Saturday: Hili dialogue

May 31, 2014 • 2:54 am

Hili is taking her tactics from Israel (after all, her name means “She’s mine!” in Hebrew). Here Andrzej plays the role of John Kerry:

A: It is high time to start direct peace negotiations.
Hili: First he has to recognize my right to exist.

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In Polish:
Ja: Najwyższy czas zacząć bezpośrednie rozmowy pokojowe.
Hili: On musi najpierw uznać moje prawo do egzystencji.

Symphony in sea minor: otters play the keyboard

May 30, 2014 • 2:05 pm

Yes, yes, I know these are freshwater beasts; in fact small-clawed otters (Aonyx cinerea) inhabit mangrove swamps and wetlands in Asia, and, at less than 5 kg, they’re world’s smallest otters. Here they play us into the weekend:

From Gawker:

The Smithsonian National Zoo’s family of Asian small-clawed otters—the smallest, cutest otter species in the world—spent some time over the weekend with one of their favorite toys: a keyboard to bang on. With their small claws, natch.

This is an exercise in animal enrichment—something the zoo says ranks with nutrition and medicine in terms of an animal’s quality of life—but it’s just as much fun for humans as it is for otters.

The small-claws get keyboard practice sessions twice a month, to “engage their sight, touch, and hearing senses.”

Perhaps some of our musician readers can assess the quality of the composition.

h/t: Hempenstein

A universe fine-tuned for humans?

May 30, 2014 • 10:08 am

A few days ago I put up a video by Keith “Mr. Deity” Dalton, decrying a really insane piece by Jewish apologist Dennis Prager explaining why the story of Noah’s Ark was “one of the most moral stories ever told.” (There was also a funny video of Bill Maher’s take on The Great Flood.)

Prager’s piece included this gem:

Q: Why did God destroy animals as well?

A: In the biblical worldview, the purpose of all creation is to benefit man. This anthropocentric view of nature, and indeed of the whole universe, is completely at odds with the current secular idealization of nature. This secular view posits that nature has its own intrinsic meaning and purpose, independent of man.

All of creation, in the biblical view, was to ultimately prepare the way for the creation of man. But one does not need the Bible alone to hold this view. A purely scientific reading of the universe is in keeping with this view. Everything — every natural and physical law — is exquisitely tuned to produce life, and ultimately man, on earth.

What struck me was the argument for “fine-tuning” has now been turned from the production of life to the production of “man.” Yet the physical constants supposedly necessary to produce life are sufficient to produce humans as well: God clearly required no additional “fine-tuning”—even if you accept that fallacious argument—to allow for humans than to allow for, say, fungi and squirrels.

Over at the creationist website Evolution News and Views (where they don’t allow any comments), the equally batty David Klinghoffer, another Jewish apologist, lauds Prager’s ridiculous piece, and denigrates me at the same time (that’s usual for Klinghoffer, who, bereft of arguments for Intelligent Design, spends his time obsessing over my character and my criticisms of ID). Here’s a screenshot of part of his comment:

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Exactly right???? Really? Even if the universe were fine-tuned for life (and I don’t think for a minute it was), how, my dear Mr. Klinghoffer, can you distinguish God’s fine-tuning the universe for life versus fine-tuning it for human life? After all, the physical constants required for both kinds of tuning are identical!  

The fact that he and others make this argument is a clear sign that their arguments are based not on science but on religion. For it is only scripture and not science that argues that humans are special creatures on this planet. The phrase “the fine-tuning of the cosmos specifically for human life” gives away the religious roots of intelligent design—roots that people like Klinghoffer repeatedly deny.

And, as I’ve argued before, you can’t sensibly make the argument that the evolution of humans or human-like creatures was inevitable. Even given determinism, if mutations are inherently nondeterministic phenomena, and evolution depends, as it does, on what mutations appear, then we can’t say that the appearance of any specific species or morphology was inevitable.

Have a look at the trailer given below for the upcoming creationist movie “Privileged Species” touted by Klinghoffer. Notice that there is not one bit of evidence in this goddamned trailer that humans, as opposed to any other oxygen-using species, are “privileged.” The trailer emphasizes oxygen, which is of course a requirement for animal life. But that oxygen was produced by the photosynthesis of plants, not by God. And since hummingbirds have a higher per gram requirement for oxygen than humans, I conclude that if the Earth was was fine-tuned for life, the ultimate aim of God’s machinations was hummingbirds, the apotheosis of creation.

The trailer is narrated by Michael Denton, described as “geneticist and senior fellow, Discovery Institute.”

Man involved in love-match that resulted in stoning of his bride admits strangling previous wife

May 30, 2014 • 7:15 am

On Tuesday I posted the sad story of Farzana Parveen, a 25-year old pregnant Pakistani woman who, contrary to her family’s wishes, married the man she loved, Mohammad Iqbal.  For that crime, she was stoned to death by her relatives in front of the High Court building of Lahore.

This so-called “honour killing” involved the arrest of the father, and a still fruitless search for the other killers, but underscored the lack of autonomy of women that leads, in Pakistan and other countries, to marriages that are arranged—often involving much older men.

I now have the sad duty to supplement that story with some horrible news that just emerged. It turns out that, according to the Guardian, this is not a black-and-white tale of star-crossed lovers thwarted by a retrograde culture. For Iqbal himself has now admitted that he was already married when he met Parveen, and, to get her as his bride, he strangled his first wife to death:

Muhummad Iqbal, the 45-year-old husband of Farzana Parveen, who was beaten to death by 20 male relatives on Tuesday, said he strangled his first wife in order to marry Parveen. He avoided a prison sentence after his family used Islamic provisions of Pakistan’s legal system to forgive him, precisely those he has insisted should not be available to his wife’s killers. “I was in love with Farzana and killed my first wife because of this love,” he told Agence France-Presse. Police confirmed that the killing had happened six years ago and that he was released after a “compromise” with his family.

