Arquivo da categoria: Uncategorized

Teamwork enables bacterial survival (Science Daily)

Strains of E. coli resistant to one antibiotic can protect other bacteria growing nearby

Date:
May 16, 2016
Source:
Massachusetts Institute of Technology
Summary:
Researchers have found that two strains of E. coli bacteria, each resistant to one antibiotic, can protect each other in an environment where both drugs are present.

Mutualism, a phenomenon in which different species benefit from their interactions with each other, can help bacteria form drug-resistant communities. Pictured is an artist’s interpretation of mutualism among bacteria. Credit: Jose-Luis Olivares/MIT

A new study from MIT finds that two strains of bacteria that are each resistant to one antibiotic can protect each other in an environment containing both drugs.

The findings demonstrate that mutualism, a phenomenon in which different species benefit from their interactions with each other, can help bacteria form drug-resistant communities. This is the first experimental demonstration in microbes of a type of mutualism known as cross-protection, which is more commonly seen in larger animals.

The researchers focused on two strains of E. coli, one resistant to ampicillin and the other resistant to chloramphenicol. These bacteria and many others defend themselves from antibiotics by producing enzymes that break down the antibiotics. As a side effect, this also protects cells that don’t produce those enzymes, by removing the antibiotic from the environment.

“Any time that you’re breaking down an antibiotic, there’s this potential for cross-protection,” says Jeff Gore, the Latham Family Career Development Associate Professor of Physics and the senior author of the study, which appears in the Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences the week of May 16.

The MIT team found that, indeed, both strains could survive in an environment where both antibiotics were present, even though each was only resistant to one of the drugs. This type of situation is likely also found in the natural world, especially in soil where many strains of bacteria live together.

“Each of them is making different toxins and each of them is resistant to different toxins,” Gore says. “A lot of antibiotics are produced by microbes as part of the combat that is taking place between microorganisms in the soil.”

Gore and co-first authors Eugene Yurtsev and Arolyn Conwill, both MIT graduate students, also found that the populations of the two strains oscillate over time. Population oscillations are common in predator-prey interactions but rare in mutualistic interactions such as the cross-protection seen in this study.

Throughout their experiments, the researchers diluted the bacterial population each day by transferring about 1 percent of the population to a new test tube, to which new antibiotics were added. They found that while the total size of the bacterial population remained about the same, there were large oscillations in the relative percentages of each strain, which varied by nearly 1,000 percent over a period of about three days.

For example, if the ampicillin-resistant strain was more abundant in the beginning of a cycle, it rapidly deactivated ampicillin in the environment, allowing the chloramphenicol-resistant strain to begin growing. The ampicillin-resistant strain only began growing once the other strain had expanded enough to deactivate most of the chloramphenicol, at which point the chloramphenicol-resistant strain had already overtaken the ampicillin-resistant strain.

“The mutualism exhibits oscillations because the strain that is more abundant at the beginning of a growth cycle might end up less abundant at the end of that cycle,” Gore says.

At lower antibiotic concentrations, the bacterial population can survive in this oscillating pattern indefinitely, but at higher drug concentrations, the oscillations destabilize the population, and it eventually collapses.

Gore suspects that similar population oscillations may also be seen in natural environments such as the human gut, as bacteria exit the body along with bowel movements, or in soil as bacteria are washed away by rainfall.

Gore’s lab is now looking at this type of mutualism in bacteria living in the gut of the worm C. elegans. The researchers are also studying how these types of population oscillations can become synchronized over large geographic areas, and how migration between populations influences this synchronization.


Journal Reference:

  1. Saurabh R. Gandhi, Eugene Anatoly Yurtsev, Kirill S. Korolev, and Jeff Gore. Range expansions transition from pulled to pushed waves as growth becomes more cooperative in an experimental microbial populationPNAS, 2016 DOI: 10.1073/pnas.1521056113

Curtailing global warming with bioengineering? Iron fertilization won’t work in much of Pacific (Science Daily)

Earth’s own experiments during ice ages showed little effect

Date:
May 16, 2016
Source:
The Earth Institute at Columbia University
Summary:
Over the past half-million years, the equatorial Pacific Ocean has seen five spikes in the amount of iron-laden dust blown in from the continents. In theory, those bursts should have turbo-charged the growth of the ocean’s carbon-capturing algae — algae need iron to grow — but a new study shows that the excess iron had little to no effect.

With the right mix of nutrients, phytoplankton grow quickly, creating blooms visible from space. This image, created from MODIS data, shows a phytoplankton bloom off New Zealand. Credit: Robert Simmon and Jesse Allen/NASA

Over the past half-million years, the equatorial Pacific Ocean has seen five spikes in the amount of iron-laden dust blown in from the continents. In theory, those bursts should have turbo-charged the growth of the ocean’s carbon-capturing algae — algae need iron to grow — but a new study shows that the excess iron had little to no effect.

The results are important today, because as groups search for ways to combat climate change, some are exploring fertilizing the oceans with iron as a solution.

Algae absorb carbon dioxide (CO2), a greenhouse gas that contributes to global warming. Proponents of iron fertilization argue that adding iron to the oceans would fuel the growth of algae, which would absorb more CO2 and sink it to the ocean floor. The most promising ocean regions are those high in nutrients but low in chlorophyll, a sign that algae aren’t as productive as they could be. The Southern Ocean, the North Pacific, and the equatorial Pacific all fit that description. What’s missing, proponents say, is enough iron.

The new study, published this week in the Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, adds to growing evidence, however, that iron fertilization might not work in the equatorial Pacific as suggested.

Essentially, earth has already run its own large-scale iron fertilization experiments. During the ice ages, nearly three times more airborne iron blew into the equatorial Pacific than during non-glacial periods, but the new study shows that that increase didn’t affect biological productivity. At some points, as levels of iron-bearing dust increased, productivity actually decreased.

What matters instead in the equatorial Pacific is how iron and other nutrients are stirred up from below by upwelling fueled by ocean circulation, said lead author Gisela Winckler, a geochemist at Columbia University’s Lamont-Doherty Earth Observatory. The study found seven to 100 times more iron was supplied from the equatorial undercurrent than from airborne dust at sites spread across the equatorial Pacific. The authors write that although all of the nutrients might not be used immediately, they are used up over time, so the biological pump is already operating at full efficiency.

“Capturing carbon dioxide is what it’s all about: does iron raining in with airborne dust drive the capture of atmospheric CO2? We found that it doesn’t, at least not in the equatorial Pacific,” Winckler said.

The new findings don’t rule out iron fertilization elsewhere. Winckler and coauthor Robert Anderson of Lamont-Doherty Earth Observatory are involved in ongoing research that is exploring the effects of iron from dust on the Southern Ocean, where airborne dust supplies a larger share of the iron reaching the surface.

The PNAS paper follows another paper Winckler and Anderson coauthored earlier this year in Nature with Lamont graduate student Kassandra Costa looking at the biological response to iron in the equatorial Pacific during just the last glacial maximum, some 20,000 years ago. The new paper expands that study from a snapshot in time to a time series across the past 500,000 years. It confirms that Costa’s finding, that iron fertilization had no effect then, fit a pattern that extends across the past five glacial periods.

To gauge how productive the algae were, the scientists in the PNAS paper used deep- sea sediment cores from three locations in the equatorial Pacific that captured 500,000 years of ocean history. They tested along those cores for barium, a measure of how much organic matter is exported to the sea floor at each point in time, and for opal, a silicate mineral that comes from diatoms. Measures of thorium-232 reflected the amount of dust that blew in from land at each point in time.

“Neither natural variability of iron sources in the past nor purposeful addition of iron to equatorial Pacific surface water today, proposed as a mechanism for mitigating the anthropogenic increase in atmospheric CO2 inventory, would have a significant impact,” the authors concluded.

Past experiments with iron fertilization have had mixed results. The European Iron Fertilization Experiment (EIFEX) in 2004, for example, added iron in the Southern Ocean and was able to produce a burst of diatoms, which captured CO2 in their organic tissue and sank to the ocean floor. However, the German-Indian LOHAFEX project in 2009 experimented in a nearby location in the South Atlantic and found few diatoms. Instead, most of its algae were eaten up by tiny marine creatures, passing CO2 into the food chain rather than sinking it. In the LOHAFEX case, the scientists determined that another nutrient that diatoms need — silicic acid — was lacking.

The Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC) cautiously discusses iron fertilization in its latest report on climate change mitigation. It warns of potential risks, including the impact that higher productivity in one area may have on nutrients needed by marine life downstream, and the potential for expanding low-oxygen zones, increasing acidification of the deep ocean, and increasing nitrous oxide, a greenhouse gas more potent than CO2.

“While it is well recognized that atmospheric dust plays a significant role in the climate system by changing planetary albedo, the study by Winckler et al. convincingly shows that dust and its associated iron content is not a key player in regulating the oceanic sequestration of CO2 in the equatorial Pacific on large spatial and temporal scales,” said Stephanie Kienast, a marine geologist and paleoceanographer at Dalhousie University who was not involved in the study. “The classic paradigm of ocean fertilization by iron during dustier glacials can thus be rejected for the equatorial Pacific, similar to the Northwest Pacific.”


Journal Reference:

  1. Gisela Winckler, Robert F. Anderson, Samuel L. Jaccard, and Franco Marcantonio. Ocean dynamics, not dust, have controlled equatorial Pacific productivity over the past 500,000 yearsPNAS, May 16, 2016 DOI: 10.1073/pnas.1600616113

Animal training techniques teach robots new tricks (Science Daily)

Virtual dogs take place of programming

Date:
May 16, 2016
Source:
Washington State University
Summary:
Researchers are using ideas from animal training to help non-expert users teach robots how to do desired tasks.

Virtual environments in which trainers gave directions to robot dog. Credit: Image courtesy of Washington State University

Researchers at Washington State University are using ideas from animal training to help non-expert users teach robots how to do desired tasks.

The researchers recently presented their work at the international Autonomous Agents and Multiagent Systems conference.

As robots become more pervasive in society, humans will want them to do chores like cleaning house or cooking. But to get a robot started on a task, people who aren’t computer programmers will have to give it instructions.

“We want everyone to be able to program, but that’s probably not going to happen,” said Matthew Taylor, Allred Distinguished Professor in the WSU School of Electrical Engineering and Computer Science. “So we needed to provide a way for everyone to train robots — without programming.”

User feedback improves robot performance

With Bei Peng, a doctoral student in computer science, and collaborators at Brown University and North Carolina State University, Taylor designed a computer program that lets humans teach a virtual robot that looks like a computerized pooch. Non-computer programmers worked with and trained the robot in WSU’s Intelligent Robot Learning Laboratory.

For the study, the researchers varied the speed at which their virtual dog reacted. As when somebody is teaching a new skill to a real animal, the slower movements let the user know that the virtual dog was unsure of how to behave. The user could then provide clearer guidance to help the robot learn better.

“At the beginning, the virtual dog moves slowly. But as it receives more feedback and becomes more confident in what to do, it speeds up,” Peng said.

The user taught tasks by either reinforcing good behavior or punishing incorrect behavior. The more feedback the virtual dog received from the human, the more adept the robot became at predicting the correct course of action.

Applications for animal training

The researchers’ algorithm allowed the virtual dog to understand the tricky meanings behind a lack of feedback — called implicit feedback.

“When you’re training a dog, you may withhold a treat when it does something wrong,” Taylor explained. “So no feedback means it did something wrong. On the other hand, when professors are grading tests, they may only mark wrong answers, so no feedback means you did something right.”

The researchers have begun working with physical robots as well as virtual ones. They also hope to eventually use the program to help people learn to be more effective animal trainers.

Artificial intelligence replaces physicists (Science Daily)

Date:
May 16, 2016
Source:
Australian National University
Summary:
Physicists are putting themselves out of a job, using artificial intelligence to run a complex experiment. The experiment created an extremely cold gas trapped in a laser beam, known as a Bose-Einstein condensate, replicating the experiment that won the 2001 Nobel Prize.

The experiment, featuring the small red glow of a BEC trapped in infrared laser beams. Credit: Stuart Hay, ANU

Physicists are putting themselves out of a job, using artificial intelligence to run a complex experiment.

The experiment, developed by physicists from The Australian National University (ANU) and UNSW ADFA, created an extremely cold gas trapped in a laser beam, known as a Bose-Einstein condensate, replicating the experiment that won the 2001 Nobel Prize.

“I didn’t expect the machine could learn to do the experiment itself, from scratch, in under an hour,” said co-lead researcher Paul Wigley from the ANU Research School of Physics and Engineering.

“A simple computer program would have taken longer than the age of the Universe to run through all the combinations and work this out.”

Bose-Einstein condensates are some of the coldest places in the Universe, far colder than outer space, typically less than a billionth of a degree above absolute zero.

They could be used for mineral exploration or navigation systems as they are extremely sensitive to external disturbances, which allows them to make very precise measurements such as tiny changes in the Earth’s magnetic field or gravity.

The artificial intelligence system’s ability to set itself up quickly every morning and compensate for any overnight fluctuations would make this fragile technology much more useful for field measurements, said co-lead researcher Dr Michael Hush from UNSW ADFA.

“You could make a working device to measure gravity that you could take in the back of a car, and the artificial intelligence would recalibrate and fix itself no matter what,” he said.

“It’s cheaper than taking a physicist everywhere with you.”

The team cooled the gas to around 1 microkelvin, and then handed control of the three laser beams over to the artificial intelligence to cool the trapped gas down to nanokelvin.

Researchers were surprised by the methods the system came up with to ramp down the power of the lasers.

“It did things a person wouldn’t guess, such as changing one laser’s power up and down, and compensating with another,” said Mr Wigley.

“It may be able to come up with complicated ways humans haven’t thought of to get experiments colder and make measurements more precise.

The new technique will lead to bigger and better experiments, said Dr Hush.

“Next we plan to employ the artificial intelligence to build an even larger Bose-Einstein condensate faster than we’ve seen ever before,” he said.

