Monthly Archives: January 2014

Sweet land of… conformity?

Posted: January 12, 2014 at 3:47 am

Americans like to see themselves as rugged individualists, a nation defined by the idea that people should set their own course through life. Think of Clint Eastwood rendering justice, rule-bound superiors be damned. Think of Frank Sinatra singing My Way.

The idea that personal liberty defines America is deeply rooted, and shared across the political spectrum. The lifestyle radicals of the 60s saw themselves as heirs to this American tradition of self-expression; today, it energizes the Tea Party movement, marching to defend individual liberty from the smothering grasp of European-style collectivism.

But are Americans really so uniquely individualistic? Are we, for example, more committed individualists than people in those socialist-looking nations of Europe? The answer appears to be no.

For many years now, researchers worldwide have been conducting surveys to compare the values of people in different countries. And when it comes to questions about how much the respondents value the individual against the collective that is, how much they give priority to individual interest over the demand of groups, or personal conscience over the orders of authority Americans consistently answer in a way that favors the group over the individual. In fact, we are more likely to favor the group than Europeans are.

Surprising as it may sound, Americans are much more likely than Europeans to say that employees should follow a bosss orders even if the boss is wrong; to say that children must love their parents; and to believe that parents have a duty to sacrifice themselves for their children. We are more likely to defer to church leaders and to insist on abiding by the law. Though Americans do score high on a couple of aspects of individualism, especially where it concerns government intervening in the market, in general we are likelier than Europeans to believe that individuals should go along and get along.

American individualism is far more complex than our national myths, or the soap-box rhetoric of right and left, would have it. It is not individualism in the libertarian sense, the idea that the individual comes before any group and that personal freedom comes before any allegiance to authority. Research suggests that Americans do adhere to a particular strain of liberty one that emerged in the New World in which freedom to choose your allegiance is tempered by the expectation that you wont stray from the values of the group you choose. In a political climate where liberty is frequently wielded as a rhetorical weapon but rarely discussed in a more serious way, grasping the limits of our notion of liberty might guide us to building Americas future on a different philosophical foundation.

The image of America as the bastion of libertarianism is a long-established one. Our Founding Fathers stipulated a set of personal rights and freedoms in our key documents that was, by the standards of that day, radical. The quintessentially American philosopher Ralph Waldo Emerson, in Self-Reliance, extolled the person who does not defer to outside authority or compromise his principles for the sake of any collectivity family, church, party, community, or nation.

This quality in the American character struck observers from overseas, including Alexis de Tocqueville, who in his 1830s book, Democracy in America, famously tied the relatively new word individualism to what seemed so refreshingly new about the Americans. Popular culture today reinforces this image by making heroes of men (its almost always men) who put principle above everything else, even if perhaps especially if that makes them loners.

But in modern America, when you look at real issues where individual rights conflict with group interests, Americans dont appear to see things this way at all. Over the last few decades, scholars around the world have collaborated to mount surveys of representative samples of people from different countries. The International Social Survey Programme, or ISSP, and the World Value Surveys, or WVS, are probably the longest-running, most reliable such projects. Starting with just a handful of countries, both now pose the same questions to respondents from dozens of nations.

Their findings suggest that in several major areas, Americans are clearly less individualistic than western Europeans. One topic pits individual conscience against the demands of the state. In 2006, the ISSP asked the question In general, would you say that people should obey the law without exception, or are there exceptional occasions on which people should follow their consciences even if it means breaking the law? At 45 percent, Americans were the least likely out of nine nationalities to say that people should at least on occasion follow their consciences far fewer than, for example, the Swedes (70 percent) and the French (78 percent). Similarly, in 2003, Americans turned out to be the most likely to embrace the statement People should support their country even if the country is in the wrong.

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Sweet land of... conformity?

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Beautiful footage of SpaceShipTwo’s latest supersonic test flight

Posted: at 3:46 am

Virgin Galactic's space plane, SpaceShipTwo, finished its third rocket-powered test flight yesterday, breaking the sound barrier and reaching an altitude of 71,000 feet the loftiest in a spate of recent test-runs. Here for your enjoyment is a highlight reel of yesterday's flight.

Via the Virgin Galactic news brief:

In command on the flight deck of SS2 for the first time under rocket power was Virgin Galactic's Chief Pilot Dave Mackay. Mackay, along with Scaled Composites' (Scaled) Test Pilot Mark Stucky, tested the spaceship's Reaction Control System (RCS) and the newly installed thermal protection coating on the vehicle's tail booms. All of the test objectives were successfully completed.

