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Comment Re: Because she had a big impact on peace on earth (Score 2) 144

few lately meet the original criteria of fostering peace and reducing war,

I think it's been very broad for the last 50 years, and what they also now recognize is nonviolent resistance to tyranny. That's why MLK and Lech Walesa won the prize (among others), and I have a hard time thinking of anyone more deserving.

Comment Re:A bit of a straw-man (Score 1) 238

On the other hand, implementation of technology has become a corporate thing.

Unlike 100 years ago, when anyone with a trowel and some perseverance could grow iPhones in their home garden, and communications satellites were built by village artisans.

Or we could go back in time to, say, the 1940s, when the development of computers and rockets was being driven by one of the ugliest wars in history. Not to say that it wasn't necessary, but do you really think that would be an improvement over Apple and SpaceX?

Comment Re:Patents? (Score 1) 315

You realize all power utilities are already monopolies regulated as utilities, don't you? They are guaranteed exclusive access to their captive markets.

What applies to the US does not necessarily apply to the other 95% of the world's population.

Until they have a working prototype to show the patent office they should be put in the same pile with patent applications for perpetual motion machines.

That would make it impossible to patent until someone has invested the $2.8 billion estimated to build such a machine, and why would they do that without a guarantee of exclusivity?

Patent applications for perpetual motion machines are fed into the shredder because they violate the known laws of physics. But there's nothing that says this reactor isn't possible. I suspect that the engineering challenges involved are much more difficult than expected or admitted (they always are), but that's a separate problem, and very difficult to predict in advance.

Comment Re:Patents? (Score 3, Insightful) 315

This has been legal for at least 34 years. As someone who has to deal with the consequences of Bayh-Dole on a regular basis, I have mixed feelings about it. On the one hand, it causes universities to lock up a lot of basic research as restricted IP, which holds back progress and actually makes it more difficult for the results to reach the market. Or, even worse, the inventors (or eventual IP holders) treat it as a money-making machine and are basically using using the federal funding to do product development. (As opposed to using federal funding to come up with the initial concept, then private funding to develop the product.)

On the other hand, for something that's extremely capital-intensive to develop, where commercialization requires orders of magnitude more funding than the government initially provided, no one is going to invest the money required unless they're guaranteed exclusivity. This is certainly one of those cases. The alternative is for the DOE, or the UW, to invest $2.8 billion of its own money (which, ultimately, is other people's money) developing a commercial-scale reactor - and that still doesn't really get it to "market".

Comment Re:What the Hell (pun intended) (Score 1) 29

Also, it's odd: Nobel prizes used to be given to things which hae proven their worth. Super-res microscopy while cool and wile showing a *lot* of promise has not yet reached the stage where it looks more than "very very promising".

Eh, I'm not so sure about that. Sometimes the prize is for research done decades ago that turned out to be really fundamental, and sometimes it's for huge breakthroughs that fundamentally and immediately change what we're capable of doing. This certainly looks like the latter to me.

Comment Re:Yeah, he also sabotaged the Vietnam peacetalks (Score 1) 125

Then he couldn't have made any deal in violation of any law at that time. How can a presidential candidate sell US weapons without being president?

The claim was that the deal happened when he was a candidate, the actual weapons transfers happened later. The latter is not in doubt, the former is more of a conspiracy theory.

Which is likely why the US never sold weapons to Iran. Israel did and the US replenished Israel's. Splitting hairs I know, but if someone can argue the meaning of the word "is" in order to escape blame for wrong doing, certainly an actual step to isolate yourself would do the same.

So, you're saying providing arms to a state sponsor of terrorism in violation of an embargo is equivalent to receiving oral sex from a White House intern?

Comment Re:He did some decent things as president. (Score 2) 125

Gerald Ford and Jimmy Carter, were probably the only two presidents going back to Eisenhower who were actually pretty decent human beings

I'm reading "The Invisible Bridge" right now, and Ford does come across as relatively decent - hopelessly out of his depth, but also a victim of unfortunate circumstances.

