Nominees for The Golden Steve Awards

February 12, 2015 • 12:00 pm

As he does yearly, my movie-maven nephew Steven, with his usual hubris, has nominated last year’s movies for what he humbly calls the “Golden Steve” awards. As he says on his website “Truth at 24“:

Far and away the most coveted of motion picture accolades, Golden Steves are frequently described as the Oscars without the politics. Impervious to bribery, immune to ballyhoo, unswayed by sentiment and riddled with integrity, this committee of one might legitimately be termed “fair-mindedness incarnate.” Over 160 of the year’s most acclaimed features were screened prior to the compilation of this ballot. Check back tomorrow night for the winners. First, some caveats:

1) Owing to a lifelong suspicion of prime numbers, each category is comprised of six nominees, not five.

2) A film can be nominated in only one of the following categories: Best Animated Feature, Best Non-Fiction Film, Best Foreign Language Film. Placement is determined by the Board of Governors. Said film remains eligible in all other fields.

3) This list is in no way connected with the Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences—a fact that should be apparent from its acumen. Please look elsewhere for Oscar analysis.

I’ll give just his “Best Picture” nominees; you can see the rest on his site. There are 12 categories, and the winner in each (chosen by the lad himself, of course) will be announced on the site tomorrow night.

Best Picture

Boyhood

The Dance of Reality

Goodbye to Language

Ida

Mr. Turner

Under the Skin

Steven has also announced his selection for the winners of the regular Oscars (to be announced Feb. 22), which I put in an earlier post. He has a superb track record of picking the winners, so we’ll check back in ten days to find out out how he did.

Speaking of clams. . .

February 12, 2015 • 10:30 am

(Does that sound like the title of a Krista Tippett show?). I’m on the move today, and posting will be light, which means that if I report on science or natural history, I won’t have time to read the original papers. But this finding is cool anyway, and there’s a video, so I’ll use a secondary source. In fact, checking the Nat. Geo. article and the Wikipedia piece on the clam, I don’t think this phenomenon has yet been published in a reviewed journal (it’s been presented at a meeting).

National Geographic reports on the phenomenon of “disco clams” off Indonesia. The species (Ctenoides ales) is also called the “electric clam” and the “electric flame scallop,” for it  has a habit that (as far as I know) is unique among bivalves: it produces flashing lights. You can see that in this video:

Why the light show? First of all, it’s not really a light show: the clams are not bioluminescent. Rather, they have a cute trick to make it look as though they’re flashing. From Wikipedia:

Research by graduate student Lindsey Dougherty showed that the apparent flashing-light display of this clam is not a bioluminescence phenomenon, but is instead coming from reflection of the ambient light (sun or diving light). A staff member of the Lembeh Resort in Indonesia, where Dougherty was working with Dimpy Jacobs in August 2013, wrote, “The clams have a highly reflective tissue on the very outer edge of their mantle that is exposed and then hidden very quickly, so the change back and forth from the white reflective tissue to the red tissue creates the appearance of flashing”.

Dougherty went on to discover that the brightly reflective edge of the mantle of these clams contains nano-spheres made of silica, which are very reflective.

So why do they flash? Presumably not to attract John Travolta, but there are three other hypotheses:

1. Attracting a mate
2. Attracting prey (plankton in this case)
3. Warning predators to stay away (what biologist call an aposematic trait)

#3 would only work, of course, if the clam was either toxic or distasteful to predators. In fact, that turns out to be the case, but read about the research supporting #3 as the answer on the National Geographic site.

In other words, the trait evolved for Staying Alive:

stayin-aliveh/t: M(C)squared

 

Another Republican politician ducks question of whether he accepts evolution; making a full slate of GOP candidates who won’t affirm the truth of evolution

February 12, 2015 • 8:30 am

Wisconsin governor Scott Walker, a diehard conservative, is being bruited about as a possible Republican presidential candidate in 2016. Given that, it’s appropriate for us to examine his views about evolution, which are, after all, a touchstone of how far a man’s religious belief—or pandering to his constituency—blinds him to obvious scientific truth.

