Wednesday, 30 May 2012

NATURE WRITES THE SCRIPT


On why natural history has to be led by science not anthropomorphism

The stability and richness of the natural world are uniquely comforting. There is grandeur in its infinite variety and scale, mystery in its whys and wherefores, and spectacle in its creations and events.

The story is there.

In her recent book ‘Why Animals Matter,’ Marian Dawkins addresses the difficulty of asserting consciousness in animals. Emotions have three parts – the behaviour; the physiological occurrences and the subjective emotion.

We know that animals have the first two, but we don’t know whether they have the third. You may think ‘if it looks like a duck and quacks like a duck, then it’s a duck,’ but everything we know from neuroscience tells us that, while animals differ as to what extent, they do not feel emotions in the same way that humans do.

For example, hybrids of one kind of weaver bird with other species are born with the ability to make a nest, but not with the ability to carry out the mating behaviour necessary to lure a mate. So such individuals merely build a nest and deconstruct it again. This is an example of how complex behaviour can be genetically ingrained, and does not necessarily require thought or knowledge of purpose.

But does it matter whether an animal can ‘think’ or not? Feeling an urge to run away from a painful or dangerous stimulus may be just as valid a reason to respect their condition as if they were capable of a more complex assessment of the situation. We don’t know how much a baby can think, but that doesn’t make its ill treatment any less abhorrent than that of an adult – a baby has nerves after all, and can sense and respond.

However, most animals cannot think to the same extent that we do – they do not contemplate relationships and consequences in the same way, and dealing with abstract tasks and concepts is typically impossible, even if for their own survival advantage. For example, a mother duck often doesn’t know how many ducklings she has, because she cannot count, and so often does not react if one of them goes missing.

As such, describing a bear cub as ‘little Mickey, cuddling up to his Mum, fearful of the future challenges he must face in order to keep the family alive’ is just wrong – misleading, because neuroscience says animals probably do not think to that depth – and lazy, because there are so many interesting stories to tell about how, why and what animals DO think and do.

The natural world is a treasure trove of information and stories. Let’s revel in that storytelling resource by doing away with the frame of human platitudes.


Friday, 6 April 2012

Nuclear Power - the obvious, scientist's case

One scientist has tweeted – “evidence can often be uncomfortable – it’s also known, colloquially, as life.”

On the basis of evidence then, I’d like to discuss people saying nuclear power is the cleanest and safest energy form – err, hello?? Am I missing something?


Chernobyl? Fukushima? Around 4000 radiation-related deaths? And it hasn’t even been around that long. How many deaths have you heard of as a result of wind farms?!

Is this like Titanic being the ‘unsinkable’* ship? Or some stubborn scientists poo-poohing  any negative assertions about discoveries because they can’t see the truth (/wood) for their life’s work (/trees)? #historyrepeating

Scientists are currently operating in a Microsoft manner - working confined by the initial limitations of their method, still in awe that some things are possible at all, and not being user-friendly. Society needs Mac scientists, ones that ARE user-friendly, who know what questions people actually have and who can give understandable answers within the wider framework of life.

*re: debates that 'unsinkable' is a misquote - the fact that there were insufficient lifeboats proves, more than any quote, that this was the general opinion. 

I'll see you in our dreams

When younger I couldn’t stop dreaming; I lost myself in stories, curiosities, ambitions. But I thought, DOING is living. To live your dreams you need to DO things rather than think and write about them.

However then (and I had little access to technology as a teen) all this gaming/virtual reality/internet/media obsession came along, so now it is possible, even admired, to live in your dreams. The mental life is becoming some people’s whole reality. And I’m now slightly jealous that I haven’t gone down that path. Constant mental stimulation is appealing, rather than hiking to places, and laboriously making things by hand. 

“I dream. Sometimes I think that's the only right thing to do.”
― Haruki Murakami, Sputnik Sweetheart

By imaging oxygen uptake patterns in the brain when thinking particular thoughts,  researchers can associate particular brain areas with particular ideas. Thus looking at these patterns when asleep means we can in a crude way read someone’s dreams. As the mind is acknowledged to be a product of matter, our access to it is becoming greater than ever.

So as well as being a major focus of life, dreams are now tangible themselves.

Monday, 19 March 2012

LONDRIZZLE MY HEART

Check out this comic performance poetry pitch I delivered at Bristol's Poetry Can (maybe should have done it in London, but they're Brits too, they love the self-deprecating schtick)

<IT'S NOT EVEN GREEN>

SCIENCE IS ART IS SCIENCE

This recreation of a false natural history (below) admits that we yearn for our roots and for things built naturally, by things over which we have no control, with a stronger connection to 'the ultimate purpose of it all':


mail.jpg


I'm working with neuroscience experts from various universities tomorrow to develop an artistic spatial cognition stunt - can't wait. And with the curator of the Wellcome Trust's 'Brains' exhibition, to make our 'Superhuman Lab' studio artily beautiful. Maybe the same patterns will be writ small and large across the walls of the studio - branching trees and branching neurones. Hoping to bring in some art works from Robert Devcic's GVArt studio, such as a 3D print of a brain scan... Also have some great ideas on visualisation from March's SameAs event - www.sameas.us - very useful when testing the amazing mental abilities of our Shaolin warrior.

Sunday, 18 March 2012

Lessons from Nature

For a while I have been working on a television treatment which brings lessons from the animal kingdom to bear on human issues - on monogamy, cooperation, punishment and many other areas. But now Terry Tom Brown has beaten me to that feat - making this connection in the media - with his brilliant column in the Observer magazine. I guess if you can't beat them join them, so I am planning to approach him to work on a proposal for a Radio 4 series - 'Lessons from Nature'? - or perhaps even a new Sunday morning natural history production. There's a lot of scope for 'mind and spirit' programming for atheists - we're not robots you know! (well not simple ones).

Wonders of the Rollerskate Park: The Physics of Rollerskating

My current project, 'Superhuman Lab' for the Discovery Channel, is a brilliant excuse to spend time thinking about amazing abilities and how our amazing biology can explain them.

Amazing abilities like, for example, that smug ice-skating jump that Robbie Williams does in that video:

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=S7mZ5Y6OuH0

Having read up on tennis and dancing techniques, and seen how this can improve the performance of even top-flight athletes, t seems to me that science could hugely benefit those who want to succeed in sports and art. Understanding, for example, that the practical route to standing still on roller skates relies on the physics of an equal pull of gravity on all parts of the bottom of the boots, is really useful. Developing even spreading of the weight across the boots, and soles parallel to the ground, is much easier when you know this is the overall aim, rather than trial and error-ing what helps you balance.

To find out how science can help you become a freewheeling Hyde Park-ite, check out my film: Wonders of the Rollerskate Park (WT) : <IN FINAL EDIT>. I'm not saying I'm a free-wheeling Hyde Park-ite. In fact I got terribly bruised.

I'm now looking at short films on brainpower and sporting ability, linked to the Wellcome Trust's brilliant forthcoming exhibitions - Brains: Mind as Matter (29th March - 17th June 2012), and Superhumans (19 July-16 October 2012). More short films coming your way soon!