Saturday, 13 November 2010
Experts
Another bane of my life is the profound ignorance of experts! They learn so much in one small field, lose perspective and then say that without their know;edge you cannot comment on the subject or understand such affairs.
I read an opinion yesterday which extends this, as the argument is used by third parties, who side with the "expert", unquestioningly taking on board totally the view that without official training one cannot contribute to that subject. In a discussion on the practice of infant vaccination an ordinary American suggested that those who refuse vaccines for their children and talk with others about their reasons should be
" charged with the criminal behavior of practising medicine without a license and gagged and/or removed from the community."
Now I know that to study and to learn are laudable practices, I do it constantly myself, but the age of the internet emphasises that it's the ability to comprehend and to sift through ideas that is the most crucial ability. Craft skills such as spray painting a car are defined but if a new methodology turns up the old skill in largely useless, except in assesssing the end product. Look at newspaper printsetters in the 80s. Then look at bankers in the last few years - they sold a host of bogus products for years and conned whole countries or anyway persuaded them to overexpand and expend and too fast.
Now medics sell/use the products of "Big Pharma" and because they always have it is not a practice they dare question or even feel the need to. It requires informed and objective observation from outside the expertise to describe the problems and bring forward solutions. You cannot imagine that such a huge industry would voluntarily shut itself down, can you?
[On that latter point, I feel that there would be a lot of work as "Big Health Promoter" for the phrmaceutical industry to move on to and medics could carry out real medicine on any intense cases of infection rather than acting as "fitters" for the pharmacists and trusting in the ideas of a 19th century quack (Jenner)who lifted his ideas from Turkish peasants - who probably did a better job than he did!]
I read an opinion yesterday which extends this, as the argument is used by third parties, who side with the "expert", unquestioningly taking on board totally the view that without official training one cannot contribute to that subject. In a discussion on the practice of infant vaccination an ordinary American suggested that those who refuse vaccines for their children and talk with others about their reasons should be
" charged with the criminal behavior of practising medicine without a license and gagged and/or removed from the community."
Now I know that to study and to learn are laudable practices, I do it constantly myself, but the age of the internet emphasises that it's the ability to comprehend and to sift through ideas that is the most crucial ability. Craft skills such as spray painting a car are defined but if a new methodology turns up the old skill in largely useless, except in assesssing the end product. Look at newspaper printsetters in the 80s. Then look at bankers in the last few years - they sold a host of bogus products for years and conned whole countries or anyway persuaded them to overexpand and expend and too fast.
Now medics sell/use the products of "Big Pharma" and because they always have it is not a practice they dare question or even feel the need to. It requires informed and objective observation from outside the expertise to describe the problems and bring forward solutions. You cannot imagine that such a huge industry would voluntarily shut itself down, can you?
[On that latter point, I feel that there would be a lot of work as "Big Health Promoter" for the phrmaceutical industry to move on to and medics could carry out real medicine on any intense cases of infection rather than acting as "fitters" for the pharmacists and trusting in the ideas of a 19th century quack (Jenner)who lifted his ideas from Turkish peasants - who probably did a better job than he did!]
Thursday, 11 November 2010
Biomedicalecology
Just out trawling for interesting blogs etc and had to comment on a gut bacteria discussion. With the Organic folk at the Soil Association publishing on the subject these days there is maybe a revival of interest in these matters. As always it still seems rather "fringe" though. Until we can realise that the antibiotic is a double edged sword and leaves one's symbio-ants as dead as any dangerous colonisers we will continue to have events of chronic infection and antibiotics will continue to be eclipsed as useful medicines.
So Biomedicalecology can describe the full nature of these symbiotic relationships. It pains me to hear the crusades against "Ecoli 0157:H7" or whatever they term it. Escherichia coli is found normally as a major constituent of our gut flora. Biomedicalecology should look at how the normal relationship breaks down and what subtle changes we could make to restore balance. More crucially, though, an understanding of where the relationship fails can help avoiding the problem in the future. This understanding could slash medical costs and improve human fitness profoundly.
Trouble is there's a vast set of industries based on illness, not health, and they rather like the status quo.
That'll do for now.
I'm still fundraising for the Centre. I'm maybe going to change the name to Greencentre but it'll always be Second Foundation, too. I owe that to Isaac!
So Biomedicalecology can describe the full nature of these symbiotic relationships. It pains me to hear the crusades against "Ecoli 0157:H7" or whatever they term it. Escherichia coli is found normally as a major constituent of our gut flora. Biomedicalecology should look at how the normal relationship breaks down and what subtle changes we could make to restore balance. More crucially, though, an understanding of where the relationship fails can help avoiding the problem in the future. This understanding could slash medical costs and improve human fitness profoundly.
Trouble is there's a vast set of industries based on illness, not health, and they rather like the status quo.
That'll do for now.
I'm still fundraising for the Centre. I'm maybe going to change the name to Greencentre but it'll always be Second Foundation, too. I owe that to Isaac!
Thursday, 25 March 2010
If
Posts one and two are tied to three through my projected "Second Foundation". Not a totally original concept but lifted from/alluding to Asimov's epic exploration of inevitable decline of any society and the rebirthing of something new and better from its ashes.
