Solipsists the world over are grinning with uneasy and paranoiac triumph after hearing the news that a group of Austrian physicists have asserted that, according to the best evidence available from quantum physics, reality as we know it doesn’t actually exist if there’s no one (or nothing) observing it. I’ll freely admit that this is probably pure journalistic overstatement of the genuine facts, but I for one don’t have the PhD that would allow me to know that for certain – and besides, it confirms something that I’ve secretly always felt to be not just true but self-evident. You are all figments of my imagination, you see, and I can make you all disappear just by clicking shut this wi* [Error Type: 500 – connection terminated.]
Monthly Archives: April 2007
Earth’s twin – potentially habitable planet discovered
You’d have had to have been asleep underneath that heavy news-proof rock I mention periodically to not have heard about the Earth-like planet discovered a little over twenty light years from the ball of rock we currently call home. For the more detailed facts of the matter (unfiltered by mainstream journalism and headline editors), I refer you on to the ever-reliable Centauri Dreams, which discusses what is known for certain (and what is mere conjecture) about the planet and the solar syastem it is situated in, and then looks at the potential of the planet as an environment habitable to humans. Of course, not everyone is particularly impressed by this – Michael Anissimov believes (with some justification) that we should use our time and effort more effectively, and stop getting excited about other planets until we’ve properly addressed the issues and potentials of the one we find ourselves on already.
The future’s already here…
… but it’s not evenly distributed yet. Just to prove that it’s not only the Futurismic team who believe we’re living in a science fictional world, here’s an article by British sf author and critic Gwyneth Jones about the way science fiction has become science fact – and all the more sinister and alarming connotations that this state of play presents to us.
Sea squirts suggest route to human regenerative medicine
First the somewhat icky news – human beings are distant evolutionary descendents of sea squirts! Now the upside – sea squirts have the ability to regenerate genetic abnormalities over a series of generations, and it is hoped that the mechanisms discovered can be used to allow humans to regenerate parts of their own bodies that are flawed or wounded.
Happy birthday, Hubble
Here’s a reason to celebrate – today marks the 17th anniversary of the Hubble Telescope’s tenure in space. To mark the occasion, the European wing of the Hubble community have released a stunning image of the Carina Nebula. The Bad Astronomy blog can take you on a guided tour through the Carina image, as well – including a little philosophy with the cosmological sensawunda.