Of course Walker, as we see in the video below, flatly refuses to answer the question of whether he “believes in” (I prefer “accepts the scientific truth of”) evolution. We’re left wondering whether he either doesn’t accept evolution, or he does but won’t admit it for fear of driving away conservative voters. Either way it’s an invidious tactic. I’d send all these people a copy of Why Evolution is True, but you know that wouldn’t accomplish anything. After all, only 19% of Americans accept a naturalistic view of evolution, and why would you want to alienate the rest?

PuffHo also gives a summary:

Wisconsin Gov. Scott Walker (R) on Wednesday dodged a question about whether he believes in evolution.

Speaking at the Chatham House foreign policy think tank London, Walker was asked: “Are you comfortable with the idea of evolution? Do you believe in it?”

“For me, I am going to punt on that one as well,” he said. “That’s a question politicians shouldn’t be involved in one way or another. I am going to leave that up to you. I’m here to talk about trade, not to pontificate about evolution.”

Walker was officially in the United Kingdom to promote trade and investment. He added when pressed: “I love the evolution of trade in Wisconsin.”

Those of you who defend Republicans as “not all being idiots,” well, read this piece by Luke Brinker in Salon, laying out where all the potential G.O.P. candidates for president stand on evolution. Here’s Brinker’s summary of their stands.

The Evolutionists

  • Nobody. [JAC: Depressing, isn’t it?]

The Asterisk

  • Jeb Bush: Asked in 2005 whether he accepted evolution, Bush affirmed that he did — but that it shouldn’t be taught in schools. “Yeah, but I don’t think it should actually be part of the curriculum, to be honest with you,” Bush said. “And people have different points of view and they can be discussed at school, but it does not need to be in the curriculum.” Later that year, he argued that students should be presented with “varying viewpoints.” [JAC: I hope they ask him this in the Presidential debates, and then hit him hard about teaching creationism as science.]

They Aren’t Scientists

  • Chris Christie: Does Christie affirm evolutionary science? “That’s none of your business,” he replied with characteristic brusqueness in 2011. “Evolution is required teaching,” he added. “If there’s a certain school district that also wants to teach creationism, that’s not something we should decide in Trenton.” [JAC: Teaching creationism also happens to be against the law.]
  • Ted Cruz: While his kooky father would like you to know that evolution is a Communist lie, the Texas senator himself “won’t discuss evolution directly,” the New Yorker reported.
  • Bobby Jindal: The Brown University biology major, Rhodes scholar, and scorner of “the stupid party” feigns ignorance on the subject, emphasizing last year that he’s not an “evolutionary biologist” and contending that local schools should decide what they teach. [JAC: I wrote a popular book on the topic that is accessible and comprehensible to every semi-educated or educated person, including biology major Jindal. He’s simply a coward who won’t even look at the evidence.]
  • John Kasich: During his 2010 run for Ohio governor, Kasich seemed to place evolution and creationism on a par with one another, saying only that both evolution and “creation science” should be taught in classrooms.
  • Rand Paul: During his 2010 Senate campaign, Paul courted young earth creationists and said he would “pass” on the question of how old the earth is.
  • Marco Rubio: Asked the earth’s age in 2012, Rubio replied, “I’m not a scientist, man.” He added, “At the end of the day, I think there are multiple theories out there on how the universe was created and I think this is a country where people should have the opportunity to teach them all.” After his remarks on the earth’s age were widely derided, Rubio acknowledged that it’s 4.5 billion years old, but maintained that that wasn’t inconsistent with creationism.
  • Scott Walker: He’s going to punt on this one.