The research is published in the Nature group journal Scientific Reports.


Journal Reference:

  1. P. B. Wigley, P. J. Everitt, A. van den Hengel, J. W. Bastian, M. A. Sooriyabandara, G. D. McDonald, K. S. Hardman, C. D. Quinlivan, P. Manju, C. C. N. Kuhn, I. R. Petersen, A. N. Luiten, J. J. Hope, N. P. Robins, M. R. Hush. Fast machine-learning online optimization of ultra-cold-atom experimentsScientific Reports, 2016; 6: 25890 DOI: 10.1038/srep25890

A importância da laicidade no século 21 (OESP)

15 Maio 2016 | 03h 00

Neste século, cujo primeiro evento de repercussão mundial foram os ataques às torres gêmeas de Nova York, em 11 de setembro de 2001, assistimos ao ressurgimento do papel da religião na vida política. No cenário internacional, são notórios e dramáticos os fatos que complicam a geopolítica mundial, ocasionados por interpretações de caráter fundamentalista de religiões estabelecidas.

No Brasil, a presença da atividade política baseada e dirigida por princípios de fé nunca foi tão marcante. De acordo com o Departamento Intersindical de Assessoria Parlamentar (Diap), o pleito de 2014 elegeu uma bancada evangélica de 75 deputados federais; no seu apogeu, em 1962, o Partido Democrata Cristão, de inspiração católica, tinha 20 cadeiras na Câmara dos Deputados.

Nesse contexto, é oportuno retomar a questão da laicidade, seu papel na vida da democracia e dos direitos humanos, seus nexos com a secularização e a tolerância.

A secularização, termo que vem do latim saeculum, do mundo da vida terrena (não da vida religiosa), e a laicidade, do grego laos, povo, como leigo e laico, em contraposição ao clero no quadro de hierarquização da Igreja, foram consequências da dessacralização da sociedade, como aponta Weber.

O processo de diferenciação estrutural e funcional das instituições é a acepção que mais aproxima a laicização à secularização. Os atores sociais não só começaram a se distanciar da força avassaladora das tradições religiosas, mas as relações das religiões com o Estado se alteraram fundamentalmente no correr desse processo que remonta aos ideais do Iluminismo e da Revolução Francesa. Nesse contexto, surge o tema da laicidade do Estado.

Um Estado laico diferencia-se do teocrático, em que o poder religioso e o poder político se fundem, e também do confessional, em que há vínculos entre o poder político e uma religião.

No Brasil Império, a religião oficial era a católica, ainda que outras fossem permitidas e a liberdade de opinião, assegurada. Com a República, deu-se a separação da Igreja do Estado, que se tornou laico, ensejando a igualdade da liberdade dos cultos, a secularização dos cemitérios, o casamento civil e o registro civil para o nascimento e o falecimento de pessoas.

Rui Barbosa, autor da legislação que implantou a laicização do Estado brasileiro, consagrada na Constituição de 1891, explica que sua matriz inspiradora foi norte-americana. O Estado se dessolidarizou de toda a atividade religiosa em função, como diria Jefferson, da prevalência de um muro de separação entre a atividade religiosa e a ação estatal como preconizado pela Primeira Emenda da Constituição dos EUA. O Estado laico não implica que a sociedade civil seja laica. Com efeito, esta passou a se constituir como uma esfera autônoma e própria para o exercício da liberdade religiosa e de consciência, na qual o Estado não interfere. Abria-se desse modo espaço para o que Benjamin Constant denominou liberdade negativa, não submetida a regras externas provenientes do poder público.

A laicidade, aponta Abbagnano, é expressão do princípio da autonomia das/nas atividades humanas: elas podem se desenvolver segundo regras próprias, não impostas externamente por fins e interesses diversos daqueles que as inspiram e norteiam. É o caso da liberdade de pesquisa, que pressupõe o antidogmatismo e o exame crítico de temas e problemas.

Quando a polarização e as tensões se tornam mais agudas, é importante lembrar que a laicidade é uma das formas de tolerância, ou, mais exatamente, uma das maneiras de responder ao problema da intolerância.

Como ressalta Bobbio, o tema da tolerância surgiu com a desconcentração do poder ideológico (consequência da secularização), pois a tolerância em relação a distintas crenças e opiniões coloca o problema de como lidar com a compatibilidade/convivência de verdades contrapostas (laicidade metodológica, pluralismo, antidogmatismo) e, subsequentemente, com o “diferente” (estrangeiros, pessoas de diversas opções sexuais, etc…). Daí o nexo entre democracia e direitos humanos, pois a tutela da liberdade de crença, de opinião e de posições políticas integra as regras do jogo democrático, para as quais o Outro não é um inimigo a ser eliminado, mas integrante da mesma comunidade política.

Em relação ao “diferente”, lembro que a Constituição (artigo 3.º, IV) estabelece que um dos objetivos da República é “promover o bem de todos sem preconceitos de origem, raça, sexo, cor e quaisquer outras formas de discriminação”.

Entre os componentes da dicotomia tolerância/intolerância está, no plano interno, a convivência/coexistência de verdades contrapostas (religiosas, políticas), no âmbito das regras do jogo democrático e da tutela dos direitos humanos; no plano externo, a aceitação da pluralidade dos Estados na sua heterogeneidade.

Por essa razão um Estado aconfessional como o brasileiro (artigo 19, I, da Constituição) não pode, por obra de dependência ou aliança com qualquer religião, sancionar juridicamente normas ético-religiosas próprias à fé de uma confissão. Por exemplo: no campo da família, o direito ao divórcio; no critério do início da vida, a descriminalização do aborto e a pesquisa científica com células-tronco.

Num Estado laico, as normas religiosas das diversas confissões são conselhos dirigidos aos fiéis, e não comandos para toda a sociedade. A finalidade da liberdade de religião e de pensamento é garantir ao cidadão uti singuli a máxima diferenciação no campo das ideologias, das religiões e da cultura – ou seja, a liberdade individual.

A finalidade pública da laicidade é criar, nesse contexto, para todos os cidadãos uma plataforma comum na qual possam encontrar-se enquanto membros de uma comunidade política. É essa finalidade que cabe resguardar, para conter o indevido transbordar da religião para o espaço público, que se tornou um dos desafios da agenda política contemporânea.

Neste século, cujo primeiro evento de repercussão mundial foram os ataques às torres gêmeas de Nova York, em 11 de setembro de 2001, assistimos ao ressurgimento do papel da religião na vida política. No cenário internacional, são notórios e dramáticos os fatos que complicam a geopolítica mundial, ocasionados por interpretações de caráter fundamentalista de religiões estabelecidas.

No Brasil, a presença da atividade política baseada e dirigida por princípios de fé nunca foi tão marcante. De acordo com o Departamento Intersindical de Assessoria Parlamentar (Diap), o pleito de 2014 elegeu uma bancada evangélica de 75 deputados federais; no seu apogeu, em 1962, o Partido Democrata Cristão, de inspiração católica, tinha 20 cadeiras na Câmara dos Deputados.

Nesse contexto, é oportuno retomar a questão da laicidade, seu papel na vida da democracia e dos direitos humanos, seus nexos com a secularização e a tolerância.

A secularização, termo que vem do latim saeculum, do mundo da vida terrena (não da vida religiosa), e a laicidade, do grego laos, povo, como leigo e laico, em contraposição ao clero no quadro de hierarquização da Igreja, foram consequências da dessacralização da sociedade, como aponta Weber.

O processo de diferenciação estrutural e funcional das instituições é a acepção que mais aproxima a laicização à secularização. Os atores sociais não só começaram a se distanciar da força avassaladora das tradições religiosas, mas as relações das religiões com o Estado se alteraram fundamentalmente no correr desse processo que remonta aos ideais do Iluminismo e da Revolução Francesa. Nesse contexto, surge o tema da laicidade do Estado.

Um Estado laico diferencia-se do teocrático, em que o poder religioso e o poder político se fundem, e também do confessional, em que há vínculos entre o poder político e uma religião.

No Brasil Império, a religião oficial era a católica, ainda que outras fossem permitidas e a liberdade de opinião, assegurada. Com a República, deu-se a separação da Igreja do Estado, que se tornou laico, ensejando a igualdade da liberdade dos cultos, a secularização dos cemitérios, o casamento civil e o registro civil para o nascimento e o falecimento de pessoas.

Rui Barbosa, autor da legislação que implantou a laicização do Estado brasileiro, consagrada na Constituição de 1891, explica que sua matriz inspiradora foi norte-americana. O Estado se dessolidarizou de toda a atividade religiosa em função, como diria Jefferson, da prevalência de um muro de separação entre a atividade religiosa e a ação estatal como preconizado pela Primeira Emenda da Constituição dos EUA. O Estado laico não implica que a sociedade civil seja laica. Com efeito, esta passou a se constituir como uma esfera autônoma e própria para o exercício da liberdade religiosa e de consciência, na qual o Estado não interfere. Abria-se desse modo espaço para o que Benjamin Constant denominou liberdade negativa, não submetida a regras externas provenientes do poder público.

A laicidade, aponta Abbagnano, é expressão do princípio da autonomia das/nas atividades humanas: elas podem se desenvolver segundo regras próprias, não impostas externamente por fins e interesses diversos daqueles que as inspiram e norteiam. É o caso da liberdade de pesquisa, que pressupõe o antidogmatismo e o exame crítico de temas e problemas.

Quando a polarização e as tensões se tornam mais agudas, é importante lembrar que a laicidade é uma das formas de tolerância, ou, mais exatamente, uma das maneiras de responder ao problema da intolerância.

Como ressalta Bobbio, o tema da tolerância surgiu com a desconcentração do poder ideológico (consequência da secularização), pois a tolerância em relação a distintas crenças e opiniões coloca o problema de como lidar com a compatibilidade/convivência de verdades contrapostas (laicidade metodológica, pluralismo, antidogmatismo) e, subsequentemente, com o “diferente” (estrangeiros, pessoas de diversas opções sexuais, etc…). Daí o nexo entre democracia e direitos humanos, pois a tutela da liberdade de crença, de opinião e de posições políticas integra as regras do jogo democrático, para as quais o Outro não é um inimigo a ser eliminado, mas integrante da mesma comunidade política.

Em relação ao “diferente”, lembro que a Constituição (artigo 3.º, IV) estabelece que um dos objetivos da República é “promover o bem de todos sem preconceitos de origem, raça, sexo, cor e quaisquer outras formas de discriminação”.

Entre os componentes da dicotomia tolerância/intolerância está, no plano interno, a convivência/coexistência de verdades contrapostas (religiosas, políticas), no âmbito das regras do jogo democrático e da tutela dos direitos humanos; no plano externo, a aceitação da pluralidade dos Estados na sua heterogeneidade.

Por essa razão um Estado aconfessional como o brasileiro (artigo 19, I, da Constituição) não pode, por obra de dependência ou aliança com qualquer religião, sancionar juridicamente normas ético-religiosas próprias à fé de uma confissão. Por exemplo: no campo da família, o direito ao divórcio; no critério do início da vida, a descriminalização do aborto e a pesquisa científica com células-tronco.

Num Estado laico, as normas religiosas das diversas confissões são conselhos dirigidos aos fiéis, e não comandos para toda a sociedade. A finalidade da liberdade de religião e de pensamento é garantir ao cidadão uti singuli a máxima diferenciação no campo das ideologias, das religiões e da cultura – ou seja, a liberdade individual.

A finalidade pública da laicidade é criar, nesse contexto, para todos os cidadãos uma plataforma comum na qual possam encontrar-se enquanto membros de uma comunidade política. É essa finalidade que cabe resguardar, para conter o indevido transbordar da religião para o espaço público, que se tornou um dos desafios da agenda política contemporânea.

*Celso Lafer é professor emérito da Universidade de São Paulo

A ciência inútil de Alckmim (OESP)

14 Maio 2016 | 03h 00

Geraldo Alckmin insinuou, semanas atrás, que o dinheiro destinado à pesquisa científica no Estado de São Paulo é desperdiçado em estudos irrelevantes ou mesmo inúteis. Ninguém duvida que a aplicação do dinheiro público deve ser cuidadosa e sempre pode ser melhorada. O problema é saber o que é ciência útil.

Quinze páginas publicadas nesta semana na mais conceituada revista científica mundial podem ser consideradas uma resposta às criticas do governador. Principalmente porque seus autores foram, durante anos, considerados grandes produtores de ciência “inútil”. Mas vamos à história que culminou na publicação.

Faz mais de 20 anos, um amigo voltou da França com uma ideia fixa. Queria estudar a biologia molecular dos vírus. Argumentava que novos vírus surgiriam do nada para assombrar a humanidade. O HIV e o ebola eram o prenúncio do que nos esperava no futuro. Sua ciência sempre foi criativa e de qualidade. E foi por esse motivo, e não com medo do apocalipse, que a Fapesp passou a financiar o jovem virologista. O grupo cresceu.

A ciência que esses virologistas produziram nas últimas décadas pode ser classificada como básica ou pura, sem utilidade aparente. Talvez fosse considerada “inútil” pelo governador. Pessoas que pensam assim acreditam que o papel do Estado é financiar projetos que resultem em conhecimentos de utilidade óbvia e imediata, que resolvam os problemas da Nação. Como essa política científica utilitarista e de curto prazo não predomina na Fapesp, a virologia molecular “inútil” prosperou no Estado de São Paulo. Entre os anos 2000 e 2007, eles formaram uma rede de pesquisa, montaram laboratórios, formaram estudantes e publicaram trabalhos científicos. Depois cada um seguiu seu caminho, estudando vírus diferentes, com métodos distintos, nas mais diversas unidades da USP.

