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151.www.wiwi-treff.de323000
152.hispagua.cedex.es323000
153.www.meteoclimatic.com323000
154.www.research.att.com322000
155.www.nyteknik.se321000
156.www.szote.u-szeged.hu318000
157.www.boku.ac.at317000
158.www.bom.gov.au310000
159.nobelprize.org304000
160.www.eetimes.com304000
161.inauka.ru304000
162.www.atmel.com303000
163.www.inf.tu-dresden.de302000
164.www.ipp.mpg.de300000
165.nssdc.gsfc.nasa.gov298000
166.science.slashdot.org298000
167.www.eere.energy.gov297000
168.www.cancer.org296000
169.www.sztaki.hu293000
170.www.eia.doe.gov292000
171.www.psychomedia.qc.ca291000
172.www.nsf.gov290000
173.www.aist.go.jp289000
174.www.mathematik.uni-ulm.de289000
175.www.mpa-garching.mpg.de283000
176.www.inf.ethz.ch282000
177.www.redensarten-index.de280000
178.www.math.ethz.ch276000
179.www.chemie.de274000
180.www.comunitazione.it274000
181.www.zamg.ac.at273000
182.www.jamstec.go.jp272000
183.www.informatik.uni-ulm.de271000
184.www.rle.mit.edu270000
185.www.wetenschapsforum.nl267000
186.www.ilemaths.net265000
187.www.infomine.com264000
188.www.astro.uni-bonn.de263000
189.www.esa.int260000
190.www.forskning.no260000
191.www.biology-online.org255000
192.www.competence-site.de255000
193.www.bioportal.jp255000
194.www.astrosurf.com254000
195.www.altera.com252000
196.www.research.ibm.com250000
197.bifi.unizar.es250000
198.www.behindthename.com249000
199.www.wissenschaft-im-dialog.de249000
200.www.math.jussieu.fr246000
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191. www.biology-online.org

Rating: 255000 points*
*amount mentions of word 'www.biology-online.org' on the other websites

www.biology-online.org

Biology Online. Life Science Reference

Description: Biology Online, information in the life sciences in the form of tutorials, references and an online dictionary of biology terms.

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Response: No, I don't believe science holds all the answers to our existence
Our consciousness paves the way for our spirituality, but there's little consensusIn finger-wagging style, Mary Midgley warns that "serious scientists know that their enquiries are endless; any answers always raise a swarm of new questions" (Serious scientists know that they cannot explain all the major puzzles of existence, 28 August). But who ever said otherwise? Well, I did apparently.She quotes from my 1995 book, Soul Searching, selecting passages to back her assertion that I believe that science can provide "a sufficient explanation for everything that is or might be". What she fails to say is that in these passages I was describing how things looked to overconfident natural philosophers at the end of the 18th century, and how this set the stage for a Romantic reaction and in particular for spiritualism and psychical research.True, I wrote that "two hundred years later this ambitious [Enlightenment] programme for a self-sufficient science has succeeded beyond the dreams of its inventors. Across great swaths of nature ... the major puzzles of existence have been pulled to pieces in the hands ... of all-conquering and -consuming scientific rationality."But I went on: "Yet equally, two hundred years later, the majority of ordinary people have remained as faithful as ever to the earlier ways of thinking." And this was precisely my point. For most people scientific explanation remains unsatisfying. Indeed almost everybody has a Midgley – and a Newton – inside them, protesting that there has to be more to life, the universe and everything than we can ever know.Midgley asserts: "Humphrey is convinced that something called science has indeed solved the mind-body problem." But if she had read further she would have found me saying: "All but a few contemporary psychologists agree that there will eventually prove to be some sort of satisfactory theory of mind-brain relationship … But at present there really is very little consensus about the form, let alone the substance, of this theory-to-come."However, Midgley, it seems, has no interest in such a scientific theory anyway. For her, "our problem here is to understand the relation between our inner and outer life … and how to face life as a whole". Strangely enough, I entirely agree. In my own more recent writing, such as Seeing Red, I have begun to argue that the explanation for why consciousness evolved lies in its very mysteriousness and the effect this has on our world-view.Since Midgley has quoted at such length from a book I wrote 15 years ago, let me answer with these words from the cover of my new book Soul Dust: "Consciousness, [Humphrey] argues, is nothing less than a magical-mystery show that we stage for ourselves inside our own heads. This self-made show lights up the world for us and makes us feel special and transcendent. Thus consciousness paves the way for spirituality, and allows us, as human beings, to reap the rewards, and anxieties, of living in what Humphrey calls the 'soul niche'." I invite Mary Midgley to review it.ReligionPhilosophyAtheismControversies in scienceNicholas Humphreyguardian.co.uk © Guardian News & Media Limited 2010 | Use of this content is subject to our Terms & Conditions | More Feeds
guardian.co.uk
Ebooks: the future is now
Science fiction writers have always been on the cutting edge, and now sf publishers are scrambling to stay ahead of the ebook curve.
abc.net.au
Greenpeace ends Scots oil rig blockade
Greenpeace ends a blockade of a drilling ship 100 miles off Shetland after oil company Chevron wins a second court order.
bbc.co.uk
Mystery Bird: Bobolink, Dolichonyx oryzivorus
This lovely neotropical migrant has many remarkable features, but one of them makes this bird unique in North AmericaBobolink, Dolichonyx oryzivorus, photographed at Earth Resources Observation and Science (EROS) Center, Minnehaha County, South Dakota, USA.Image: Terry Sohl, 28 August 2010 [with binoculars]. Like this photograph? You are encouraged to purchase this image from this fine photographer. Canon 50D, 400 5.6L.Question: This lovely neotropical migrant has many remarkable features, but one of them makes this bird unique in North America. What is that?Response: This is a Bobolink, Dolichonyx oryzivorus, a small New World blackbird. The bobolink is the only member of genus Dolichonyx. Bobolinks complete one of the longest known migrations for any neotropical songbird, breeding in the grasslands of North America and wintering throughout Argentina, Bolivia and Paraguay. They occasionally pop up in Europe, although, like many vagrants from North America, the overwhelming majority of records for this species are from the British Isles.Male bobolinks are unique among North American avifauna because their breeding garb features a black belly accented by a pale colored topside. Embedded below is a 2 minute radio programme about the bobolink, thanks to my friends at BirdNote Radio:If you have bird images, video or mp3 files that you'd like to share with a large and appreciate audience, feel free to email them to me for consideration.GrrlScientistguardian.co.uk © Guardian News & Media Limited 2010 | Use of this content is subject to our Terms & Conditions | More Feeds
guardian.co.uk
Amber yields ancient bug haul
More than 700 new species of ancient insects, preserved in 50-million-year-old amber, were found in India.
bbc.co.uk