The Hell No Caucus

  • Ben Carson: He may be an acclaimed neurosurgeon, but Carson casts his lot with the creationists. “Evolution and creationism both require faith. It’s just a matter of where you choose to place that faith,” he declared in 2012, proceeding to imply that evolutionists lacked an ethical framework. [JAC: He’s a Seventh-day Adventist, but he just looks like an idiot when he says that accepting evolution requires as much faith as his religion.]
  • Mike Huckabee: During a 2007 GOP presidential debate, the Southern Baptist preacher and former Arkansas governor indicated that he doesn’t accept evolution. “But you know, if anybody wants to believe they are the descendants of a primate, they are certainly welcome to do it,” he said. [JAC: Huckabee, like all of us, are of course direct descendants of primates. Even if he doesn’t accept evolution, does he deny that his own parents are primates?]
  • Rick Perry: Calling evolution just a “theory that’s out there,” Perry proclaimed in 2011 that “God is how we got here.” Creationism and evolution should both be presented in public schools, he added. [JAC: He’s advocating that schools violate the law—a great stand for a Presidential candidate!]
  • Rick Santorum: Denouncing the idea that evolution is “above reproach,” Santorum said in 2008, “I obviously don’t feel that way. I think there are a lot of problems with the theory of evolution, and do believe that it is used to promote to a worldview that is anti-theist, that is atheist.”

I would absolutely love to debate all of these candidates at once on the truth of evolution and the history of teaching creationism in U.S. schools. Twelve against one—bring ’em on!  They got nothing!

h/t: Barry, jsp

Readers’ wildlife photos

February 12, 2015 • 7:20 am

Now that he’s back from Hobbitland, Stephen Barnard has started sending us photos again. And I can’t believe I’m including d*gs as wildlife here, except that I like border collies best among all d*gs—and the puppies are cute. His report:

The weather conditions have been difficult and good photos have been few  and far between.

The first is a pair of Trumpeter Swans (Cygnus buccinator) at long distance. I like the color of the background.

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The second is yet another Red-tailed Hawk (Buteo jamaicensis) that are  common as dirt here but spooky.

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Finally, my d*g, the Border Collie Deets [Canis lupus familiaris], in action yesterday, and in October 2010 as a pup (on the far left).

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And reader Joe Dickenson sends what I think are our first photographs of clams:

I think this may be a new one for your wildlife series:  giant clams (Tridacna gigas) taken on the reefs around four islands in French Polynesia (Moorea, Bora Bora, Raiatea and Huahini).  I’m not sure what causes the striking variations in color; perhaps differences in the populations of symbiotic algae?  I would be happy to hear from knowledgable readers.  Expect other reef denizens in a few days.

giant clams1

 

According to Wikipedia, these things can get up to 200 kg in weight. They also have, as Joe notes above, symbiotic algae:

The creature’s mantle tissues act as a habitat for the symbiotic single-celled dinoflagellate algae (zooxanthellae) from which it gets nutrition. By day, the clam opens its shell and extends its mantle tissue so that the algae receive the sunlight they need to photosynthesize.

giant clams3

 

giant clams5

giant clams4

giant clams6

 


 

Thursday: Hili dialogue

February 12, 2015 • 4:34 am

It’s Darwin Day, today, and I’m off to Mississippi to spread the Good News of Evolution. Posting may be light until I return Saturday evening, but, like Maru, I do my best.

In honor of today, there’s a special Hili dialogue. But first an explanatory note from Malgorzata

This dialogue may be rather incomprehensible for WEIT readers. On Listy it is placed just by an article by Ed Yong in which a uterus of a pregnant platypus plays a prominent role.

*******
Hili: It’s Darwin Day today.
A: So what?
Hili: Nothing, I’m thinking about a pregnant platypus.
A: Have you reached any conclusions?
Hili: Yes, God works in mysterious ways when you are looking for the right uterus.
P1020158
In Polish:
Hili: Dziś Dzień Darwina.
Ja: I co?
Hili: Nic, myślę o samicy dziobaka w ciąży.
Ja: Masz jakieś wnioski?
Hili: Tak, niezbadane są wyroki boskie jak poszukujesz właściwej macicy.