Em dezembro, meu colega apareceu na Fapesp com outra ideia fixa. Argumentou que um vírus quase desconhecido poderia estar relacionado aos casos de microcefalia que pipocavam no Nordeste. Era o zika. Enquanto o pânico se espalhava em meio à total desinformação, em uma semana a rede dos virologistas moleculares se aglutinou e resolveu atacar o problema. Eram 45 cientistas agrupados em 15 laboratórios “inúteis”. Na semana seguinte, a Fapesp aumentou o financiamento desses laboratórios. Não tardou para um exército de virologistas moleculares paulistas desembarcar no palco da tragédia munidos de tudo que existia de “inútil” nos seus laboratórios. Isolaram o vírus dos pacientes e, enquanto um laboratório “inútil” cultivava o vírus, outro “inútil” sequenciou seu genoma. Rapidamente esse grupo de cientistas básicos se tornou “útil”. Demonstraram que o vírus ataca células do sistema nervoso, que atravessa a placenta e infecta o sistema nervoso do feto. E que provoca o retardo de seu crescimento.

Em poucos meses, a nova variante do vírus zika foi identificada, isolada, seu mecanismo de ação, esclarecido, e um modelo experimental para a doença foi desenvolvido. Essas descobertas vão servir como base para o desenvolvimento de uma vacina nos próximos anos. São essas descobertas “úteis”, descritas no trabalho realizado por cientistas “inúteis”, que agora foram publicadas pela revista Nature.

Premidos pela Segunda Guerra, cientistas “inúteis” dos EUA e da Inglaterra desenvolveram o radar, a bomba atômica e o computador. Premidos pela microcefalia, nossos virologistas estão ajudando a resolver o problema. Da mesma maneira que era impossível prever no entreguerras que o financiamento de linguistas, físicos teóricos, matemáticos e outros cientistas “inúteis” fosse ajudar no esforço de guerra, era impossível prever que os esforços de financiamento de jovens virologistas iriam, anos mais tarde, solucionar o enigma do zika antes da toda poderosa ciência americana.

Esse é um dos motivos que levam todo país que se preza a financiar essa tal de ciência “inútil”. Esse repositório de cientistas, laboratórios e conhecimento não somente aumenta nosso conhecimento sobre a natureza e ajuda a educar nossos jovens, mas pode ser aglutinado em uma emergência. Foi porque a Fapesp financiou ciência “inútil” por anos que agora temos a capacidade de responder rapidamente a uma emergência médica nacional. Do meu ponto de vista, a simples existência desse trabalho científico é uma resposta da comunidade científica às críticas ventiladas por nosso governador.

MAIS INFORMAÇÕES: THE BRAZILIAN ZIKA VÍRUS STRAIN CAUSES BIRTH DEFECTS IN EXPERIMENTAL MODELS. NATURE DOI:10.1038/NATURE18296 2016

Elevação do nível do mar traga várias ilhas do Pacífico (El País)

Mudanças climáticas estão elevando as águas pelo menos desde meados do século XX

MIGUEL ÁNGEL CRIADO

15 MAI 2016 – 00:19 CEST

Desaparecem ilhas do Pacífico:. A imagem aérea mostra a ilha de Nuatambu partida em duas pelas águas. SIMON ALBERT / EL PAÍS VÍDEO

Desta vez não se trata de previsões ameaçadoras para um futuro distante: um grupo de pesquisadores comprovou como em apenas poucas décadas várias ilhas do oceano Pacífico desapareceram sob o mar. Seu estudo conecta as mudanças climáticas mundiais com a elevação do nível do mar em escala local. Uma conexão que tragará muitas outras ilhas e zonas costeiras nas próximas décadas.

Usando imagens aéreas e por satélites obtidas desde 1947, cientistas australianos têm acompanhado a elevação do nível das águas que rodeiam as ilhas Salomão, no meio do Pacífico ocidental. O arquipélago, formado por cerca de 1.000 ilhas que, juntas, mal superam os 28.000 quilômetros quadrados de extensão, é o lar de mais de meio milhão de pessoas. De origem vulcânica, muitas são pequenos pedaços de terra de poucos hectares, quase ao nível do mar. Por isso são um laboratório onde testar os efeitos das mudanças climáticas nas zonas costeiras.

Os registros dendrocronológicos obtidos dos troncos das árvores mostram que o nível do mar se manteve estável nos últimos séculos, somente sujeito a variações temporais pelo impacto de fenômenos climáticos como El Niño. No entanto, esse equilíbrio foi para o espaço nas últimas décadas. Desde meados do século passado o oceano subiu 3 milímetros por ano, uma cifra que se elevou até os 7 milímetros anuais desde 1994.

Cinco pequenas ilhas das Salomão desapareceram e outras seis perderam a maior parte da terra

Com esses dados, os pesquisadores puderam comprovar com imagens o desaparecimento de cinco ilhas. Apesar de que a maior tinha apenas cinco hectares, trata-se de ilhotas com vegetação, vida silvestre e, pelo menos em dois casos, habitadas. Em algumas ainda é possível ver árvores que se afogam com as raízes sob o mar.

O estudo, publicado na Environmental Research Letters, também mostra que outras seis ilhas perderam até 62% de sua terra. Além disso, o ritmo do avanço do mar está ficando mais acelerado. As imagens tomadas do céu demonstram que até os anos 60 as águas arrebataram apenas 0,1% por unidade de área. A porcentagem se elevou até 0,5% anual até 2002 e, a partir daí, explodiu até 1,9%.

“A elevação do nível do mar nas Ilhas Salomão nos últimos 20 anos foi três vezes maior que a média mundial”, diz em uma mensagem o pesquisador da Universidade de Queensland (Austrália), Simon Albert. Embora possa parecer que o nível do mar tenda a ser igual em todo o planeta, há fatores locais que o elevam ou baixam.

No caso das Salomão, “em parte isso se deve ao aumento do nível do mar e, em parte, ao ciclo natural dos ventos alísios que movem a água no Pacífico ocidental”, esclarece o cientista australiano. “Mas, independentemente da combinação de causas, esses resultados nos apresentam uma visão dos impactos da elevação do nível do mar na segunda metade deste século, quando o restante do planeta sofrer um ritmo semelhante ao que experimentaram as Ilhas Salomão nestes 20 anos”, acrescenta Albert.

Comunidades de pescadores tiveram de mudar-se morro acima para distanciar suas casas do mar

O drama está transcorrendo quase ao vivo. Na ilha de Nuatambu, por exemplo, viviam 25 famílias. O mar lhes roubou a metade da terra e, na década atual, arrebatou 11 casas. Em várias ilhas as pessoas já tiveram de mudar-se para as zonas mais altas ou mudar de ilha. Algumas comunidades se fragmentaram, com alguns membros deslocados e outros ainda resistindo.

No artigo que os próprios pesquisadores escrevem em The Conversation está incluído o depoimento de Sirilo Sutaroti, o ancião-chefe que aos 94 anos rege o povo paurata, uma tribo de pescadores: “O mar começou a adentrar, o que nos obrigou a ir morro acima e reconstruir nosso povoado longe do mar”.

Há um limite para avanços tecnológicos? (OESP)

16 Maio 2016 | 03h 00

Está se tornando popular entre políticos e governos a ideia que a estagnação da economia mundial se deve ao fato de que o “século de ouro” da inovação científica e tecnológica acabou. Este “século de ouro” é usualmente definido como o período de 1870 a 1970, no qual os fundamentos da era tecnológica em que vivemos foram estabelecidos.

De fato, nesse período se verificaram grandes avanços no nosso conhecimento, que vão desde a Teoria da Evolução, de Darwin, até a descoberta das leis do eletromagnetismo, que levou à produção de eletricidade em larga escala, e telecomunicações, incluindo rádio e televisão, com os benefícios resultantes para o bem-estar das populações. Outros avanços, na área de medicina, como vacinas e antibióticos, estenderam a vida média dos seres humanos. A descoberta e o uso do petróleo e do gás natural estão dentro desse período.

São muitos os que argumentam que em nenhum outro período de um século – ao longo dos 10 mil anos da História da humanidade – tantos progressos foram alcançados. Essa visão da História, porém, pode e tem sido questionada. No século anterior, de 1770 a 1870, por exemplo, houve também grandes progressos, decorrentes do desenvolvimento dos motores que usavam o carvão como combustível, os quais permitiram construir locomotivas e deram início à Revolução Industrial.

Apesar disso, os saudosistas acreditam que o “período dourado” de inovações se tenha esgotado e, em decorrência, os governos adotam hoje medidas de caráter puramente econômico para fazer reviver o “progresso”: subsídios a setores específicos, redução de impostos e políticas sociais para reduzir as desigualdades, entre outras, negligenciando o apoio à ciência e tecnologia.

Algumas dessas políticas poderiam ajudar, mas não tocam no aspecto fundamental do problema, que é tentar manter vivo o avanço da ciência e da tecnologia, que resolveu problemas no passado e poderá ajudar a resolver problemas no futuro.

Para analisar melhor a questão é preciso lembrar que não é o número de novas descobertas que garante a sua relevância. O avanço da tecnologia lembra um pouco o que acontece às vezes com a seleção natural dos seres vivos: algumas espécies são tão bem adaptadas ao meio ambiente em que vivem que deixam de “evoluir”: esse é o caso dos besouros que existiam na época do apogeu do Egito, 5 mil anos atrás, e continuam lá até hoje; ou de espécies “fósseis” de peixes que evoluíram pouco em milhões de anos.

Outros exemplos são produtos da tecnologia moderna, como os magníficos aviões DC-3, produzidos há mais de 50 anos e que ainda representam uma parte importante do tráfego aéreo mundial.

Mesmo em áreas mais sofisticadas, como a informática, isso parece estar ocorrendo. A base dos avanços nessa área foi a “miniaturização” dos chips eletrônicos, onde estão os transistores. Em 1971 os chips produzidos pela Intel (empresa líder na área) tinham 2.300 transistores numa placa de 12 milímetros quadrados. Os chips de hoje são pouco maiores, mas têm 5 bilhões de transistores. Foi isso que permitiu a produção de computadores personalizados, telefones celulares e inúmeros outros produtos. E é por essa razão que a telefonia fixa está sendo abandonada e a comunicação via Skype é praticamente gratuita e revolucionou o mundo das comunicações.

Há agora indicações que essa miniaturização atingiu seus limites, o que causa uma certa depressão entre os “sacerdotes” desse setor. Essa é uma visão equivocada. O nível de sucesso foi tal que mais progressos nessa direção são realmente desnecessários, que é o que aconteceu com inúmeros seres vivos no passado.

O que parece ser a solução dos problemas do crescimento econômico no longo prazo é o avanço da tecnologia em outras áreas que não têm recebido a atenção necessária: novos materiais, inteligência artificial, robôs industriais, engenharia genética, prevenção de doenças e, mais do que tudo, entender o cérebro humano, o produto mais sofisticado da evolução da vida na Terra.

Entender como uma combinação de átomos e moléculas pode gerar um órgão tão criativo como o cérebro, capaz de possuir uma consciência e criatividade para compor sinfonias como as de Beethoven – e ao mesmo tempo promover o extermínio de milhões de seres humanos –, será provavelmente o avanço mais extraordinário que o Homo sapiens poderá atingir.

Avanços nessas áreas poderiam criar uma vaga de inovações e progresso material superior em quantidade e qualidade ao que se produziu no “século de ouro”. Mais ainda enfrentamos hoje um problema global, novo aqui, que é a degradação ambiental, resultante em parte do sucesso dos avanços da tecnologia do século 20. Apenas a tarefa de reduzir as emissões de gases que provocam o aquecimento global (resultante da queima de combustíveis fósseis) será uma tarefa hercúlea.

Antes disso, e num plano muito mais pedestre, os avanços que estão sendo feitos na melhoria da eficiência no uso de recursos naturais é extraordinário e não tem tido o crédito e o reconhecimento que merecem.

Só para dar um exemplo, em 1950 os americanos gastavam, em média, 30% da sua renda em alimentos. No ano de 2013 essa porcentagem havia caído para 10%. Os gastos com energia também caíram, graças à melhoria da eficiência dos automóveis e outros fins, como iluminação e aquecimento, o que, aliás, explica por que o preço do barril de petróleo caiu de US$ 150 para menos de US$ 30. É que simplesmente existe petróleo demais no mundo, como também existe capacidade ociosa de aço e cimento.

Um exemplo de um país que está seguindo esse caminho é o Japão, cuja economia não está crescendo muito, mas sua população tem um nível de vida elevado e continua a beneficiar-se gradualmente dos avanços da tecnologia moderna.

*José Goldemberg é professor emérito da Universidade de São Paulo (USP) e é presidente da Fundação de Amparo à Pesquisa do Estado de São Paulo (Fapesp)

Abril é o sétimo mês consecutivo de temperaturas recorde no planeta (O Globo)

Por O Globo. 16/05/2016

 

RIO — Abril deste ano registrou as temperaturas mais quentes para este mês na História, segundo informações da Nasa. É o sétimo mês consecutivo de temperaturas recorde, com mais de 1 grau Celsius de diferença em relação à média entre 1951 e 1980.

A temperatura média global em abril foi 1.11 grau Celsius acima da média do período 1951-1980, esmagando o recorde anterior para o mês, registrado em 2010, de 0,24 grau Celsius acima da média.

— O mais interessante é a escala na qual estamos quebrando os recordes — disse Andy Pitman, da Universidade de Nova Gales do Sul, na Austrália, em entrevista ao “Guardian”. —Claramente, tudo está caminhando na direção errada. Os cientistas climáticos estão alertando sobre isso desde os anos 1980, e tem sido óbvio desde os anos 2000. Então onde está a surpresa?

É o terceiro mês consecutivo em que o recorde de temperatura é quebrado pela maior diferença já registrada. Desde fevereiro, quando as margens começaram a quebrar recordes, os cientistas começaram a falar sobre “emergência climática”. Existe a influência do El Niño, mas o temor é que o planeta esteja aquecendo de forma mais acelerada que o imaginado, o que coloca em risco os objetivos acertados em Paris.