Every president and vice president after Carter have been more or less sociopaths

I didn't think Bush Sr. was a sociopath - his foreign policy was a stunning triumph compared to everyone who followed, and he managed not to do anything else drastically stupid, which is really the most I expect out of our leaders at this point. I don't think it's irrelevant to his legacy that the Clinton years coasted by relatively smoothly with a strong economy and uncontested superpower status. His one unforgivable sin was appointing Thomas to SCOTUS.

I don't really think Obama or Biden are sociopaths either; like most politicians, they're career opportunists, but occasionally one of them does something that suggests there's an actual human being underneath, and I'm reminded of what a disappointment the last six years have been. But even Bush Jr had his occasional moments of decency and thoughtfulness, which made everything else about his presidency even more infuriating.

Comment Re:Yeah, he also sabotaged the Vietnam peacetalks (Score 4, Informative) 125

He couldn't have been traitorous as president, the president himself decides who our enemies are and are not.

Except:

1) Reagan wasn't president at the time of the supposed deal that GP mentioned
2) Iran was subject to an arms embargo at the time the administration sold it arms
3) The profits from arms sales to Iran were then funneled to the Nicaraguan Contras, further violating the law

In defense of Reagan - a phrase I never thought I'd write - there's no proof that he actually knew about (3), at least. So, a dupe, but not necessarily a traitor.

Comment Re:Paging Arthur C. Clarke... (Score 1) 534

the tough part on this particular subject is likely that the language didn't provide for distinctions between "Earth" and "other planets' since no other planets were known to exist by the people who spoke the language that was first used for writing down Genesis.

Right, which is why it's silly to insist on a literal interpretation of the text (or to assume that everyone else necessarily adheres to a literal interpretation), since it's using a very limited vocabulary incapable of making these kind of decisions.

Comment Re:Are scientists ready? (Score 1) 534

Nearly everything I read on the subject carries a stated or more often unstated assumption that evolved alien life will have the same carbon-and-water basis that we do.

No, the assumption is that we won't be able to detect vastly different forms of life at a distance unless they have advanced technology. We know that an oxygen-rich atmosphere is extremely unlikely without photosynthesis, which means that we have a simple chemical signature that we can look for to detect probable life, even if it's only single-celled. We have no idea what kind of chemical signature to expect from other forms of pre-technological life.

Comment Re:Paging Arthur C. Clarke... (Score 1) 534

what happened to giving Man dominion over all he surveys (Genesis 26, Psalm 8)

When that was first written down, "all he surveys" was almost certainly intended to mean "all that he surveys on Earth", with everything above being "the heavens", which was definitely not part of the dominion. And that's assuming that the English translation is actually 100% faithful to the original meaning, which I doubt.

Comment Re:ET would disprove God (Score 2) 534

You made them rulers over the works of your hands; you put everything under their feet - Psalms 8:6
And God said, Let us make man in our image, after our likeness: and let them have dominion over the fish of the sea, and over the fowl of the air, and over the cattle, and over all the earth, and over every creeping thing that creepeth upon the earth.

There's so much lost in translation that I'm reluctant to go with the literal interpretation here (especially as an atheist), but this seems pretty limited in scope to me. Unless you're a strict Biblical literalist - which is not a majority of Christians - there are any number of ways these statements can be bent to be compatible with the idea of life on other planets. Sects like the Catholic church have already managed to adapt to the fact of evolution and the age of the Earth without much effort; they stopped taking the early books of the Old Testament literally a long time ago. (It's the New Testament that's really important for most Christians.) I don't doubt that some adherents would freak out (not necessarily for purely doctrinal reasons!), but I'm pretty certain that Pope Francis would simply invite the aliens to mass.

I also have infinite confidence in the ability of diehard literalists to come up with contorted explanations for anything that contradicts the Genesis narrative. People who believe that the speed of light must have drastically changed over the course of several thousand years are capable of pretty much any type of cognitive dissonance.

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