Superb owls

February 11, 2015 • 3:20 pm

Let’s end today’s hijinks with everyone’s favorite bird, the owl, which was coopted during the SuperBowl into the meme SuperbOwl, which is far more appealing. Matthew sent me a tw**t from the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service showing this photo, which looks for all the world like a group of owl fans cheering on their team:

215bo1
Photo Credit: Katie McVey/USFWS

They are, in fact, young burrowing owls (Athene cunicularia), and they’re in an artificial burrow: a five-gallon bucket buried and connected to the surface with a breathing pipe. It’s a way to save this endangered species whose habitat is declining.

If you go to the USFWS website, you’ll see a bit more about how the picture was taken (by Katie McVey, doing her graduate research) and how the owls are given artificial burrows. The short post also includes this hilarious picture of the chicks either being banded or being checked. Owls always look either pissed off or bemused:

215bo2
Photo Credit: Katie McVey/USFWS

From the site:

Burrowing owls are different from many owls people know. Aside from living in tunnels, when a burrowing owl feels threatened (like the owls pictured at top), they hiss. So while the owls look surprised, they are actually defending themselves.

The hissing sounds like a rattlesnake and deters some predators from looking in the burrow for a meal because who wants to deal with a nest full of rattlesnakes?

“The owls in the photo [at top] look like 30 day olds,” almost ready to fly away, and those colorful bands will enable researchers to ID the birds without putting them through the stress of recapture.

And just to remind you that these adorable birds are in fact efficient and vicious predators, here’s the last bit of the post:

Finally, burrowing owls really are as cute as the photos make them seem, Katie says, “except when they don’t finish a meal. This little guy has the tail of a kangaroo rat still sticking out of his mouth. Yum!”

215bo3
Still eating. Photo Credit: Katie McVey/USFWS

And, as lagniappe, Matthew also sent me a link to this engraving in Amsterdam’s Rijksmuseum. It’s skating owls, created in the 17th century by the Dutch artist Adriaen van de Venne (1589-1662). Note that they’re carrying their noms. (Excuse the screenshot.)

Screen Shot 2015-02-11 at 2.44.56 PM

 

Vatican newspaper screws up the theory of evolution before criticizing it

February 11, 2015 • 1:19 pm

Is the Vatican down with Darwin? I don’t think so.

Apologists often argue that many churches have no problem with evolution, trotting out the Catholic Church as an example.  Well, that’s not quite true. The Church has sort-of endorsed evolution, but it also endorses the historical reality of Adam and Eve as our ancestors, and also accepts human exceptionalism in the form of our having a soul that God somehow inserted into our ancestors. Further, in 2009, 27% of American Catholics described themselves as young-earth creationists, bucking their church in the direction of being more conservative. So I’m not really happy with the Church’s form of god-guided “theistic evolution,” nor their insistence on a two-person bottleneck of Homo sapiens that is completely contradicted by genetic data.

My view that the Church has problems with evolution is supported by an article that just appeared in  L’Osservatore Romano, the Vatican City newspaper. Although it doesn’t speak officially for the Church, it does give us some notion of how the winds of official Catholicism are blowing. And for evolution they seem to be ill winds.The piece in question is written by Carlo Maria Polvani, identified by Wikipedia as a priest with science training:

Carlo Maria Polvani. . . is a Roman Catholic priest and currently a member of the Committee for the reform for the Vatican Media since his appointment in July 2014.

Polvani was born in Milan. He was educated in the Istituto Leone XIII and then in the Collège Stanislas, he earned a Baccalauréat Français Section Scientifique avec mention in 1982. He enrolled in McGill University, Canada in the Department of Biochemistry and received in 1985, a B.Sc. with honours and in 1990 a Ph.D Dean’s Honour List, for his research on the enzymatic mechanism of the Sodium Potassium ATPase.