— O alvo de 1.5 grau Celsius é um desejo. Eu não sei se conseguiríamos esse objetivo se parássemos com as emissões hoje. Existe inércia no sistema. E o resultado de abril coloca pressão para os 2 graus Celsius — disse Pitman.

Latour’s new book assembles big names to “Reset Modernity!”

Avatar de Jeremy SchmidtJeremy J Schmidt

MIT Press has its new site live for Bruno Latour’s new book Reset Modernity! The book has many leading thinkers making contributions; description below for what looks like a provocative new work:

9780262034593_0Overview

Modernity has had so many meanings and tries to combine so many contradictory sets of attitudes and values that it has become impossible to use it to define the future. It has ended up crashing like an overloaded computer. Hence the idea is that modernity might need a sort of reset. Not a clean break, not a “tabula rasa,” not another iconoclastic gesture, but rather a restart of the complicated programs that have been accumulated, over the course of history, in what is often called the “modernist project.” This operation has become all the more urgent now that the ecological mutation is forcing us to reorient ourselves toward an experience of the material world for which…

Ver o post original 328 mais palavras

Quando todos os europeus eram negros (El País)

Maior estudo genético de europeus da pré-história revela um passado complexo e violento no qual populações inteiras foram forçadas a emigrar ou desaparecer para sempre

NUÑO DOMÍNGUEZ

Três crânios encontrados na República Checa associados com o período gravetiano.

Três crânios encontrados na República Checa associados com o período gravetiano. M. Frouz / J. Svoboda

O estudo genético de restos mortais de europeus que morreram há milhares de anos, abriu uma janela única para a pré-história do continente. O trabalho abrange grande parte do Paleolítico Superior, de 45.000 até 7.000 anos atrás, e revela vários episódios até agora desconhecidos.

“O que vemos é uma história das populações tão complexa quanto a dos últimos 7.000 anos, com muitos momentos em que populações substituem outras, imigração em uma escala dramática e em um momento no qual o clima estava mudando radicalmente”, resumiu David Reich, geneticista da Universidade de Harvard e principal autor do estudo, publicado na revista Nature.

O estudo analisou o DNA de 51 euroasiáticos, uma amostra 10 vezes maior que qualquer estudo anterior. Abarca desde os humanos modernos mais antigos registrados aos caçadores-coletores que viveram pouco antes da revolução neolítica que trouxe consigo a agricultura ao continente.

A primeira conclusão do estudo é que, embora os neandertais e os humanos modernos (os Homo sapiens) se cruzaram e tiveram filhos férteis, a percentagem de DNA dessa outra espécie que carregamos diminuiu rapidamente, passando de 6 % para os 2% de hoje. Isto implica certa incompatibilidade evolutiva que já tinha sido destacada por outros estudos recentes.

Há 19.000 anos, alguém enterrou na Cantábria uma das mulheres mais misteriosas da pré-história europeia. Trata-se da Dama Vermelha, que em seus 35 ou 40 anos recebeu uma sepultura muito estranha, o que poderia indicar um significado sagrado. Seu cadáver tinha decomposto ao ar livre e, em seguida, seus ossos foram cobertos com tinta vermelha. Tanto deviam respeitar aquela mulher que um de seus ossos foi cuidadosamente devolvido ao túmulo depois que um animal selvagem o profanou para se alimentar. Além de uns desenhos esquemáticos e a presença de pólen, pouco se sabe sobre a mulher e o significado que a cultura à qual pertencia queria dar à sua sepultura. A senhora é um dos 51 indivíduos que foram analisados neste estudo. A equipe de Manuel González Morales está preparando uma reconstrução do aspecto que teve essa mulher, cujo genes mostram que era negra, explica.

Embora os primeiros sapiens tenham chegado à Europa há cerca de 45.000 anos, sua marca genética desapareceu completamente nas populações atuais. As primeiras populações que possuem algum parentesco com os europeus de hoje remontam a uns 37.000 anos atrás. Os autores do trabalho identificam essa população com o período aurignaciano.

Embora os primeiros sapiens tenham chegado à Europa há cerca de 45.000 anos, sua marca genética desapareceu completamente nas populações atuais

“Estão associados a esta cultura os primeiros exemplos de arte e música, assim como as pinturas da caverna de Chauvet na França ou as flautas de ossos”, diz Manuel González Morales, pesquisador da Universidade da Cantábria e coautor do trabalho.

Naquela época, a Europa vivia a última idade do gelo, com geleiras avançando do norte da Europa e empurrando povos inteiros à migração ou ao extermínio. Segundo dados do trabalho, há 33.000 anos outro grupo substitui quase totalmente o anterior e é associado com o período gravetiano, caracterizado por pinturas com as mãos em negativo e as redondas estatuetas das Vênus paleolíticas esculpidas em osso, explica González.

Inesperadamente, há cerca de 19.000 anos, reaparecem os descendentes do período aurignaciano. Os restos humanos encontrados na Cantábria mostram agora que os habitantes desta região estavam diretamente relacionados com eles.

Uma das possíveis explicações é que aquele povo migrou para refúgios quentes do sul da Europa, em particular a Península Ibérica. Depois do momento mais frio da última idade do gelo esta população volta a se expandir para o norte da Europa, recuperando o território perdido e substituindo seus habitantes.

Última onda

Mais uma vez, cerca de 14.000 anos atrás, outra população vinda das terras do Oriente Médio desembarca no continente e passa a ser dominante, substituindo boa parte das anteriores. Esta última onda, que não era conhecida até agora, foi identificada pelos restos de um caçador e coletor encontrado em Villabruna, Itália e que deu nome a esta população.

A marca genética deste grupo se perpetuou durante milênios, já que, por exemplo, o caçador coletor de La Braña (Leão), que viveu há 7.000 anos estava relacionado com este grupo.

Os genes do homem de La Braña mostram que tinha pele escura e olhos azuis. De acordo com González, até a chegada de seus ancestrais à Europa cerca de 14.000 anos atrás, todos os europeus tinham a pele escura e os olhos castanhos. “O trabalho mostra que os primeiros indivíduos com genes de pele clara viveram há uns 13.000 anos”, explica o pesquisador da Universidade da Cantábria. Depois, com a chegada dos primeiros agricultores do Oriente Médio começa o Neolítico e a pele branca se torna muito mais comum. Em outras palavras, os europeus foram negros durante a maior parte de sua história.

If The UAE Builds A Mountain Will It Actually Bring More Rain? (Vocativ)

You’re not the only one who thinks constructing a rain-inducing mountain in the desert is a bonkers idea

May 03, 2016 at 6:22 PM ET

Photo Illustration: R. A. Di ISO

The United Arab Emirates wants to build a mountain so the nation can control the weather—but some experts are skeptical about the effectiveness of this project, which may sound more like a James Bond villain’s diabolical plan than a solution to drought.

The actual construction of a mountain isn’t beyond the engineering prowess of the UAE. The small country on the Arabian Peninsula has pulled off grandiose environmental projects before, like the artificial Palm Islands off the coast of Dubai and an indoor ski hill in the Mall of the Emirates. But the scientific purpose of the mountain is questionable.

The UAE’s National Center for Meteorology and Seismology (NCMS) is currently collaborating with the U.S.-based University Corporation for Atmospheric Research (UCAR) for the first planning phase of the ambitious project, according to Arabian Business. The UAE government gave the two groups $400,000 in funding to determine whether they can bring more rain to the region by constructing a mountain that will foster better cloud-seeding.

Last week the NCMS revealed that the UAE spent $588,000 on cloud-seeding in 2015. Throughout the year, 186 flights dispersed potassium chloride, sodium chloride and magnesium into clouds—a process that can trigger precipitation. Now, the UAE is hoping they can enhance the chemical process by forcing air up around the artificial mountain, creating clouds that can be seeded more easily and efficiently.

“What we are looking at is basically evaluating the effects on weather through the type of mountain, how high it should be and how the slopes should be,” NCAR lead researcher Roelof Bruintjes told Arabian Business. “We will have a report of the first phase this summer as an initial step.”

But some scientists don’t expect NCAR’s research will lead to a rain-inducing alp. “I really doubt that it would work,” Raymond Pierrehumbert, a professor of physics at the University of Oxford told Vocativ. “You’d need to build a long ridge, not just a cone, otherwise the air would just go around. Even if you could do that, mountains cause local enhanced rain on the upslope side, but not much persistent cloud downwind, and if you need cloud seeding to get even the upslope rain, it’s really unlikely to work as there is very little evidence that cloud seeding produces much rainfall.”

Pierrehumbert, who specializes in geophysics and climate change, believes the regional environment would make the project especially difficult. “UAE is a desert because of the wind patterns arising from global atmospheric circulations, and any mountain they build is not going to alter those,” he said. 

Pierrehumbert concedes that NCAR is a respectable organization that will be able to use the “small amount of money to research the problem.” He thinks some good scientific study will come of the effort—perhaps helping to determine why a hot, humid area bordered by the ocean receives so little rainfall.

But he believes the minimal sum should go into another project: “They’d be way better off putting the money into solar-powered desalination plants.”

If the project doesn’t work out, at least wealthy Emirates have a 125,000-square-foot indoor snow park to look forward to in 2018.

Who’s downloading pirated papers? Everyone (Science)

John Bohannon

Science  29 Apr 2016: Vol. 352, Issue 6285, pp. 508-512
DOI: 10.1126/science.352.6285.508

Data from the controversial website Sci-Hub reveal that the whole world turns to it for journal articles.

Just as spring arrived last month in Iran, Meysam Rahimi sat down at his university computer and immediately ran into a problem: how to get the scientific papers he needed. He had to write up a research proposal for his engineering Ph.D. at Amirkabir University of Technology in Tehran. His project straddles both operations management and behavioral economics, so Rahimi had a lot of ground to cover.

But every time he found the abstract of a relevant paper, he hit a paywall. Although Amirkabir is one of the top research universities in Iran, international sanctions and economic woes have left it with poor access to journals. To read a 2011 paper in Applied Mathematics and Computation, Rahimi would have to pay the publisher, Elsevier, $28. A 2015 paper in Operations Research, published by the U.S.-based company INFORMS, would cost $30.

He looked at his list of abstracts and did the math. Purchasing the papers was going to cost $1000 this week alone—about as much as his monthly living expenses—and he would probably need to read research papers at this rate for years to come. Rahimi was peeved. “Publishers give nothing to the authors, so why should they receive anything more than a small amount for managing the journal?”

Many academic publishers offer programs to help researchers in poor countries access papers, but only one, called Share Link, seemed relevant to the papers that Rahimi sought. It would require him to contact authors individually to get links to their work, and such links go dead 50 days after a paper’s publication. The choice seemed clear: Either quit the Ph.D. or illegally obtain copies of the papers. So like millions of other researchers, he turned to Sci-Hub, the world’s largest pirate website for scholarly literature. Rahimi felt no guilt. As he sees it, high-priced journals “may be slowing down the growth of science severely.”

The journal publishers take a very different view. “I’m all for universal access, but not theft!” tweeted Elsevier’s director of universal access, Alicia Wise, on 14 March during a heated public debate over Sci-Hub. “There are lots of legal ways to get access.” Wise’s tweet included a link to a list of 20 of the company’s access initiatives, including Share Link.

But in increasing numbers, researchers around the world are turning to Sci-Hub, which hosts 50 million papers and counting. Over the 6 months leading up to March, Sci-Hub served up 28 million documents. More than 2.6 million download requests came from Iran, 3.4 million from India, and 4.4 million from China. The papers cover every scientific topic, from obscure physics experiments published decades ago to the latest breakthroughs in biotechnology. The publisher with the most requested Sci-Hub articles? It is Elsevier by a long shot—Sci-Hub provided half-a-million downloads of Elsevier papers in one recent week.

These statistics are based on extensive server log data supplied by Alexandra Elbakyan, the neuroscientist who created Sci-Hub in 2011 as a 22-year-old graduate student in Kazakhstan (see bio, p. 511). I asked her for the data because, in spite of the flurry of polarized opinion pieces, blog posts, and tweets about Sci-Hub and what effect it has on research and academic publishing, some of the most basic questions remain unanswered: Who are Sci-Hub’s users, where are they, and what are they reading?

For someone denounced as a criminal by powerful corporations and scholarly societies, Elbakyan was surprisingly forthcoming and transparent. After establishing contact through an encrypted chat system, she worked with me over the course of several weeks to create a data set for public release: every download event over the 6-month period starting 1 September 2015, including the digital object identifier (DOI) for every paper. To protect the privacy of Sci-Hub users, we agreed that she would first aggregate users’ geographic locations to the nearest city using data from Google Maps; no identifying internet protocol (IP) addresses were given to me. (The data set and details on how it was analyzed are freely accessible at http://dx.doi.org/10.5061/dryad.q447c.)

F1.mediumIt’s a Sci-Hub WorldCREDITS: (DATA) SCI-HUB; (MAP) ADAPTED BY G. GRULLÓN/SCIENCE 

Elbakyan also answered nearly every question I had about her operation of the website, interaction with users, and even her personal life. Among the few things she would not disclose is her current location, because she is at risk of financial ruin, extradition, and imprisonment because of a lawsuit launched by Elsevier last year.

The Sci-Hub data provide the first detailed view of what is becoming the world’s de facto open-access research library. Among the revelations that may surprise both fans and foes alike: Sci-Hub users are not limited to the developing world. Some critics of Sci-Hub have complained that many users can access the same papers through their libraries but turn to Sci-Hub instead—for convenience rather than necessity. The data provide some support for that claim. The United States is the fifth largest downloader after Russia, and a quarter of the Sci-Hub requests for papers came from the 34 members of the Organization for Economic Co-operation and Development, the wealthiest nations with, supposedly, the best journal access. In fact, some of the most intense use of Sci-Hub appears to be happening on the campuses of U.S. and European universities.

In October last year, a New York judge ruled in favor of Elsevier, decreeing that Sci-Hub infringes on the publisher’s legal rights as the copyright holder of its journal content, and ordered that the website desist. The injunction has had little effect, as the server data reveal. Although the sci-hub.org web domain was seized in November 2015, the servers that power Sci-Hub are based in Russia, beyond the influence of the U.S. legal system. Barely skipping a beat, the site popped back up on a different domain.

