how does change operate? What triggers a new invention, a different philosophy, an altered society? The interactive network of man’s activities links the strangest, most disparate elements, bringing together th...
      1  notes

    Science brings change upon society, forcing society to adapt to technological change and forcing more technological change.

    19 JUN 2011

     A Brief History of People Resisting Technological Advance...

    Look at how often change is fought in history. Here’s an example that always tickles me. The chain of events back in the twelfth century that set Europe going economically after the Dark Ages was essentially the textile revolution. A new loom came in from Arab Spain. It had foot pedals, which left the weaver’s hands free to weave faster and make more cloth cheaper. The Dutch weavers smashed the thing up because it would have put people out of work. (That was a new idea in the twelfth century....
      1  notes

    Even though the advances ultimately benefit society as a whole, people resist and riot because they are put out of work or may lose power from the change.

    19 JUN 2011

     Accidental Inventions

    To begin with, often you just don’t know change is coming. Even if you’re personally involved, you may be looking the wrong way at the time, like young William Perkin of London in 1856. Around then, everybody wits looking for benzene rings and chemistry was the flavor of the month, and Perkin, a chemist, was trying to be the young science hero who would save the great British empire by discovering the way to make artificial quinine chemically. You see, our administration and army chaps were d...
      1  notes

    It is the search that produces revolutionary inventions, not the intention, discovering something useful is like winning the lottery in this passage, but you have to be knowledgeable enough to know that you have won it.

    19 JUN 2011

     Juxtaposition is the Spice of Life

    Let me suggest a new axiom: juxtaposition is the spice of life. Humanity’s biggest talent, unique to us, is juxtaposing, finding and operating novel relationships between things or ideas... Recent ideas on neural activity suggest that the brain operates in a very associative way, with small neuron clusters containing core concepts, rather in the way a battery holds a trickle charge. These core concepts would be irreducibly small fragments of sounds or sights, or any phenomena that you experie...
      1  notes

    The brain can be wired more ways then there are atoms in the Universe, and new combinations create new ideas and innovations.

    19 JUN 2011

     Technology Manufactures Social Change

    The main thing, it seems to me, is to remember that technology manufactures not gadgets, but social change. Once the first tool was picked up and used, that was the end of cyclical anything. The tool made a new world, the next one changed that world, the one after that changed it again, and so on. Each time the change was permanent. Using the tool changes the user permanently, whether we like it or not. Once when I was in Moscow talking to academician Petrov, I said, “Why don’t you buy Americ...
      1  notes

    Examples of technology changing society, unintended consequences.

    19 JUN 2011

     Ignoring Inconvenient Truths In Astronomy

    Metaphysically speaking, no one paradigm is innately any better than any other. A universe that began at 9 a.m. on October 10, 4004 B.C. (which was official back in the seventeenth century) is intrinsically no less valuable for those who live by a belief in it than is our present uncertain universe, perhaps built like a yo-yo, forever destroying and remaking itself in never-ending big bangs. Each of the cosmological theories has, at different times, found totally ironclad evidence to support ...
      1  notes

    In order to keep the Earth at the center of the Universe, theologians and astronomers had to come up with wild explanatory theories that did not fit the evidence.

    19 JUN 2011

     How Culture Influences Scientific Metaphors

    If you believe the cosmos is made up of omelette, you build instruments specifically designed to find traces of intergalactic yolk. In that paradigm you reject phenomena like pulsars and black holes as paranormal garbage. In an omelette cosmos, the beginning of the universe becomes a chicken and egg problem, doesn’t it? Now, this definition of terms (like omelette universe) happens all the time. The reason that we today refer to electricity in terms of current is because in the eighteenth ce...
      2  notes

    Electricity has a current because Franklin thought it flowed like water, mal-aria is named after "bad air" because people thought it was caused by that, and we define the Universe it terms of clockwork or information depending on the cultural innovations of the time.


    Child Reference

     Accomplishments of Science by the Year 2000
    Books, Brochures, and Chapters>Book Chapter:  Bergman, Jules (1985), Accomplishments of Science by the Year 2000, Langley Research Center, Washington, DC, Retrieved on 2011-06-19
    Folksonomies: science society nasa
    Child Reference Memes
    01 JUL 2011

     The Impact of Scientific Ignorance on Society

    As a society, we walk a tightrope between limbo and extinction. We’re on a threshold of survival, in a society threatened as never before to find the way, with less and less margin for error. The decades ahead to the year 2000 and beyond, as were the decades just past, can be either interrogative, presumptuous, or insane. And we have to create our own flight plan, because this Earth didn’t come with one telling us how to get to the future safely. The winds of change are blowing across this l...
      1  notes

    Anticipating the future is the lesson of the past, and the modern world is increasingly disenchanted with the technological progress that makes life possible.

    01 JUL 2011

     Two Examples of Leaping to Conclusions without the Facts

    Let me give you two examples of leaping to conclusions without the full facts. Back in the 1890’s, a certain California newspaper was apprehensive about the harmful effects the railroads would have on the environment. If the trains crossed the Mojave to get to the Pacific, this newspaper editorialized, “the huge iron rails will reverse the Earth’s magnetic field with catastrophic effects.” Now that’s real science! One hundred forty years ago, the Royal Society in England warned against the ra...
    Folksonomies: facts prescience error
    Folksonomies: facts prescience error
      1  notes

    People, even scientists, thought the train would come apart and asphyxiate its passengers at speeds of 35 MPH, and the rocket was disregarded by the military until the Germans adopted it.

    01 JUL 2011

     A 1985 View of Science and Technology in Year 2000

    The glib words of years past from our politicians are hollow nightmares indeed when we are confronted with the staggering realities of what has to be done. But the key is there--technology, using it-and we hardly do now. The future may be unpredictable, but we can make a few well-aimed guesses about what life will be like in the year 2000. We’ll fly on supersonic transports, or more likely hypersonic transports, for which the ground work (or should I call it air work) has already been laid at...
    Folksonomies: futurism
    Folksonomies: futurism
      1  notes

    Prescient with the qualifier that these things will only happen if America puts emphasis on science and technology education.

    Parent Reference