But his piece, “Whyy are there no penguins at the North Pole?”, is replete with errors and misunderstandings, perhaps because Fr. Polvani didn’t really learn much about evolution during his training in biochemistry. The upshot of  the piece is that modern evolutionary theory is in deep trouble because it is not predictive—it can’t tell us what will evolve and what will not—and because of that it needs a New Paradigm. The title of the piece is its message: evolutionary biologists don’t have a good explanation of why there are no Arctic penguins!

If this wasn’t in L’Osservatore Romano, it wouldn’t be worth discussing, for it’s just one more antievolution piece from an ignorant person. But if this reflects some current in the Church, we should pay a bit of attention. But just a bit!

Evolutionists will cringe at the errors in Polvani’s article. Here’s some big ones, for instance, that crop up when the good Father is trying to explain natural selection:

When, however, mutations cause more competitive characteristics to emerge, they tend to express themselves in subsequent generations by disruptive selection (one phenotype eliminates another), stabilizing selection (a phenotype is established in a population), or directional selection (the particular characteristic of a phenotype is strengthened).

Umm. . . not exactly.  Leving aside the confusing phrase “mutations tend to express themselves,” the definition of disruptive selection is completely wrong. It’s actually selection for two discrete phenotypes at the same time, with the intermediate types being at a disadvantage. An example is the Pyrinestes finches in Africa studied by Tom Smith, in which birds are selected for either thick or thin beaks because of the presumed bimodality of seed types, and those with intermediate beaks leave fewer offspring. And the definitions of “stabilizing selection” (which really means that an intermediate type is favored and deviants in either direction from that type are disfavored) as well as of directional selection (one extreme of a phenotypic distribution is favored, like selection for increasing antibiotic resistance in bacteria)—are equally muddled.

In other words, Father Polvani doesn’t seem to understand what he’s talking about. But let’s get to the meat of his argument—those missing Arctic penguins. First he brings up Popper’s criterion of falsification: that if Darwinian evolution is a real scientific theory, it should be possible to show it to be wrong—to make observations that would falsify it. Polvani says that we can’t, implying that we can always make up a story to save the modern theory of evolution, rendering it impervious to refutation and thus invalid as a theory in the Popperian sense.

What, says Polvani, has cast doubt on evolution? The fact that we don’t see penguins at the North Pole! Yep, listen up:

The Darwinist position implies that statistically, the genotypic mutation of wings into fins would have also occurred in birds living in other areas on the planet, such as, for example, the rainforests of Sumatra, but since in that environment the phenotypic features offered no competitive advantages, the penguin did not establish itself there. The same Darwinist position, however, implies that in the Arctic zones, similar in many ways to those of the Antarctic, species similar to the penguin might have been expected. Instead, there are none. To explain this absence, many Darwinists frequently use a deductive or ‘top-down’ approach, pleading the existence of causes not yet explained experimentally in order to justify an unforeseen observation.

There would be no lack of Darwinists prepared to support the idea that the presence of predators like polar bears, who live exclusively at the North Pole, could possibly be the reason for the absence of penguins in the boreal zones. Although, this line of argument might even prove valid could such an experiment take place, it is nevertheless tainted by a tautological logic: in fact, one cannot base a theory on an observation and then, when such a process results in an unsatisfactory conclusion, invoke the theory to justify the observation. This limitation is reinforced by the fact that, as things stand now, the Darwinist position, contrary to other scientific theories, has nothing to brag about with regard to predictability, that is, the capacity to correctly predict future observations on the basis of theoretical postulates. Indeed, there is not a single biologist who can forecast if and when penguins might appear at the North Pole, not even assuming the hypothetical extinction of polar bears due to global warming.