Online Survey

Tell us what you think about Sci-Hub at http://bit.ly/Sci-Hub.

It’s hard to discern how threatened by Sci-Hub Elsevier and other major publishers truly feel, in part because legal download totals aren’t typically made public. An Elsevier report in 2010, however, estimated more than 1 billion downloads for all publishers for the year, suggesting Sci-Hub may be siphoning off under 5% of normal traffic. Still, many are concerned that Sci-Hub will prove as disruptive to the academic publishing business as the pirate site Napster was for the music industry (see editorial, p. 497). “I don’t endorse illegal tactics,” says Peter Suber, director of the Office for Scholarly Communications at Harvard University and one of the leading experts on open-access publishing. However, “a lawsuit isn’t going to stop it, nor is there any obvious technical means. Everyone should be thinking about the fact that this is here to stay.”

Need or convenience?CREDITS: (DATA) SCI-HUB; (MAP) ADAPTED BY G. GRULLÓN/SCIENCE

IT IS EASY TO UNDERSTAND why journal publishers might see Sci-Hub as a threat. It is as simple to use as Google’s search engine, and as long as you know the DOI or title of a paper, it is more reliable for finding the full text. Chances are, you’ll find what you’re looking for. Along with book chapters, monographs, and conference proceedings, Sci-Hub has amassed copies of the majority of scholarly articles ever published. It continues to grow: When someone requests a paper not already on Sci-Hub, it pirates a copy and adds it to the repository.

Elbakyan declined to say exactly how she obtains the papers, but she did confirm that it involves online credentials: the user IDs and passwords of people or institutions with legitimate access to journal content. She says that many academics have donated them voluntarily. Publishers have alleged that Sci-Hub relies on phishing emails to trick researchers, for example by having them log in at fake journal websites. “I cannot confirm the exact source of the credentials,” Elbakyan told me, “but can confirm that I did not send any phishing emails myself.”

So by design, Sci-Hub’s content is driven by what scholars seek. The January paper in The Astronomical Journal describing a possible new planet on the outskirts of our solar system? The 2015 Nature paper describing oxygen on comet 67P/Churyumov-Gerasimenko? The paper in which a team genetically engineered HIV resistance into human embryos with the CRISPR method, published a month ago in the Journal of Assisted Reproduction and Genetics? Sci-Hub has them all.

It has news articles from scientific journals—including many of mine in Science—as well as copies of open-access papers, perhaps because of confusion on the part of users or because they are simply using Sci-Hub as their all-in-one portal for papers. More than 4000 different papers from PLOS’s various open-access journals, for example, can be downloaded from Sci-Hub.

The flow of Sci-Hub activity over time reflects the working lives of researchers, growing over the course of each day and then ebbing—but never stopping—as night falls. (There is an 18-day gap in the data starting 4 November 2015 when the domain sci-hub.org went down and the server logs were improperly configured.) By the end of February, the flow of Sci-Hub papers had risen to its highest level yet: more than 200,000 download requests per day.

How many Sci-Hub users are there? The download requests came from 3 million unique IP addresses, which provides a lower bound. But the true number is much higher because thousands of people on a university campus can share the same IP address. Sci-Hub downloaders live on every continent except Antarctica. Of the 24,000 city locations to which they cluster, the busiest is Tehran, with 1.27 million requests. Much of that is from Iranians using programs to automatically download huge swaths of Sci-Hub’s papers to make a local mirror of the site, Elbakyan says. Rahimi, the engineering student in Tehran, confirms this. “There are several Persian sites similar to Sci-Hub,” he says. “So you should consider Iranian illegal [paper] downloads to be five to six times higher” than what Sci-Hub alone reveals.

The geography of Sci-Hub usage generally looks like a map of scientific productivity, but with some of the richer and poorer science-focused nations flipped. The smaller countries have stories of their own. Someone in Nuuk, Greenland, is reading a paper about how best to provide cancer treatment to indigenous populations. Research goes on in Libya, even as a civil war rages there. Someone in Benghazi is investigating a method for transmitting data between computers across an air gap. Far to the south in the oil-rich desert, someone near the town of Sabhā is delving into fluid dynamics. (Go to bit.ly/Sci-Hub for an interactive map of the website’s data and see what people are reading in cities worldwide.) Mapping IP addresses to real-world locations can paint a false picture if people hide behind web proxies or anonymous routing services. But according to Elbakyan, fewer than 3% of Sci-Hub users are using those.

In the United States and Europe, Sci-Hub users concentrate where academic researchers are working. Over the 6-month period, 74,000 download requests came from IP addresses in New York City, home to multiple universities and scientific institutions. There were 19,000 download requests from Columbus, a city with less than a tenth of New York’s population, and 68,000 from East Lansing, Michigan, which has less than a hundredth. These are the homes of Ohio State University and Michigan State University (MSU), respectively.

The numbers for Ashburn, Virginia, the top U.S. city with nearly 100,000 Sci-Hub requests, are harder to interpret. The George Washington University (GWU) in Washington, D.C., has its science and technology campus there, but Ashburn is also home to Janelia Research Campus, the elite Howard Hughes Medical Institute outpost, as well as the servers of the Wikimedia Foundation, the headquarters of the online encyclopedia Wikipedia. Spokespeople for the latter two say their employees are unlikely to account for the traffic. The GWU press office responded defensively, sending me to an online statement that the university recently issued about the impact of journal subscription rate hikes on its library budget. “Scholarly resources are not luxury goods,” it says. “But they are priced as though they were.”

Several GWU students confessed to being Sci-Hub fans. When she moved from Argentina to the United States in 2014 to start her physics Ph.D., Natalia Clementi says her access to some key journals within the field actually worsened because GWU didn’t have subscriptions to them. Researchers in Argentina may have trouble obtaining some specialty journals, she notes, but “most of them have no problem accessing big journals because the government pays the subscription at all the public universities around the country.”

Even for journals to which the university has access, Sci-Hub is becoming the go-to resource, says Gil Forsyth, another GWU physics Ph.D. student. “If I do a search on Google Scholar and there’s no immediate PDF link, I have to click through to ‘Check Access through GWU’ and then it’s hit or miss,” he says. “If I put [the paper’s title or DOI] into Sci-Hub, it will just work.” He says that Elsevier publishes the journals that he has had the most trouble accessing.

The GWU library system “offers a document delivery system specifically for math, physics, chemistry, and engineering faculty,” I was told by Maralee Csellar, the university’s director of media relations. “Graduate students who want to access an article from the Elsevier system should work with their department chair, professor of the class, or their faculty thesis adviser for assistance.”

The intense Sci-Hub activity in East Lansing reveals yet another motivation for using the site. Most of the downloads seem to be the work of a few or even just one person running a “scraping” program over the December 2015 holidays, downloading papers at superhuman speeds. I asked Elbakyan whether those download requests came from MSU’s IP addresses, and she confirmed that they did. The papers are all from chemistry journals, most of them published by the American Chemical Society. So the apparent goal is to build a massive private repository of chemical literature. But why?

Bill Hart-Davidson, MSU’s associate dean for graduate education, suggests that the likely answer is “text-mining,” the use of computer programs to analyze large collections of documents to generate data. When I called Hart-Davidson, I suggested that the East Lansing Sci-Hub scraper might be someone from his own research team. But he laughed and said that he had no idea who it was. But he understands why the scraper goes to Sci-Hub even though MSU subscribes to the downloaded journals. For his own research on the linguistic structure of scientific discourse, Hart-Davidson obtained more than 100 years of biology papers the hard way—legally with the help of the publishers. “It took an entire year just to get permission,” says Thomas Padilla, the MSU librarian who did the negotiating. And once the hard drive full of papers arrived, it came with strict rules of use. At the end of each day of running computer programs on it from an offline computer, Padilla had to walk the resulting data across campus on a thumb drive for analysis with Hart-Davidson.

Yet Sci-Hub has drawbacks for text-mining research, Hart-Davidson says. The pirated papers are in unstructured PDF format, which is hard for programs to parse. But the bigger issue, he says, is that the data source is illegal. “How are you going to publish your work?” Then again, having a massive private repository of papers does allow a researcher to rapidly test hypotheses before bothering with libraries at all. And it’s all just a click away.

WHILE ELSEVIER WAGES a legal battle against Elbakyan and Sci-Hub, many in the publishing industry see the fight as futile. “The numbers are just staggering,” one senior executive at a major publisher told me upon learning the Sci-Hub statistics. “It suggests an almost complete failure to provide a path of access for these researchers.” He works for a company that publishes some of the most heavily downloaded content on Sci-Hub and requested anonymity so he could speak candidly.

For researchers at institutions that cannot afford access to journals, he says, the publishers “need to make subscription or purchase more reasonable for them.” Richard Gedye, the director of outreach programs for STM, the International Association of Scientific, Technical and Medical Publishers, disputes this. Institutions in the developing world that take advantage of the publishing industry’s outreach programs “have the kind of breadth of access to peer-reviewed scientific research that is pretty much the equivalent of typical institutions in North America or Europe.”

And for all the researchers at Western universities who use Sci-Hub instead, the anonymous publisher lays the blame on librarians for not making their online systems easier to use and educating their researchers. “I don’t think the issue is access—it’s the perception that access is difficult,” he says.

“I don’t agree,” says Ivy Anderson, the director of collections for the California Digital Library in Oakland, which provides journal access to the 240,000 researchers of the University of California system. The authentication systems that university researchers must use to read subscription journals from off campus, and even sometimes on campus with personal computers, “are there to enforce publisher restrictions,” she says.

Will Sci-Hub push the industry toward an open-access model, where reader authentication is unnecessary? That’s not clear, Harvard’s Suber says. Although Sci-Hub helps a great many researchers, he notes, it may also carry a “strategic cost” for the open-access movement, because publishers may take advantage of “confusion” over the legality of open-access scholarship in general and clamp down. “Lawful open access forces publishers to adapt,” he says, whereas “unlawful open access invites them to sue instead.”

EVEN IF ARRESTED, Elbakyan says Sci-Hub will not go dark. She has failsafes to keep it up and running, and user donations now cover the cost of Sci-Hub’s servers. She also notes that the entire collection of 50 million papers has been copied by others many times already. “[The papers] do not need to be downloaded again from universities.”

Indeed, the data suggest that the explosive growth of Sci-Hub is done. Elbakyan says that the proportion of download requests for papers not contained in the database is holding steady at 4.3%. If she runs out of credentials for pirating fresh content, that gap will grow again, however—and publishers and universities are constantly devising new authentication schemes that she and her supporters will need to outsmart. She even asked me to donate my own Science login and password—she was only half joking.

For Elbakyan herself, the future is even more uncertain. Elsevier is not only charging her with copyright infringement but with illegal hacking under the U.S. Computer Fraud and Abuse Act. “There is the possibility to be suddenly arrested for hacking,” Elbakyan admits. Others who ran afoul of this law have been extradited to the United States while traveling. And she is fully aware that another computer prodigy–turned-advocate, Aaron Swartz, was arrested on similar charges in 2011 after mass-downloading academic papers. Facing devastating financial penalties and jail time, Swartz hanged himself.

Like the rest of the scientific community, Elbakyan is watching the future of scholarly communication unfold fast. “I will see how all this turns out.”

Correction (28 April 2016): “Andrew Schwartz” has been corrected to “Andrew Swartz.”

El Foucault más íntimo, lejos de la gloria académica (El Clarín)

 

02/04/16

Entrevista con Daniel Defert.  El testimonio en primera persona del activista francés, compañero del filósofo por décadas, devuelve el retrato más emocionante del autor de “Vigilar y castigar”.

POR TANIA MARTINI Y ENRICO IPPOLITO

Escenas de pareja. Michel Foucault y Daniel Defert convivieron por más de 25 años. Aquí comparten una pipa de hachís.

Escenas de pareja. Michel Foucault y Daniel Defert convivieron por más de 25 años. Aquí comparten una pipa de hachís.

Compañero, testigo cercano y experto en su obra, Daniel Defert descubre en esta conversación al Foucault que las biografías no lograron terminar de pulir. Conoció al filósofo cuando era estudiante en la Universidad de Clermont-Ferrand, Francia. Y en 1963 comenzó la relación que terminó con la muerte de Foucault en 1984. Esta entrevista, publicada en Die Tageszeitung (Berlín), retrata la vida cotidiana del gran filósofo francés del siglo XX a través de la lente de quien fuera –además– el guardián del archivo Foucault hasta que fuera adquirido por de Biblioteca Nacional de Francia.

-Señor Defert, ¿por qué habla usted alemán? ¿Por Marx o por Goethe?

-Lo aprendí en la escuela. Pero en realidad viajo ya desde hace tiempo una vez por año a Alemania.

-En Alemania usted asistió a cursos sobre Bertolt Brecht.

-Eso fue en setiembre de 1960, cuando viajé por Alemania. En Heidelberg iba todos los días a clases sobre Bertolt Brecht. En Frankfurt conocí a un muchacho joven que era muy amigo de la esposa de Adorno. Él escribió un trabajo sobre André Gide. Tuve una historia con él. Me propuso visitar una clase de Adorno.

-¿Conoció usted a Adorno?

-No lo conocí. Rechacé la propuesta porque estaba cansado. Después volví a Francia y me presentaron a Foucault. Con el tiempo me arrepiento, ¡pues podría haber conocido a Adorno y Foucault en la misma semana!

-Parece que Foucault dijo una vez que si hubiera leído a Adorno más tempranamente, se hubiera ahorrado de escribir algunas cosas.

-Creo que lo dijo por cortesía.

-En la sociología de Frankfurt, Foucault fue rechazado por largo tiempo.

