We like lists because we don’t want to die. Here’s a long one.
- Hawass: Beyonce is "a stupid person and she doesn’t understand a thing."
- Meanwhile Andrew Collins’ new book Beneath the Pyramids (Amazon US/UK) is out (and a new video of the caves under the Giza plateau, and an interview here).
- Extra-terrestrial oceans, on Earth?
- It’s official: there’s water on the moon, says NASA. But where are the aliens?
- Scientists can turn on a ‘junk’ gene that fights HIV. What else do we have in our evolutionary backpack? I’d like some wings, please.
- The evolution of the God gene. Atheists will be wanting to turn that one off.
- Even hard-core atheists believe in magic.
- Humans still evolving, as our brains shrink.
- Alex Grey’s Chapel of Sacred Mirrors – the movie.
- Can you visualise the end of the world?
- Maybe the original film with the highest ever worldwide opening will help you.
- Lesley from Binnall of America weighs in on the controversial alien abduction film ‘The Fourth Kind‘.
- Does the brain tap into the future? George Dvorsky gets almost parapsychological.
- Why our brains will never live in the matrix. Wetware is so yesterday.
- The pyramids of Scotland revisited.
- Too many people are afraid of science, says Pope’s astronomer. It’s the scientists that I’m scared of.
- Mad scientist autobiography of the year.
- Peace on drugs?
- Keeping the spark alive: the neural correlates of love.
- More entertainment from ‘Ghost Hunters’ as ex-debunker debunks the show.
- Where No One Has Gone Before – Alternative Star Trek pilot to be released.
- Scientists demonstrate universal programmable quantum processor.
- Big bankers say they are doing God’s work. Perhaps not these ones.
- Satan, the great motivator: The curious economic effects of religion.
- Less than half of Britons believe that human activity is to blame for global warming.
- Just pulling this out of the ground could work as a natural laxative!
Thanks Greg
Quotes of the Day:
One of the advantages of being disorderly is that one is constantly making exciting discoveries.
A. A. Milne