I want a focus of thought and an exemplar of ideas. I know now you only need a website but real people and real talk suit most folk so much better so "Hafod Gwyrdd" will be a focus of "2F" as I could call it in a modern vein.
2F is to be if I can tie some last details in the next couple of weeks. Six months of glorious toil will bring the buildings into play allowing everything else to progress.
WTS
I want a focus of thought and an exemplar of ideas. I know now you only need a website but real people and real talk suit most folk so much better so "Hafod Gwyrdd" will be a focus of "2F" as I could call it in a modern vein.
2F is to be if I can tie some last details in the next couple of weeks. Six months of glorious toil will bring the buildings into play allowing everything else to progress.
WTS
Tuesday, 23 March 2010
OK
Second Foundation.
The solution within.
A report today suggests that we've all been spending too much time on ourselves, chasing each other to arrive first at all the reward stations that we've all lost sight of the bigger social pictures. Don't we all know that already? Ex ministers of the crown profit from the positions they've been honoured with - well, Tony gave them the tacit example, of course. He just upped and left to feather his nest as much as possible.
Me, I've never been very clear of whether there was a where we were going and, if so, whether we should be going there at all! Certainly, I'm not too good at "follow my leader" as I need to see actions make sense in the broader perspective. Thus the "put your head down and just get on with something" also became hard to swallow. Remember"Not in my name"? I didn't see that a war against the Iraqis was justified, I didn't believe Blair and, ten years earlier, had marched against the first offensive. Then, afterwards, seeing and hearing it all being carried out "in my name", as if I approved of it, always felt wrong. Such a lack of accountability or of democracy of any sort.
So it all cruises on. Copenhagen and East Anglia showed the World was not ready, able or mature enough to deal with the consequences of the dash for development, growth and industry. The interesting irony in the juxtapositioning of the two locations is that, prior to the last major climate change event, you could have walked from one to the other. An increase in global temperature and greenhouse gas concentration had led to the melting of a colossal amount of the ice sheet and an increase in sea levels of the sixty metres or so needed to drown a vast area of rich lowlands, inhabited by probably substantial populations of humans and other species. Auroch, maybe mammoth, bison and the like as well as species common today. I'm talking of a mere 8000 years ago, maybe ten at most when Doggerland was submerged beneath the returning North Sea. Returning after maybe a thirty thousand year absence!
There are two factors here. One is the inevitability and the dramatic effect of climate change and the other is that it is not hasty in its action. It was some eight to ten thousand years after the glacial retreat began that Doggerland was lost. Yes "after the end of the ice age". Greenhouse gas concentrations - carbon dioxide and water vapour - had increased substantially (CO2 up from 180ppm to 280ppm, roughly) and still sixty metres of sea level rise took ten thousand years.
Eventually another fifty metres worth of ice rejoined the oceans, roughly by the time the Romans invaded Britain, to bring about something like our current sea levels.
I digressed a bit, but with purpose, as I feel the Doggerland saga shines a lot of light on our present day discussions.
- It was a natural event and demonstrated how sea levels can change substantially and that vast landscapes can be lost (or gained, as the Earth subsequently cools!)
- Over the whole timespan the annual increase in sea level was 6 mm per annum.
- It appears that CO2 levels and temperature rose very early as the glacial period turned to retreat, although not wholly uniformly or conjointly - temperature preceded CO2 increase. I have not seen evidence on water vapour.
- During the first ten thousand years of glacial retreat (from 18000 bp) there was a prolonged increase in vegetative growth, with global forestation reaching a level of twice the present. As sea levels rose there was also loss of forested land but the upper figure stands.
- There was thus a larger capacity in that era for the global ecosystems to absorb atmospheric carbon dioxide than we have at present.
- Our present rate of sea level rise is generally measured to be 2mm to 6mm per annum or even less so seems to present no immediate threat.
- Comparing now and the era of Doggerland's flooding then CO2 was in balance, now it is rising and already 100ppm higher. The only sink that's diminished now is the forest - oceans and (mostly northern) mosses being unchanged and presumably working at full pelt.
- As CO2 levels continue to climb so the existing sinks are not coping. We should, thus, replant the missing woodland, or a good portion of it.
- Now, in the post glacial period CO2 levels must have risen more than is apparent to the measurers (ice cores etc) as much was immediately sunk into re-emerging forests (and moss). Thus the actual release of CO2 must have been such that it allowed 280ppm to be maintained and at the same time allowed, over 10000 years carbon equivalent to 150 ppm to be stored as woodland.
- Remember that carbon was also being laid down as moss during this time and the balance between release from and solution into is very unclear.
Was that clear? As far as I can see, it is blindingly obvious that although climate change is a slow process sea levels will rise henceforth. In the post glacial era there was probably an equivalent amount of atmospheric carbon to current levels, only it was being taken into the terrestrial ecosystem so didn't stay in the atmosphere as it does now - with nowhere else to go! Way back then CO2 went to the new woodlands and we still got sea level rise, albeit over a few thousand years. If we don't recreate our forests could it be that sea levels will carry on rising until all the ice is gone. so what if that's going to be in 5000 years. We really should act responsibly and try to turn things round. It's a bit of a faith thing, I guess. Hmm, not that easy to sell.
I'll come back to this!
Labels:
atmospheric carbon,
Doggerland,
Ice sheets melting
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