-El trato con la historicidad era todo lo contrario. Cuando la Escuela de Frankfurt (o incluso Hannah Arendt) hablaban de historia, siempre era algo de segunda mano. En cambio para Foucault era importante ir a los archivos y consultar las fuentes primarias.

-Al mismo tiempo, hasta el día de hoy la Escuela de Frankfurt no tiene demasiada recepción en Francia.

-Llegó a Francia a través de Jean Baudrillard, pero eso ya era una segunda ola. Antes ya había estado Henri Lefebvre.

-Foucault incorporó muchos filósofos alemanes.

-Yo incluso diría que era germanófilo. Leía y hablaba alemán. Cuando tuvo su examen en la École Normale Supérieure, pronunció mal una palabra alemana y el profesor se le rió. Foucault quedó avergonzado. Cuando su padre le preguntó qué le gustaría de regalo para tener éxito, él contestó: «clases de alemán».

–Después de la muerte de Foucault en 1984, usted fundó AIDES, la organización de lucha contra el SIDA más grande de Francia, y ha dedicado su vida a la lucha contra el SIDA.

–Sí, queríamos establecer un archivo de la historia de la organización. A mí no me gusta escribir, por eso hicimos el libro en forma de una entrevista. Hubo una primera versión del libro que no me gustó.

–¿Por qué no?

–Porque los entrevistadores reorganizaron la historia como algo demasiado personal. Desde el momento en que uno intenta trazar una cronología y llevar todo a una narrativa lineal, cambia el significado de los acontecimientos.

–¿Qué fue lo que le pareció demasiado personal?

–Tenía que ver con mi vida y mi relación con Foucault. Desde luego que la fundación de AIDES tiene que ver con la muerte de Foucault. Pero yo no quería hablar de cosas privadas, entonces descartamos el borrador y reestructuramos el libro.

–Usted también rechazó hablar con biógrafos de Michel Foucault, por ejemplo Didier Eribon, quien seguramente haya escrito la biografía más conocida de Foucault.

–Sí. Eribon conocía a Foucault muy bien. Después de la muerte de Foucault, no lo vi por dos años. Un día me llamó y me habló de la biografía. Yo no lo quise ver.

–¿Se ha arrepentido de eso?

–Pensé que su biografía iba a quedar bien. Además, fue de todos modos mejor que la haya hecho sin mí, puesto que él debía buscar respuestas e investigar hechos concretos. Para mi gusto, le quedó un Foucault demasiado académico. Por eso quedé decepcionado: no mostraba a l hombre como realmente era.

–¿En qué sentido?

–Suprimió todos los aspectos fantásticos y apasionantes de su vida. Me decepcionó y por eso acepté responderle algunas preguntas al biógrafo James Miller. Pero luego quedé horrorizado.

–¿Por qué?

–El libro de Miller no es serio. Es absurdo. La biografía de David Macey, The lives of Michel Foucault (1993) es buena. Él investigó mucho, leyó los textos de Foucault, mientras Eribon ni los miró… Sólo le interesaba su vida académica. La mayoría de la gente que trabaja sobre Foucault usa el libro de Macey.

–Usted dijo que se arrepiente de haber hablado con James Miller

–Miller quería a toda costa hacer una historia sadomasoquista de Foucault. Macey se interesó por el intelectual.

–Pero no sólo Eribon consideraba a Foucault un académico extraordinario. En un sistema universitario tan estricto y jerárquico como el francés, Foucault alcanzó la cima y llegó a ser profesor del Collège de France.

–Cuando conocí a Foucault en 1960, él acababa de regresar de Alemania. Era un «Herr Professor», uno de aquellos a quienes se les sostenía el abrigo —como se hacía en Alemania con los profesores antes de 1968. Él tenía treinta años y yo, veintiuno. Yo estaba impresionado por su look «Herr Professor».

–¿Y eso cambió en el 68?

–Foucault ya había cambiado antes. En 1966 se fue de Francia hacia Túnez y allí era muy cercano con sus estudiantes. En marzo del 66 estuvo involucrado en el primer movimiento estudiantil.

–¿Y en el 68?

–En mayo del 68 estaba en Túnez. Fue allí, no en Francia, donde cambió su relación hacia los estudiantes. Estaba involucrado en las luchas antijerárquicas. Incluso en el Collège de France, que tendía a mantener el estatuto del «Herr Professor», intentó conservar otro tipo de relación con los estudiantes. Allí tenía más de seiscientos oyentes en sus cursos: era un espectáculo. A él le gustaba más la forma de enseñar en EE.UU., los seminarios pequeños donde los estudiantes podían hablar con gran libertad. Todo eso se aleja del académico extraordinario al que usted aludió.

–¿Y esto es omitido por Eribon?

–Eribon está bien informado, pero es bastante pudoroso respecto de la vida privada. Eribon proyectó el deseo de una vida académica en Foucault. Por su parte, Miller reveló acontecimientos ocurridos en EE.UU., cosa que para mí fue muy interesante. Tenía algo original, como de inescrutable, que le faltaba a Eribon. Pero el resto ya es un disparate; creo que Miller proyectó sus propias fantasías sexuales.

–Resulta interesante que ambas miradas proyecten un tipo de fantasía sobre la vida de Foucault.

–Sí. Mire, la madre de Foucault era una mujer muy elegante y burguesa. Una vez me dijo: «No podés hablar de él porque sos su pareja». Pienso que tenía razón, por eso le hice caso y tampoco quise hablar sobre él en mi biografía, por más que los lectores lo hayan esperado.

–Los lectores esperan eso porque él es una superestrella, pero seguramente Foucault mismo habría rechazado ese interés por su vida. Por cierto, en 2015 visitamos su lugar de nacimiento y su tumba en Vendeuvre… 

–Su madre hizo poner en su tumba «Profesor del Collège de France», ¿lo ha visto? A mí me impactó. Yo hablé con ella del tema y me dijo: «Bueno, las palabras son sólo palabras, la gente las olvida, pero no los títulos». De modo que es la tumba de un académico.

–Usted quiso contar la historia política más que la privada y, sin embargo, ahora estamos hablando aquí de él …

–Es que mucho de lo que yo he pensado y escrito fue inspirado por Foucault. No en el sentido de lo que él decía, sino más bien en relación a un cierto hábito del pensamiento. Uno de los miembros de AIDES dijo una vez: «Defert nos impone siempre estas teorías foucaultianas». Pero yo jamás tuve intención de hacer tal cosa.

–¿Fue su muerte la razón de su trabajo con AIDES?

–En cierto modo yo fundé AIDES en nombre de Foucault. Su madre me dio su apoyo y me dijo que yo debía hacerlo por él.

–Usted dijo que no le agradaría hablar de su vida. ¿Por qué es tan difícil hablar de uno mismo? ¿Es lo mismo que escribir? Usted dice en su libro que resulta ocioso escribir si uno no encuentra una nueva forma para expresar lo que se tiene para decir.

–Eso tiene que ver con mi profundo convencimiento de no ser un autor. Foucault, en cambio, escribía todos los días. Durante 25 años lo vi cuatro, cinco horas diarias escribiendo. Cuando no escribía por dos días, ya estaba cerca de la neurosis. Le encantaba escribir. Yo no lo disfruto en absoluto. Y cuando uno no escribe, tampoco puede cambiar su propia escritura, encontrar nuevas formas de expresarse.

–¿Entonces se ha concentrado en su trabajo político?

–Siempre me gustó hacer cosas concretas y cuando estaban hechas, estaban hechas. Quizás eso sea una señal de histeria. El trabajo en el G.I.P. (Grupo de Información sobre las Prisiones) fue excelente. Foucault también estaba feliz con ello.

–¿Cuán estrecho era su trabajo en conjunto con él?

–Cuando conocí a Foucault, él no tenía la intención de quedarse en Francia. Había estado en Suecia, Polonia, Alemania y quería irse a Japón. Yo quería finalizar la Agrégation en filosofía para ganar algo de dinero. Como yo no quise irme a Japón, Foucault se quedó también en Francia. Jamás le dije que había reconsiderado mi decisión y que me quería ir con él, porque él ya lo había descartado. Así que nos quedamos en París, él escribió Las palabras y las cosas (1966) y yo me preparé para mi Agrégation. Ese fue su primer éxito. Nosotros éramos una pareja joven y muy enamorada, lo cual pienso que se reflejó en el proceso de escritura y también en el libro y su éxito. Luego yo me fui a Túnez y Foucault vino conmigo después. Surgió el 68 y yo adherí más tarde al movimiento, con los maoístas, cuando éstos ya estaban prohibidos. Me comprometí con los procesos de los presos políticos.

Vigilar y castigar (1975), el primer éxito internacional de Foucault, era una obra naturalmente vinculada a nuestra vida juntos y al G.I.P. Las intervenciones políticas eran importantes para Foucault, para su pensamiento y sus teorías.

– Una vez más, vuelve usted a la estrecha relación entre la obra de Foucault y los movimientos políticos, sus intervenciones políticas.

–Foucault elevó a la categoría de objetos políticos temas que antes no estaban politizados. Cuando escribió sobre la locura a finales de los 50 y principios de los 60, eso todavía no era una cuestión política. Y las prisiones tampoco lo eran en el 68, en absoluto. Eso sucedió recién después del 71 ó el 72, cuando en Francia surgieron grandes revueltas en las prisiones, en total unas 35, algunas de las cuales fueron completamente destruidas. Para la mayoría de los de mi generación, cuando yo hablo de política es como si fuera un chiste porque para muchos yo no estaba en la política por no estar afiliado al Partido Comunista. Pero mi vida política era con el movimiento de las prisiones y el de lucha contra el sida. En ambos casos fue necesaria una politización del objeto. De modo que una vida política significa también una transformación de la política. Justamente en relación a este segundo aspecto es que Foucault estaba políticamente involucrado. Estuvo por un lapso muy breve en el Partido Comunista y lo abandonó de inmediato. Estaba más entretenido que involucrado con la política. Pero su accionar era político.

–Hablemos de las formas de lo político. Usted escribe en su libro que después del 68, el análisis social era más un movimiento de masas que parte de la sociología.

–Esa fue mi experiencia. En Inglaterra hice una encuesta para un instituto sociológico y me di cuenta que el análisis estaba en la calle, que los movimientos sociales en sí mismos eran el análisis.

–En Alemania hay un modo de leer a Foucault como apolítico o incluso como pensador neoconservador.

–Porque él rechazó un análisis centrado en el Estado y observó la diversidad de las prácticas de poder, estudiándolas como parte de la relación de fuerzas del poder. Para él se trataba más de las prácticas y las relaciones por debajo del poder estatal o, dicho de otra manera, de la relación entre médico y paciente, maestro y alumno, así como entre gobernante y gobernado. Para los marxistas, el poder sólo existía en su forma represiva. Foucault no estaba tan obsesionado con el Estado, más bien preguntaba por las formas del devenir-gobernado. Le interesaban las técnicas de control, no las instituciones en sí.

–¿Era por esto escéptico respecto a los militantes radicales de izquierda, quienes apuntaban al Estado con sus acciones?

–Foucault estaba contra el terrorismo en los países democráticos. Ésa fue también la razón por la cual se negó a apoyar las Brigadas Rojas en Italia. A raíz de una entrevista que dio en Italia para L‘Unità , se generaron algunas tensiones con Felix Guattari y Gilles Deleuze. Yo estaba más cerca de Adriano Sofri y Lotta Continua. Cuando Guattari publicó el escrito de Trotsky sobre el fascismo en Alemania, Deleuze y Foucault rompieron relaciones. Foucault pensaba que no se podía decir que el Estado alemán era un país fascista en aquel momento. Él se interesó por la RAF (Rote Armee Fraktion, el grupo Fracción Ejército rojo), pero le resultaba algo sospechosa. Estaba seguro de que Alemania Federal había sido apoyada por los soviéticos.

–En Berlín usted fue vigilado por la policía. ¿Foucault peleaba a menudo con la policía?

–Lo detuvieron varias veces y luchaba permanentemente con la policía. Lo tenían como un radical de izquierda.

–¿Por las acciones con el G.I.P., donde Sartre también estuvo involucrado?

–Sartre y Foucault eran muy cercanos en aquella época. Pero no se trataba de una relación intelectual porque discutían muy poco. Cuando Foucault conoció a Sartre, éste ya estaba muy viejo y casi ciego. Tenían un trato muy amigable. Foucault llevaba a Sartre a todos lados: a las fábricas de Renault, a las huelgas y demás. Era una amistad práctica, no hablaban de sus diferencias.

–¿Cómo era la amistad con Roland Barthes?

–Se conocieron en los 50. Quizás yo sea algo culpable de que no tuvieran una relación tan estrecha. A Barthes le gustaba ir a los bares a partir de las 18, pero en 1963 yo estudiaba filosofía y Foucault escribía Las palabras y las cosas , por lo tanto dejamos de salir. Barthes se quedó muy triste por ello, ya que Foucault le prestaba brillo intelectual a su vida nocturna. Sin Foucault, era sólo un programa con gigolós. Foucault y Barthes tenían una relación singular. Barthes siempre le copiaba un poquito a Foucault.

–¿Conoció Foucault a la otra gran figura de la izquierda radical francesa, Guy Debord?

–No.

Vigilar y castigar (1975) es incluso contrario a La sociedad del espectáculo (1967). Foucault leyó en parte a Debord, pero no demasiado. En Vigilar y castigar está este abogado del siglo XIX; allí describe las prisiones como algo exactamente opuesto al circo de Roma. Foucault tomó esto como punto de partida para mostrar que la sociedad moderna consiste, precisamente, no en el espectáculo sino en el control y la vigilancia. Así que va directamente en contra de Debord. Pero en los situacionistas también estaba Isidore Isou, quien asistió a los cursos de Foucault y le envió sus obras.

–Perdón, usted lo llama Foucault y nunca Michel…

–Antes siempre decía Michel cuando hablaba de él pero luego se convirtió en una figura pública y cada vez que decía Michel, la gente a mí alrededor también decía Michel. Eso siempre me molestó porque él era mi Michel. Toda la experiencia con AIDES fue una posibilidad de estar con él. Pensé por él, con él. Fue la posibilidad de estar cerca suyo.