[Yesterday's] flight departed Mojave Air and Space Port at 7:22 a.m. PST with the first stage consisting of the WhiteKnightTwo (WK2) carrier aircraft lifting SS2 to an altitude around 46,000 ft. At the controls of WK2 were Virgin Galactic Pilot Mike Masucci and Scaled Test Pilot Mike Alsbury. On release, SS2's rocket motor was ignited, powering the spaceship to a planned altitude of 71,000 ft. SS2's highest altitude to date and at a maximum speed of Mach 1.4. SS2's unique feather re-entry system was also tested during today's flight.

Two important SS2 systems, the RCS and thermal protection coating, were tested during today's flight in preparation for upcoming full space flights. The spaceship'sRCS will allow its pilots to maneuver the vehicle in space, permitting an optimal viewing experience for those on board and aiding the positioning process for spacecraft re-entry. The new reflective protection coating on SS2's inner tail boom surfaces is being evaluated to help maintain vehicle skin temperatures while the rocket motor is firing.

SS2's propulsion system has been developed by Sierra Nevada Corp and is the world's largest operational hybrid rocket motor. Although today's flight saw it burn for a planned 20 seconds, the system has been successfully tested in ground firings to demonstrate performance characteristics and burn time sufficient to take the spaceship and its private astronauts to space.

Awesome. Now who wants to buy us a ($200,000) ticket?

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Beautiful footage of SpaceShipTwo's latest supersonic test flight

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Futurist Friday 1.10.2014 – Video

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Futurist Friday 1.10.2014
Join the Futurists for our monthly Google Hangout, where we will discuss social reading. What is social reading? What do readers want in this area? How can d...

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Kerbal Space Program – Apex Aeronautics [.23] – Episode 4 – Space Station Solar Arrays – Video

Posted: January 11, 2014 at 1:45 pm


Kerbal Space Program - Apex Aeronautics [.23] - Episode 4 - Space Station Solar Arrays
This is the beginning of a new campaign I #39;ve started in Kerbal Space Program. I #39;m masquerading as Apex Aeronautics (a fictitious engineering company) led by ...

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Space Station Live: Student Science Heading to Space Aboard Cygnus – Video

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Space Station Live: Student Science Heading to Space Aboard Cygnus
Dr. Jeff Goldstein, Director of the National Center for Earth and Space Science Education, discusses the student experiments being flown to the International...

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RAW Video Launch Of Cygnus Cargo Ship To International Space Station 1-9-14 – Video

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RAW Video Launch Of Cygnus Cargo Ship To International Space Station 1-9-14
WALLOPS ISLAND, Va. A privately built robotic spacecraft is poised to blast off from Virginia #39;s freezing cold Eastern Shore today (Jan. 8) on a debut deliv...

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Christmas gifts and ants rocket off to space station

Posted: at 1:45 pm

CAPE CANAVERAL, Fla. A privately launched supply ship rocketed toward the International Space Station on Thursday following a series of delays ranging from the cold to the sun.

Orbital Sciences Corp. launched its unmanned Antares rocket from Wallops Island, Va., offering a view to nearby states along the East Coast. It successfully hoisted a capsule packed with 3,000 pounds of equipment and experiments provided by NASA, as well as food and even some ants for an educational project. Christmas presents also are on board for the six space station residents; the delivery is a month late.

The spacecraft, named Cygnus, should reach the station on Sunday. The orbiting outpost was zooming over the Atlantic, near Brazil, when the Antares blasted off.

Its going to be an exciting weekend, Japanese astronaut Koichi Wakata said in a tweet from the space station.

The delivery had been delayed three times since December, most recently because of a strong solar storm. Engineers initially feared solar radiation might cause the rocket to veer off course. But additional reviews Wednesday deemed it an acceptable risk. Previous delays were due to space station repairs and frigid temperatures. Thursday was a relatively balmy 45 degrees.

NASA is paying Orbital Sciences and the SpaceX company to restock the space station. The Orbital Sciences contract alone is worth $1.9 billion.

This was Orbital Sciences second trip to the orbiting lab, but its first under the contract. The company conducted a successful test run last September. Two more trips are scheduled for this year. Orbital Sciences launches from NASAs Wallops Flight Facility in eastern Virginia, its corporate base. California-based SpaceX flies from Cape Canaveral. Its scheduled to make its fourth supply run next month.