I have been excoriated by some readers for even mentioning Islam in connection with the stoning, but can you still excuse that religion now? Iqbal himself is a woman-killer, but didn’t serve a day in jail because of “Islamic provisions of Pakistan’s legal system.”

The story gets even worse:

Iqbal has also claimed that Parveen’s family killed another one of their daughters some years ago. Speaking to a researcher from the Aurat Foundation, a women’s rights organisation, he claimed that Parveen’s father, Muhammad Azeem, had poisoned the other woman after falling out with her husband-in-law.

This claim has not been substantiated. Finally, as if this weren’t sickening enough, the media and some educated people in Pakistan are excusing the stoning of Parveen. (I haven’t heard calls for prosecution of Iqbal: after all, he was exculpated). As I feared, but predicted, Pakistanis haven’t been rising up en masse to protest at this mistreatment of women (according to Pakistan’s Human Rights Commission, over 900 Pakistani women were murdered in “honour killings” in 2013).

Until Thursday there had been little comment on the case domestically, with newspapers and television stations focussing on other stories. One journalist, an editor of an Urdu national paper who did not want to be named, said the country’s media reflected its audience. “Although we have some educated people, most are still living in semi-tribal societies in far-flung rural areas,” he said. “In a country where people are being killed every day by miscreants and militants it is not so important when one woman is killed by one husband.” Some members of the public in Lahore clearly share the media’s ambivalence. Muhammad Yaqub, a student at a private university in the city, said he understood the loss of honour for the family but disliked the brutal way the woman had been killed. “He did some right and some wrong,” he said.

I wonder what the “right” is!  And really, it is “not so important when one woman is killed by one husband”? What kind of brutish and callous mentality produces such stupidity? Can we consider 930 such killings “important”? Ask anyone whose friends, relatives, or loved ones have been slaughtered in this way if that one murder was “unimportant.”

Here are the data from a 2013 Pew survey of Muslims in various countries asking, among many other questions, when honour killings are permissible for males and for females (note that the data are the percentage saying that such killings are never justified).  In Pakistan, less than half of Muslim respondents said such killings were never justified. In almost every case, when there is a difference between the sexes, it’s more justifiable to kill the female than the male.
This country is our ally! If Pakistanis won’t speak out en masse against this treatment of women, and the barbaric practice itself, let President Obama issue a strongly-worded statement. He was quick to decry the murders of 6 in Santa Barbara, so let him do the same for Pakistan, where the problem is far, far worse, for honour killings are socially sanctioned.
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Earliest evidence of birds visiting flowers

May 30, 2014 • 4:50 am

Angiosperms, or flowering plants, first appear in the fossil record about 160 million years ago. A new paper in Biology Lettersby Gerald Mayr and Volker Wilde (reference below and—I think—a free download) shows that by about 50 million years ago, birds had already evolved to take advantage of this new food source.

Mayr and Wild report a new bird fossil from the famous Messel formation of Germany. The specimen, Pumiliornis tessellatus, is remarkably well preserved as a complete skeleton and is dated at roughly 47 million years, in the middle Eocene.  It is not a member of any of the three modern groups of birds that independently evolved the ability to eat nectar and pollen: hummingbirds, lorikeets + hanging parrots, and some groups of the Passeriformes (“perching birds,” whose nectar-and-pollen eaters include sunbirds, honeycreepers, etc.).

The remarkable thing about this specimen, as shown in the photo below, is that there is a clump of pollen grains near the femur—right where the stomach would be in a living bird.  Although there are also a few insect parts (perhaps accidentally ingested along with the pollen), the number of grains, their clumping, and their position suggests that this bird was in fact eating pollen. Notice the wonderful feather impressions in the fossil below:

sn-eocene

Here are some scanning electron microscope (SEM) photos of the fossilized pollen:

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The other clue that this bird didn’t accidentally eat pollen, and was adapted to a flower-feeding lifestyle, comes from its appearance. It has a long beak and enlarged nasal openings characteristic of modern birds that sip nectar, and it has “zygodactyl” feet, meaning that the fourth toe could be turned backwards—a trait of perching birds that climb branches and flower stems. The #1 toe is the one you should look at in the photo below:

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Now it’s not clear if pollen was the primary object of this bird’s diet, was ingested accidentally while drinking nectar, or if the bird ate both pollen and nectar.  What is pretty clear is that by the middle Eocene, when this bird lived, birds had already evolved to use as food flowering plants that had been around for over 100 million years.

Although the authors were unable to identify the plant that produced this pollen, they suggest that it was already itself evolutionarily adapted to pollination by animals rather than wind:

Although pollen size does not allow discrimination of insect and bird pollination, the large size of the grains and the fact that some are still clumping (figure 2c) indicate direct ingestion from a plant adapted for animal rather than wind pollination.

This pushes back the earliest known bird/nectar/pollen interaction by 17 million years, as heretofore the earliest such specimen dated at about 30 mya.

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Gerald Mayr and Volker Wilde. 2014. Eocene fossil is earliest evidence of flower-visiting by birds. Biol Lett 2014 10: 20140223

Friday: Hili dialogue

May 30, 2014 • 3:14 am

It’s Friday! We so excited! And the strife continues in Dobrzyn. . .

A: Hili, for goodness sake! You’re going to fall with that vase!  
Hili: That might scare Cyrus.
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In Polish:
Ja: Hili, na litość boską, spadniesz razem z tym wazonem!
Hili: To może się Cyrus przestraszy.
Don’t forget to check out the Hili Tumblr, which includes many early dialogues never published here, as well as adorable pictures of Baby Hili.