© Tania Martini. Traducción: Mateo Dieste

Hurricanes key to carbon uptake by forests (Science Daily)

Increases in carbon uptake by southeast US forests in response to tropical cyclone activity alone exceed carbon emissions by American vehicles each year.

Date:
May 2, 2016
Source:
Duke University
Summary:
New research reveals that the increase in forest photosynthesis and growth made possible by tropical cyclones in the southeastern United States captures hundreds of times more carbon than is released by all vehicles in the US in a given year.

This map shows the total increase of photosynthesis and carbon uptake by forests caused by all hurricanes in 2004. The dotted gray lines represent the paths of the individual storms. Credit: Lauren Lowman, Duke University

While hurricanes are a constant source of worry for residents of the southeastern United States, new research suggests that they have a major upside — counteracting global warming.

Previous research from Duke environmental engineer Ana Barros demonstrated that the regular landfall of tropical cyclones is vital to the region’s water supply and can help mitigate droughts.

Now, a new study from Barros reveals that the increase in forest photosynthesis and growth made possible by tropical cyclones in the southeastern United States captures hundreds of times more carbon than is released by all vehicles in the U.S. in a given year.

The study was published online on April 20, 2016, in the Journal of Geophysical Research — Biogeosciences.

“Our results show that, while hurricanes can cause flooding and destroy city infrastructure, there are two sides to the story,” said Barros, the James L. Meriam Professor of Civil and Environmental Engineering at Duke University. “The other side is that hurricanes recharge the aquifers and have an enormous impact on photosynthesis and taking up carbon from the atmosphere.”

In the study, Lauren Lowman, a doctoral student in Barros’s laboratory, used a hydrological computer model to simulate the ecological impacts of tropical cyclones from 2004-2007. The earlier years of that time period had a high number of tropical cyclone landfall events, while the latter years experienced relatively few.

By comparing those disparate years to simulations of a year without tropical cyclone events, Lowman was able to calculate the effect tropical cyclones have on the rates of photosynthesis and carbon uptake in forests of the southeastern United States.

“It’s easy to make general statements about how much of an impact something like additional rainfall can have on the environment,” said Lowman. “But we really wanted to quantify the amount of carbon uptake that you can relate to tropical cyclones.”

According to Barros and Lowman, it is difficult to predict what effects climate change will have on the region’s future. Even if the number of tropical cyclones that form in the Atlantic increases, that doesn’t guarantee that the number making landfall will also rise. And long-term forecasts for the region’s temperature and rainfall currently show less change than normal year-to-year variability.

But no matter what the future brings, one thing is clear — the regularity and number of tropical cyclones making landfall will continue to be vital.

“There are a lot of regional effects competing with large worldwide changes that make it very hard to predict what climate change will bring to the southeastern United States,” said Barros. “If droughts do become worse and we don’t have these regular tropical cyclones, the impact will be very negative. And regardless of climate change, our results are yet one more very good reason to protect these vast forests.”

This research was funded in part by the National Science Foundation Coupled Human and Natural Systems Program (CNH-1313799) and an earlier grant from the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration (NA08OAR4310701).


Journal Reference:

  1. Lauren E. L. Lowman, Ana P. Barros. Interplay of Drought and Tropical Cyclone Activity in SE US Gross Primary ProductivityJournal of Geophysical Research: Biogeosciences, 2016; DOI: 10.1002/2015JG003279

Theoretical tiger chases statistical sheep to probe immune system behavior (Science Daily)

Physicists update predator-prey model for more clues on how bacteria evade attack from killer cells

Date:
April 29, 2016
Source:
IOP Publishing
Summary:
Studying the way that solitary hunters such as tigers, bears or sea turtles chase down their prey turns out to be very useful in understanding the interaction between individual white blood cells and colonies of bacteria. Researchers have created a numerical model that explores this behavior in more detail.

Studying the way that solitary hunters such as tigers, bears or sea turtles chase down their prey turns out to be very useful in understanding the interaction between individual white blood cells and colonies of bacteria. Reporting their results in the Journal of Physics A: Mathematical and Theoretical, researchers in Europe have created a numerical model that explores this behaviour in more detail.

Using mathematical expressions, the group can examine the dynamics of a single predator hunting a herd of prey. The routine splits the hunter’s motion into a diffusive part and a ballistic part, which represent the search for prey and then the direct chase that follows.

“We would expect this to be a fairly good approximation for many animals,” explained Ralf Metzler, who led the work and is based at the University of Potsdam in Germany.

Obstructions included

To further improve its analysis, the group, which includes scientists from the National Institute of Chemistry in Slovenia, and Sorbonne University in France, has incorporated volume effects into the latest version of its model. The addition means that prey can now inadvertently get in each other’s way and endanger their survival by blocking potential escape routes.

Thanks to this update, the team can study not just animal behaviour, but also gain greater insight into the way that killer cells such as macrophages (large white blood cells patrolling the body) attack colonies of bacteria.

One of the key parameters determining the life expectancy of the prey is the so-called ‘sighting range’ — the distance at which the prey is able to spot the predator. Examining this in more detail, the researchers found that the hunter profits more from the poor eyesight of the prey than from the strength of its own vision.

Long tradition with a new dimension

The analysis of predator-prey systems has a long tradition in statistical physics and today offers many opportunities for cooperative research, particularly in fields such as biology, biochemistry and movement ecology.

“With the ever more detailed experimental study of systems ranging from molecular processes in living biological cells to the motion patterns of animal herds and humans, the need for cross-fertilisation between the life sciences and the quantitative mathematical approaches of the physical sciences has reached a new dimension,” Metzler comments.

To help support this cross-fertilisation, he heads up a new section of the Journal of Physics A: Mathematical and Theoretical that is dedicated to biological modelling and examines the use of numerical techniques to study problems in the interdisciplinary field connecting biology, biochemistry and physics.


Journal Reference:

  1. Maria Schwarzl, Aljaz Godec, Gleb Oshanin, Ralf Metzler. A single predator charging a herd of prey: effects of self volume and predator–prey decision-makingJournal of Physics A: Mathematical and Theoretical, 2016; 49 (22): 225601 DOI: 10.1088/1751-8113/49/22/225601

Armed guards at India’s dams as drought grips country (The Guardian)

Government says 330 million people are suffering from water shortages after monsoons fail

An armed guard at a reservoir in Tikamgarh in the central Indian state of Madhya Pradesh.

An armed guard at a reservoir in Tikamgarh in the central Indian state of Madhya Pradesh. Photograph: Money Sharma/AFP/Getty Images

Agence France-Presse

Monday 2 May 2016 Last modified on Monday 2 May 2016 

As young boys plunge into a murky dam to escape the blistering afternoon sun, armed guards stand vigil at one of the few remaining water bodies in a state hit hard by India’s crippling drought.

Desperate farmers from a neighbouring state regularly attempt to steal water from the Barighat dam, forcing authorities in central Madhya Pradesh to protect it with armed guards to ensure supplies.

India is officially in the grip of its worst water crisis in years, with the government saying that about 330 million people, or a quarter of the population, are suffering from drought after the last two monsoons failed.

“Water is more precious than gold in this area,” Purshotam Sirohi, who was hired by the local municipality to protect the dam, in Tikamgarh district, told AFP.

“We are protecting the dam round the clock.”

An Indian villager walks between rocks as he crosses a depleted reservoir in Tikamgarh in the central Indian state of Madhya Pradesh.

An Indian villager walks between rocks as he crosses a depleted reservoir in Tikamgarh in the central Indian state of Madhya Pradesh. Photograph: Money Sharma/AFP/Getty Images

But the security measures cannot stop the drought from ravaging the dam, with officials saying it holds just one month of reserves.

Four reservoirs in Madhya Pradesh have already dried up, leaving more than a million people with inadequate water and forcing authorities to bring in supplies using trucks.

Almost a 100,000 residents in Tikamgarh get piped water for just two hours every fourth day, while municipal authorities have ordered new bore wells to be dug to meet demand.

But it may not be enough, with officials saying the groundwater level has receded more than 100 feet (30 metres) owing to less than half the average annual rainfall in the past few years.

“The situation is really critical, but we are trying to provide water to everyone,” Laxmi Giri Goswami, chairwoman of Tikamgarh municipality, told AFP.

“We pray to rain gods for mercy,” she said.

A man stands on a parched lake bed as he removes dead fish and rescues the surviving ones in Ahmadabad, India.

A man stands on a parched lake bed as he removes dead fish and rescues the surviving ones in Ahmadabad, India. Photograph: Ajit Solanki/AP

In the nearby village of Dargai Khurd, only one of 17 wells has water.

With temperatures hovering around 45C, its 850 residents fear they may soon be left thirsty.

“If it dries up, we won’t have a drop of water to drink,” said Santosh Kumar, a local villager.

Farmers across India rely on the monsoon – a four-month rainy season which starts in June – to cultivate their crops, as the country lacks a robust irrigation system.

Two weak monsoons have resulted in severe water shortages and crop losses in as many as 10 states, prompting extreme measures including curfews near water sources and water trains sent to the worst-affected regions.

Many farmers are now moving to cities and towns to work as labourers to support their families.

At a scruffy, makeshift camp in north Mumbai, in one of the worst-affected states, dozens of migrants who have fled their drought-stricken villages queue to fill plastic containers with water.

Pots are lined up to be filled with drinking water at a slum in Mumbai.

Pots are lined up to be filled with drinking water at a slum in Mumbai. Photograph: Rajanish Kakade/AP

Migrants from rural areas usually come to the city in January or February to get jobs on construction sites, but people were still arriving in March and April.

“There are some 300-350 families here. That’s a total of more than 1,000 people,” said Sudhir Rane, a volunteer running the camp in Mumbai’s Ghatkopar suburb. “There is a drought and there is no water back home so more families have come here this year.”

Families are allocated a small space in the dusty wasteland, where rickety tented homes are made from wooden posts and tarpaulin sheets.

“We had no choice but to come here. There was no water, no grain, no work. There was nothing to eat and drink. What could we do?” said 70-year-old Manubai Patole. “We starved for five days. At least here we are getting food.”

Weather forecasters in New Delhi this month predicted an above-average monsoon, offering a ray of hope for the country’s millions of farmers and their families.

But many, like Gassiram Meharwal from Bangaye village in Madhya Pradesh, are not optimistic as they struggle to cultivate their crops.

Meharwal’s two-acre farm has suffered three wheat crop failures in as many years, costing him an estimated 100,000 rupees ($1,500 or £1,000).

“Our fields are doomed, they have almost turned into concrete,” he said.

Thousands of acres of land in his village go uncultivated and fears are mounting for the cattle, which face a shortage of fodder.

Desperate for income, 32-year-old Meharwal, who supports eight members of his family including his children and younger brothers, left to work as a labourer in the city of Gwalior, four hours away.

“There is no guarantee that it will rain this year. Predictions are fine but no one comes to your help when the crops fail,” he said.

“It is better to use your energy breaking stones.”

Xenotext Genetic Poetry

Avatar de dmfsynthetic zerØ

Genetics and Poetics

“Words on a page — that’s usually how we conceive of poetry. But Christian Bök, at the University of Calgary, has done something no other writer has ever done: as part of his recent project, The Xenotext, he’s enciphered a poem into a micro-organism, which then “rewrote” that poem as part of its biological response. His eventual hope is to encode a poem inside a near-indestructible bacterium (deinococcus radiodurans) which may actually outlast human civilization.”

Ver o post original

Weasel Apparently Shuts Down World’s Most Powerful Particle Collider (NPR)

April 29, 201611:04 AM ET

GEOFF BRUMFIEL

The Large Hadron Collider uses superconducting magnets to smash sub-atomic particles together at enormous energies.

The Large Hadron Collider uses superconducting magnets to smash sub-atomic particles together at enormous energies. CERN

A small mammal has sabotaged the world’s most powerful scientific instrument.

The Large Hadron Collider, a 17-mile superconducting machine designed to smash protons together at close to the speed of light, went offline overnight. Engineers investigating the mishap found the charred remains of a furry creature near a gnawed-through power cable.

A small mammal, possibly a weasel, gnawed-through a power cable at the Large Hadron Collider.A small mammal, possibly a weasel, gnawed-through a power cable at the Large Hadron Collider. Ashley Buttle/Flickr

“We had electrical problems, and we are pretty sure this was caused by a small animal,” says Arnaud Marsollier, head of press for CERN, the organization that runs the $7 billion particle collider in Switzerland. Although they had not conducted a thorough analysis of the remains, Marsollier says they believe the creature was “a weasel, probably.” (Update: An official briefing document from CERN indicates the creature may have been a marten.)

The shutdown comes as the LHC was preparing to collect new data on the Higgs Boson, a fundamental particle it discovered in 2012. The Higgs is believed to endow other particles with mass, and it is considered to be a cornerstone of the modern theory of particle physics.

Researchers have seen some hints in recent data that other, yet-undiscovered particles might also be generated inside the LHC. If those other particles exist, they could revolutionize researcher’s understanding of everything from the laws of gravity, to quantum mechanics.

Unfortunately, Marsollier says, scientists will have to wait while workers bring the machine back online. Repairs will take a few days, but getting the machine fully ready to smash might take another week or two. “It may be mid-May,” he says.

These sorts of mishaps are not unheard of, says Marsollier. The LHC is located outside of Geneva. “We are in the countryside, and of course we have wild animals everywhere.” There have been previous incidents, including one in 2009, when a bird is believed to have dropped a baguette onto critical electrical systems.

Nor are the problems exclusive to the LHC: In 2006, raccoons conducted a “coordinated” attack on a particle accelerator in Illinois.

It is unclear whether the animals are trying to stop humanity from unlocking the secrets of the universe.

Of course, small mammals cause problems in all sorts of organizations. Yesterday, a group of children took National Public Radio off the air for over a minute before engineers could restore the broadcast.