The International Space StationPhoto: AFP/NASA

Great way to start out the new year were all smiles here, said Bill Wrobel, director of NASAs Wallops facility, after Thursdays launch.

The U.S., Russian and Japanese space station residents eagerly awaited the goodies inside the Cygnus. Their families included Christmas gifts; the Cygnus should have arrived in time for the holiday. NASA also tucked in some fresh fruit.

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Mount Holyoke’s Darby Dyar Heads for Outer Space–Virtually

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Newswise SOUTH HADLEY, MASS. Humans colonizing the Moon and landing spaceships on Mars: Mount Holyoke College professor M. Darby Dyar is one of the scientists who will help NASA move these ideas from the realm of science fiction to science fact.

Dyar, MHCs Kennedy-Schelkunoff Professor of Astronomy, was recently named to three of nine scientific teams that will help NASA shape the future of human space exploration.

Each month for the next five years, scientists will meet in person or through videoconferences in virtual research institutes to share expertise and focus their research on important issues in planetary science. The specifics of their work are very specific, but the goals are literally galactic in scope.

I think that, in my lifetime, we will go to other planets and establish bases there, Dyar says. Colonization of the Moon is the most likely.

NASA is funding scientists in its Solar System Exploration Research Virtual Institutes (SSERVI) in a suitably astronomical way: $12 million annually for five years. Dyars work will bring nearly $1 million of that total to Mount Holyoke, and involve students in three distinct research projects.

Dyar will co-lead a team working to get maximum scientific benefit from samples collected from other worlds and returned to Earth via space flights. Future missions might bring back only minute amounts of rock samples, says Dyar, so her expertise in analyzing extremely small samples is needed to determine how to distribute and use the limited amount of material available. This project is based at Stony Brook University and also involves MHC lab instructor Tom Burbine, an internationally recognized asteroid expert.

A second SSERVI project focuses on how to determine, from an orbiting spacecraft, what minerals are on a planets surface. For this, co-primary investigator Dyar will work with Brown University graduate students and faculty. Because the data processing apparatus theyll use at MHC is extremely complicated, our undergraduates will train the graduate students in using the equipment.

Our students do this kind of thing all the time, she says.

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Mount Holyoke's Darby Dyar Heads for Outer Space--Virtually

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SOULFLY "Territory" live 10/05/13 @ DNA Lounge CAPITALCHAOSTV.COM – Video

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SOULFLY "Territory" live 10/05/13 @ DNA Lounge CAPITALCHAOSTV.COM
http://www.facebook.com/CapitalChaos https://plus.google.com/u/0/b/118015811605522173893/118015811605522173893/photos http://www.capitalchaostv.com/ Soulfly ...

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Problem with DNA robot led to Denver police DNA mix-up

Posted: at 1:44 pm

A malfunction in a DNA processing machine led to the scrambling of samples from 11 Denver police burglary cases, officials acknowledged Friday. It took more than two years for the department to discover the errors.

As a result of the mix-up, prosecutors are dismissing burglary cases against four people, three of whom had already pleaded guilty.

All four people had confessed to at least one burglary, but the DNA error meant they were charged with the wrong ones, Denver district attorney spokeswoman Lynn Kimbrough said.

The problem caused evidence from one case to be tied to another. Authorities have since sorted out the samples, but prosecutors won't refile charges against the four people because the statute of limitations has expired. Two of the dismissed cases were against juveniles.

They will file charges in a fifth burglary case, against an adult who is already jailed on unrelated crimes in Adams County, Kimbrough said.

The mistake happened after an $80,000 DNA processing machine "froze" while running a tray of 19 DNA samples on June 13, 2011. An analyst in the city's crime lab then called the manufacturer, which supplied directions for putting the samples back onto the machine in the right sequence. Either the directions were incorrect or the analyst misinterpreted them, and the samples were replaced in the wrong order, said Lt. Matt Murray, the department's chief of staff.

The crime lab didn't suspect the possibility of an error until after the machine froze for a second time on Nov. 22, 2013, and an analyst again requested directions from the manufacturer. The analyst became concerned because the directions seemed different the second time.

Further review over the next month uncovered the earlier mix-up, Murray said.

"The samples were returned to the tray out of sequence," Murray said at a news conference to announce the error. "None of the DNA was compromised; it was merely associated with the wrong case when we were done."

Lab officials notified the police department of the problem late Thursday, he said. District Attorney Mitch Morrissey was notified Friday afternoon.

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