The Four Field Anthropology Blog Carnival, Four Stone Heath, is up at the blog Ad Hominin. Here.
The next Four Stone Hearth will be hosted by Moi.
It is my understanding that Camp Quest of Minnesota is seeking volunteers and other assistance. This is your chance to do what you’ve always wanted to do!!!!!! Click here for the Camp Quest web site.
There’s almost no on answering the Collective Imagination Question today, so this is your chance! Click here.
And while you are over there, have a look at my latest post on Japanese Ring Tone Therapy.
The following is from a classified US intelligence document regarding Wikileaks:
Continue reading Wikileaks is a major security threat
I knew a guy who who was a highly placed person at Harvard College, and had gone to the College for his undergraduate education. I’ll call him “Dean.” Prior to his attending Harvard, he had already become a major fan of Henry David Thoreau. Thoreau, of course, went to Harvard. So when Dean was accepted to Harvard, being a major Thoreau fan, he endeavored to find out what room in the Freshmen Halls (at Harvard, “Hall” = “Dorm” for Freshmen, “House” = “Dorm” for Sophomores and beyond), was Thoreau’s. I am not sure what records or resources he used to try to figure this out, but he managed to do so. And it turned out this was to be the easy part.
I am avoiding commenting on the recent paper “Science blogs and public engagement with science: practices, challenges, and opportunities” by Inna Kouper (here). Bora has made extensive comments on the paper that I recommend (here) and as usual, Bora has done an excellent job linking to all the other stuff on the blogosphere about it.
The reason I avoided commenting on the paper is that I didn’t like it a whole lot, but did not want to get into a huge blog fight about it. I have mixed feelings about the communications field as it is, and I’m not sure sometimes if what I’m looking at is intellectually or academically unsatisfying or if I’m just not tuning in correctly to the material.
Anyway, the paper has been discussed widely enough that I thought you should know about it. The link above will get you to the original. My main two reactions to the paper are: 1) The sampling (which blogs are looked at) is not what I would have done; and 2) I find it fascinating that a communications paper about the blogosphere would not site the relevant blogging about the topic, and stick entirely to academic journal articles.
I’ve lost track of who, but someone out there suggested that this paper would be more valuable as a commentary than as a peer reviewed paper. Maybe. But if you read Bora’s post on it, you’ll see that the problem here was not the peer review process or the peer review context, but rather, the apparent failure of the journal editor(s) to apply the reviews that were carried out.
On an unrelated note, check out this one at Almost Diamonds, where Stephanie Zvan looks at genre.
… and other matters related to dust ups on the blogosphere. At Quiche Moraine.
“But they are sinners,” I can hear the preachers and politicians say. “They are choosing a life of sin for which they must be punished.” My scientist and medical friends have shared with me a reality that so many gay people have confirmed, I now know it in my heart to be true. No one chooses to be gay. Sexual orientation, like skin color, is another feature of our diversity as a human family.
Robin Carnahan, a Democrat, has a fighting chance of beating the incumbant Republican, Roy Blunt, in the upcoming Senate race in Missouri.
According to Rasmussen:
Continue reading Robin Carnahan for Senate in Missouri
Yet another meta thingie for your meta amusement.
Continue reading I’ve never seen a movie that made me so fill in the blank. This movie is absolutely whatever.
I’m not sure how good this is, but if you are a Star Wars Geek you are obligated to watch it and complain about it.
Continue reading Star Wars redone by Hello Kitty
Vaccines that contain a mercury-based preservative called thimerosal cannot cause autism on their own, a special U.S. court ruled on Friday, dealing one more blow to parents seeking to blame vaccines for their children’s illness.
hat tip: Jafsica
Have a nice day, pervert … Bwahahahahahah!!!!!