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Bush-League Lysenkoism (Scientific Publication)
Scientific American ^
| 4-26-2004
| The Editors
Posted on 05/02/2004 5:00:39 PM PDT by blam
click here to read article
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I cancelled my subscription to Scientific American today.
1
posted on
05/02/2004 5:00:40 PM PDT
by
blam
To: RightWhale
Ping. I've been threatning to cancel for months now, today I did!
2
posted on
05/02/2004 5:02:24 PM PDT
by
blam
To: blam
Why did you wait so long? They were sold to a German outfit years ago, and more recently ended up in the hands of a publishing house better known for it's pornography than anything else. They have since been sold to yet others.
Political opinions by anyone affiliated with SA should be taken with a grain of salt.
3
posted on
05/02/2004 5:03:44 PM PDT
by
muawiyah
To: blam
I was thoroughly disgusted by this editorial too. I wanted to send them a letter and express my opinion, but then I realized that this piece like so much of junk science is simply unworthy of discussion
4
posted on
05/02/2004 5:09:58 PM PDT
by
eclectic
To: blam

Outrageous. This sort of psuedo-academic/research abuse...to dabble in pure politics...is a prime example of how science has been corrupted.
Not by the White House...but by those who ridicule and attack anyone who dares criticize pro-life or pro-industry or even (in the case of the great global warming hoax) real science itself.
5
posted on
05/02/2004 5:11:06 PM PDT
by
Southack
(Media Bias means that Castro won't be punished for Cuban war crimes against Black Angolans in Africa)
To: Southack
uh oh... should be: Not by the White House...but by those who ridicule and attack anyone who dares NOT criticize pro-life or pro-industry or even (in the case of the great global warming hoax) real science itself
6
posted on
05/02/2004 5:12:32 PM PDT
by
Southack
(Media Bias means that Castro won't be punished for Cuban war crimes against Black Angolans in Africa)
To: blam
You know...this parade of non-sequitors isn't even consistent within itself.
7
posted on
05/02/2004 5:20:43 PM PDT
by
lepton
("It is useless to attempt to reason a man out of a thing he was never reasoned into"--Jonathan Swift)
To: blam
Very glad I was not alone. I read this nasty editorial, and nearly puked at the glorification they gave on a full article about Henry Waxman. He may indeed be a scientific wonder, but this was beyond the rhelm.
Being a digital subscriber, unsubscribing was SO easy...
The magazine's pandering to junque science and Grant pimpsters finally reached the end today.
Since we were both alone, probability indicates many more must have had the same reaction.
8
posted on
05/02/2004 5:53:28 PM PDT
by
Prospero
(Ad Astra!)
To: blam
Goodness !
Trofim Lysenko !
I read about him when I was a sophomore in HS -over 50 years ago. The American Communist party was all a-twitter,because Lysenko's drivel had been endorsed by The Party,and the Party could not be wrong,but Lysenko surely was,and (sob !) What is the correct Dialectic to apply ?
9
posted on
05/02/2004 6:03:15 PM PDT
by
genefromjersey
(So little time - so many FLAMES to light !!)
To: Prospero
"Since we were both alone, probability indicates many more must have had the same reaction." I expect and hope so. LOL. I don't know how to handle the gift subscription to my son. I'll probably just let it expire.
10
posted on
05/02/2004 6:13:17 PM PDT
by
blam
To: blam
I flipped through this issue at a newsstand, and both this asinine editorial-a collection of ad homneim comments which violates just about every rule of rational discourse- and the fawning profile of the reprehensible Henry Waxman made want to buy a parakeet just so I could use the magazine to line its cage.
To: genefromjersey
It's much worse than your instructor probably even described. There were many reasons for the Ukrainian famine, but the application of Lysenko's idiotic theories played no small part. Moreover, hundreds of scientists were sent into the death camps because of their denunciations of Lysenko. When you consider all this, the headline of this editorial is all the more misleading and tasteless.
To: blam
Hopefully no one will confuse Scientific American with the prestigious journal "Science".
Bush's policy is very much pro science and encourages peer reviews that disdain politics. As a scientist I find this refreshing. I have seen my share of politically biased scientific studies. Often the funding behind such publications has driven a party-line conclusion. I find these incidents disgusting.
To compare Bush's science policy with Lysenkoism is absurd. To call a scientist a Lysenkoist is analogous to calling a political activist a nazi. We have heard the President called 'nazi', 'stupid cowboy', 'lapdog of the evil oil companies' and so on.
The 'scientists' who wrote this so-called science policy critique have cheapened themselves to a lower category of persons that resort to name calling and hyperbole. Whatever their motivation they do not deserve to be revered with the title of 'scientist'.
13
posted on
05/02/2004 6:26:33 PM PDT
by
Hostage
To: Hostage
It could have been worse. They could have compared him to Phillip Lenard.
To: Hostage
SA used to be great. I cancelled about 2 years ago when they smeared the Swede who challenged the global warming morons.
15
posted on
05/02/2004 6:34:00 PM PDT
by
corkoman
(Logged in - have you?)
To: blam
SA is agenda driven. There is next to no science in it. Waste of money.
16
posted on
05/02/2004 6:58:54 PM PDT
by
RightWhale
(Destroy the dark; restore the light)
To: blam
Scientific American was the first magazine I ever subscribed to (first year of high school around 1963). I also subscribed to it longer than any other magazine but in the mid 90s I'd had enough. It's now a piece of trash.
To: RightWingAtheist
Although Lenard was completely misguided in his opposition to Einstein's relativity, we should not compare his work to Lysenko's, which was completely bereft of any scientific discovery or utility.
Physics in Germany and other countries was considered a lowly vocation and disproportionately populated by people who were Jewish because it was accessible to them (few others wanted that type of work). Thus grew an association of Physics and Jewishness. The result was a politicization of the discipline.
Lenard was a recipient of the Nobel prize in 1905 for a significant work in cathode rays. He was older and likely senile at the time of his association with the Nazi science policy (an antisemitic policy).
Keep in mind also that Einstein's relativity was viewed skeptically by all physic societies for a long time, and there are still skeptics. In fact there is evidence that Einstien's theories are not completely general. I am not a physicist but I have colleagues that are and it is interesting to hear them discuss problems of relativity in the context of singularities and blackholes.
18
posted on
05/02/2004 7:00:33 PM PDT
by
Hostage
To: blam
A more apt analogy to Lysenkoism is the notion of global warming, for which there is absolutely no scientific evidence, adhered to with religious fervor by Scientific American and other Liberal propaganda rags for purposes of advancing a collectivist social agenda.
19
posted on
05/02/2004 8:17:15 PM PDT
by
E. Pluribus Unum
(Drug prohibition laws help fund terrorism.)
To: blam
Scientific American is no more of a scientific publication than
Popular Mechanics. It is and always has been a mass market magazine for science "fans".
Now with a political agenda, I see.
20
posted on
05/02/2004 9:22:34 PM PDT
by
Salman
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