I still hate using the term “believe” when it comes to science, but these are still interesting (and telling) results.
I still hate using the term “believe” when it comes to science, but these are still interesting (and telling) results.
— Carl Sagan (via ageofreason)
(via the-sexpat-life)
— Dorion Sagan - Science Writer and Son of Carl Sagan (via cwnl)
(Source: ikenbot, via divineirony)
James Randi explains homeopathy
If you believe that homeopathic medicine can treat ailments better than medicine that has been scientifically proven to work, you are acting irrational. In this short video James Randi explains homeopathy. This is a portion of the lecture Randi gave at Princeton in 2001.
The full video is here: James Randi Lecture at Princeton 2001.
James Randi dismantles homeopathy.
As shown by Randi in the video, there is no way homeopathy can work according to chemistry as we know it; the math simply doesn’t work out. At commonly-available retail dilutions, there is a vanishingly small chance that the product contains even one molecule of the supposedly-active ingredient—which is typically an antidote to the desired effect, if not an outright poison.
(Source: youtube.com, via skeptv)
Creationists Accidentally Validate Human Evolution
The above table summarizes the conclusions of about a dozen creationist essays, classifying hominid fossils as either humans or apes. If, as creationists claim, the ape and humans species were created spontaneously and distinctly, there should be no issue grouping a fossil in one group or the other. As shown above, creationists can’t even agree among themselves which species each fossil corresponds to, inadvertently supporting the evolutionary theory of human origins.
Notice the gradual change in consensus over ape or human. Then notice that the skulls are in chronological order.
Anyone?
(via deejaylate)