Look, it’s true that we can’t completely explain the absence of penguins at the North Pole, or of any aquatic, non-flying birds there, because any number of things could explain this historical phenomenon (or non-phenomenon). The right ancestral species might not have been in the area, the ice pack, which is different from that in the Antarctic (Antarctica, after all, has LAND under the ice), might not have given advantage to flightless birds, there might not be enough fish around, or the right mutations might not have occurred even if there were potential “penguinoid” ancestors. Polvani’s argument is like saying that cosmology is invalid because we can’t explain why there aren’t more than nine planets.  Evolution is a historical science that depends on many unknowns—including the absence of mutations in species we don’t even know about—and it’s dumb to make us explain why species are missing. Is evolution deficient because we can’t explain the absence of marsupial primates?

But that doesn’t mean that evolution doesn’t make predictions, or is not falsifiable. There were ample predictions about the presence of fossil intermediates, intermediates that have since been found—and at the right position in the fossil record. That began with Darwin suggesting in 1871 that human ancestors would be found in Africa, and continuing through the prediction and discovery of mammal-like reptiles, reptile-like amphibians, feathered dinosaurs, and, recently Tiktaalik, a possible transitional form between fish and amphibians whose date and location were predicted almost perfectly.

Further, evolutionists predicted, before they were found, “dead” or inactive genes in the genome, for when a trait is removed by evolution it’s usually by the inactivation of its genes—not their complete removal from the DNA. And so, as I describe in WEIT, biologists predicted and found dead genes for yolk protein in humans (we no longer need yolk to nourish our young), and also inactivated olfactory receptor genes in porpoises and whales (they descended from animals who smelled in air, but no longer need those genes since they live in the water).

Evolution further makes what I call “retrodictions”—the ability to uniquely make sense out of previously puzzling observations. These include the presence of hind limb buds on embryonic dolphins that later disappear, and the transitory coat of hair (the “lanugo”) that appears at about six months during human gestation and then is lost.

Finally, there are many observations that, if made, would cast serious doubt on the veracity of evolution.  The most famous, of course, is the finding of fossils in the wrong places, but I have a list of a dozen others. Another is the presence in a species of a evolved trait that ia useful only for members of another species, like teats on a lion that can be suckled only by warthogs. Needless to say, none of these observations have been made. In my book I note, “Despite a million chances to be wrong, evolution always comes up right. That’s as close to a scientific truth as we can get.”

But Father Polvani still feels that he’s inflicted mortal blows on Darwinism, showing that it’s unfalsifiable. And he still seems to think there’s something else wrong with it, though he doesn’t specify what:

A reading of John Paul II’s 1996 Message to the Pontifical Academy of Sciences is enough to realize that few today doubt the evolution of life on Earth. This, however, does not alter the fact that the onus probandi (burden of proving) the precise scientific merit of the specifics of the Darwinist formulation of that theory still rests on the shoulders of its defenders.

I got news for you, Father Polvani: we’ve already shown its merit! We don’t have to do that any more!

Polvani goes on, giving a passing slap to Dawkins (of course):

In this context, it is rather paradoxical that proponents of scientific independence from the interference of religion — atheistic vehemence is manifest in Dawkins’ pamphlet The God Delusion (2006) — refuse to submit their thesis to a strictly scientific examination. Hence, merit goes to the Pontifical Academy of Sciences for having rigorously investigated, in 2008, the scientific basis of the evolution of life. The main threat to the scientific integrity of the theory of evolution, in fact, does not come from an alleged invasion of the field by theology, but rather from the incapacity of a certain self-referential science to recognize when it is time for a paradigmatic change, as philosopher Thomas Samuel Kuhn (1922-1996) indicated in The Structure of Scientific Revolutions (1966), noting ironically that “only when they must choose between competing theories do scientists behave like philosophers”.

Sorry, Father, but the main threat to public acceptance of evolution is religion, for all creationism springs from religion, and every bit of organized opposition to evolution comes from religionists. You’d have to be blind to think otherwise. I’m a lot more worried about religiously-based creationists (and yes, that includes the 27% of members of Polvani’s church) than I am about the supposed fatal weaknesses in evolutionary theory that demand a New Paradigm.

And by the way, Father Polvani, exactly why do you think it’s time for that New Paradigm of Evolution?

h/t: Felipe