Argentine football club Tigre launches implantable microchip for die-hard fans (AFP)

Abril 26, 2016 6:59pm

Tigres players hugging after a goal

PHOTO: Tigres fans won’t need hard copy tickets or to enter their stadium with the implanted microchip. (Reuters: Enrique Marcarian)

For football lovers so passionate that joining a fan club just isn’t enough, Argentine side Tigre has launched the “Passion Ticket”: a microchip that die-hards can have implanted in their skin.

In football-mad Argentina, fans are known for belting out an almost amorous chant to their favourite clubs: “I carry you inside me!”

First-division side Tigre said it had decided to take that to the next level and is offering fans implantable microchips that will open the stadium turnstiles on match days, no ticket or ID required.

“Carrying the club inside you won’t just be a metaphor,” the club wrote on its Twitter account.

Tigre secretary general Ezequiel Rocino kicked things off by getting one of the microchips implanted in his arm, under an already existing tattoo in the blue and red of the club.

The chips are similar to the ones dog and cat owners can have implanted in their pets in case they get lost.

Rocino showed off the technology for journalists, placing his arm near a scanner to open the turnstile to the club’s stadium 30 kilometres north of the capital, Buenos Aires.

“The scanner will read the data on the implanted chip, and if the club member is up-to-date on his payments, will immediately open the security turnstile,” the club said.

Rocino said getting a chip would be completely voluntary.

“We’re not doing anything invasive, just accelerating access. There’s no GPS tracker, just the member’s data,” he said.

AFP

Répteis têm atividade cerebral típica de sonhos humanos, revela estudo (Folha de S.Paulo)

Dr. Stephan Junek, Max Planck Institute for Brain Research
Sleeping dragon (Pogona vitticeps). [Credit: Dr. Stephan Junek, Max Planck Institute for Brain Research]
Estudo mostra que lagartos atingem padrão de sono que, em humanos, permite o surgimento de sonhos

REINALDO JOSÉ LOPES
COLABORAÇÃO PARA A FOLHA

28/04/2016 14h56

Será que os lagartos sonham com ovelhas escamosas? Ninguém ainda foi capaz de enxergar detalhadamente o que acontece no cérebro de tais bichos para que seja possível responder a essa pergunta, mas um novo estudo revela que o padrão de atividade cerebral típico dos sonhos humanos também surge nesses répteis quando dormem.

Trata-se do chamado sono REM (sigla inglesa da expressão “movimento rápido dos olhos”), que antes parecia ser exclusividade de mamíferos como nós e das aves. No entanto, a análise da atividade cerebral de um lagarto australiano, o dragão-barbudo (Pogona vitticeps), indica que, ao longo da noite, o cérebro do animal fica se revezando entre o sono REM e o sono de ondas lentas (grosso modo, o sono profundo, sem sonhos), num padrão parecido, ainda que não idêntico, ao observado em seres humanos.

Liderado por Gilles Laurent, do Instituto Max Planck de Pesquisa sobre o Cérebro, na Alemanha, o estudo está saindo na revista especializada “Science”. “Laurent não brinca em serviço”, diz Sidarta Ribeiro, pesquisador da UFRN (Universidade Federal do Rio Grande do Norte) e um dos principais especialistas do mundo em neurobiologia do sono e dos sonhos. “Foi feita uma demonstração bem clara do fenômeno.”

A metodologia usada para verificar o que acontecia no cérebro reptiliano não era exatamente um dragão de sete cabeças. Cinco exemplares da espécie receberam implantes de eletrodos no cérebro e, na hora de dormir, seu comportamento foi monitorado com câmeras infravermelhas, ideais para “enxergar no escuro”. Os animais costumavam dormir entre seis e dez horas por noite, num ciclo que podia ser mais ou menos controlado pelos cientistas do Max Planck, já que eles é que apagavam e acendiam as luzes e regulavam a temperatura do recinto.

O que os pesquisadores estavam medindo era a variação de atividade elétrica no cérebro dos dragões-barbudos durante a noite. São essas oscilações que produzem o padrão de ondas já conhecido a partir do sono de humanos e demais mamíferos, por exemplo.

Só foi possível chegar aos achados relatados no novo estudo por causa de seu nível de detalhamento, diz Suzana Herculano-Houzel, neurocientista da UFRJ (Universidade Federal do Rio de Janeiro) e colunista da Folha. “Estudos anteriores menos minuciosos não tinham como detectar sono REM porque, nesses animais, a alternância entre os dois tipos de sono é extremamente rápida, a cada 80 segundos”, explica ela, que já tinha visto Laurent apresentar os dados num congresso científico. Em humanos, os ciclos são bem mais lentos, com duração média de 90 minutos.

Além da semelhança no padrão de atividade cerebral, o sono REM dos répteis também tem correlação clara com os movimentos oculares que lhe dão o nome (os quais lembram vagamente a maneira como uma pessoa desperta mexe os olhos), conforme mostraram as imagens em infravermelho.

DORMIR, TALVEZ SONHAR

A primeira implicação das descobertas é evolutiva. Embora dormir seja um comportamento aparentemente universal no reino animal, o sono REM (e talvez os sonhos) pareciam exclusividade de espécies com cérebro supostamente mais complexo. “Para quem estuda os mecanismos do sono, é um estudo fundamental”, afirma Suzana.

Acontece que tanto mamíferos quanto aves descendem de grupos primitivos associados aos répteis, só que em momentos bem diferentes da história do planeta – mamíferos já caminhavam pela Terra havia dezenas de milhões de anos quando um grupo de pequenos dinossauros carnívoros deu origem às aves. Ou seja, em tese, mamíferos e aves precisariam ter “aprendido a sonhar” de forma totalmente independente. O achado “resolve esse paradoxo”, diz Ribeiro: o sono REM já estaria presente no ancestral comum de todos esses vertebrados.

O trabalho do pesquisador brasileiro e o de outros especialistas mundo afora tem mostrado que ambos os tipos de sono são fundamentais para “esculpir” memórias no cérebro, ao mesmo tempo fortalecendo o que é relevante e jogando fora o que não é importante. Sem os ciclos alternados de atividade cerebral, a capacidade de aprendizado de animais e humanos ficaria seriamente prejudicada.

Tanto Ribeiro quanto Suzana, porém, dizem que ainda não dá para cravar que lagartos ou outros animais sonham como nós. “Talvez um dia alguém faça ressonância magnética em lagartos adormecidos e veja se eles mostram a mesma reativação de áreas sensoriais que se vê em humanos em sono REM”, diz ela. “Claro que os donos de cachorro têm certeza que suas mascotes sonham, mas o ideal seria fazer a decodificação do sinal neural”, uma técnica que permite saber o que uma pessoa imagina estar vendo quando sonha e já foi aplicada com sucesso por cientistas japoneses.

Paranormal beliefs can increase number of dé jà vu experiences (Science Daily)

Date:
April 27, 2016
Source:
British Psychological Society (BPS)
Summary:
A belief in the paranormal can mean an individual experiences more déjà vu moments in their life.

A belief in the paranormal can mean an individual experiences more déjà vu moments in their life.

This is one of the findings of a study by 3rd year undergraduate student Chloe Pickles and Dr Mark Moss, of Northumbria University, who will present their poster today, Thursday 28 April 2016, at the British Psychological Society’s annual conference in Nottingham. Over 100 participants completed surveys relating to perceived stress, belief in paranormal experiences and beliefs about déjà vu. Analysis of the results showed a strong link between belief in paranormal experiences and the frequency, pleasantness and intensity of déjà vu experiences. Stress was linked significantly to intensity and duration only.

Chloe Pickles said: “Our study calls in to question whether stress increases the number of déjà vu moments for an individual. Previous research had not considered the impact of belief when experiencing the feeling that this moment has happened before. Déjà vu might be a normal experience for those more open to it as well as (or instead of) a consequence of a negative life events.”

Why E O Wilson is wrong about how to save the Earth (AEON)

01 March, 2016

Robert Fletcher is an associate professor at the Sociology of Development and Change Group at Wageningen University in the Netherlands. His most recent book is Romancing the Wild: Cultural Dimensions of Ecotourism (2014).

Bram Büscher is a professor and Chair at the Sociology of Development and Change Group at Wageningen University in the Netherlands. His most recent book is Transforming the Frontier: Peace Parks and the Politics of Neoliberal Conservation in Southern Africa (2013).

Edited by Brigid Hains

Opinion sized gettyimages 459113790

A member of the military-style Special Ranger Patrol talks to a suspected rhino poacher on 7 November 2014 at the Kruger National Park, South Africa. Photo by James Oatway/Sunday Times/Getty

Edward O Wilson is one of the world’s most revered, reviled and referenced conservation biologists. In his new book (and Aeon essayHalf-Earth, he comes out with all guns blazing, proclaiming the terrible fate of biodiversity, the need for radical conservation, and humanity’s centrality in both. His basic message is simple: desperate times call for desperate measures, ‘only by setting aside half the planet in reserve, or more, can we save the living part of the environment and achieve the stabilisation required for our own survival’. Asserting that ‘humanity’ behaves like a destructive juggernaut, Wilson is deeply concerned that the current ‘sixth extinction’ is destroying many species before scientists have even been able to identify them.

Turning half of the Earth into a series of nature parks is a grand utopian vision for conservation, perhaps even a hyperbolic one, yet Wilson seems deadly serious about it. Some environmental thinkers have been arguing the exact opposite, namely that conservation should give up its infatuation with parks and focus on ‘mixing’ people and nature in mutually conducive ways. Wilson defends a traditional view that nature needs more protection, and attacks them for being ‘unconcerned with what the consequences will be if their beliefs are played out’. As social scientists who study the impact of international conservation on peoples around the world, we would argue that it is Wilson himself who has fallen into this trap: the world he imagines in Half-Earth would be a profoundly inhumane one if ever his beliefs were ‘played out’.

The ‘nature needs half’ idea is not entirely new – it is an extreme version of a more widespread ‘land sparing’ conservation strategy. This is not about setting aside half the Earth as a whole but expanding the world’s current network of protected areas to create a patchwork grid encompassing at least half the world’s surface (and the ocean) and hence ‘about 85 per cent’ of remaining biodiversity. The plan is staggering in scale: protected areas, according to the International Union for the Conservation of Nature, currently incorporate around 10-15 per cent of the Earth’s terrain, so would need to more than triple in extent.

Wilson identifies a number of causes of the current ecological crisis, but is particularly concerned by overpopulation. ‘Our population,’ he argues, ‘is too large for safety and comfort… Earth’s more than 7 billion people are collectively ravenous consumers of all the planet’s inadequate bounty.’ But can we talk about the whole of humanity in such generalised terms? In reality, the world is riven by dramatic inequality, and different segments of humanity have vastly different impacts on the world’s environments. The blame for our ecological problems therefore cannot be spread across some notion of a generalised ‘humanity’.

Although Wilson is careful to qualify that it is the combination ofpopulation growth and ‘per-capita consumption’ that causes environmental degradation, he is particularly concerned about places he identifies as the remaining high-fertility problem spots – ‘Patagonia, the Middle East, Pakistan, and Afghanistan, plus all of sub-Saharan Africa exclusive of South Africa’. These are countries with some of the world’s lowest incomes. Paradoxically, then, it is those consuming the least that are considered the greatest problem. ‘Overpopulation’, it seems, is the same racialised bogeyman as ever, and the poor the greatest threat to an environmentally-sound future.

Wilson’s Half-Earth vision is offered as an explicit counterpoint to so-called ‘new’ or ‘Anthropocene’ conservationists, who are loosely organised around the controversial Breakthrough Institute. For Wilson, these ‘Anthropocene ideologists’ have given up on nature altogether. In her book, Rambunctious Garden (2011), Emma Marris characteristically argues that there is no wilderness left on the Earth, which is everywhere completely transformed by the human presence. According to Anthropocene thinking, we are in charge of the Earth and must manage it closely whether we like it or not. Wilson disagrees, insisting that ‘areas of wilderness… are real entities’. He contends that an area need not be ‘pristine’ or uninhabited to be wilderness, and ‘[w]ildernesses have often contained sparse populations of people, especially those indigenous for centuries or millennia, without losing their essential character’.

Research across the globe has shown that many protected areas once contained not merely ‘sparse’ inhabitants but often quite dense populations – clearly incompatible with the US Wilderness Act’s classic definition of wilderness as an area ‘where man himself is a visitor who does not remain’. Most existing ‘wilderness’ parks have required the removal or severe restriction of human beings within their bounds. Indeed, one of Wilson’s models for conservation success – Gorongosa National Park in Mozambique – sidelined local people despite their unified opposition. In his book Conservation Refugees (2009), Mark Dowie estimates that 20-50 million people have been displaced by previous waves of protected-area creation. To extend protected areas to half of the Earth’s surface would require a relocation of human populations on a scale that could dwarf all previous conservation refugee crises.

Would these people include Montana cattle ranchers? Or Australian wheat growers? Or Florida retirees? The answer, most likely, is no, for the burden of conservation has never been shared equitably across the world. Those who both take the blame and pay the greatest cost of environmental degradation are, almost always, those who do not have power to influence either their own governments or international politics. It is the hill tribes of Thailand, the pastoralists of Tanzania, and the forest peoples of Indonesia who are invariably expected to relocate, often at gunpoint, as Dowie and many scholars, including Dan Brockington in his book Fortress Conservation (2002), have demonstrated.

How will human society withstand the shock of removing so much land and ocean from food-growing and other uses? Wilson criticises the Anthropocene worldview’s faith that technological innovation can solve environmental problems or find substitutes for depleted resources, but he simultaneously promotes his own techno-fix in a vision of ‘intensified economic evolution’ in which ‘the free market, and the way it is increasingly shaped by high technology’ will solve the problem seemingly automatically. According to Wilson, ‘products that win competition today… are those that cost less to manufacture and advertise, need less frequent repair and replacement, and give highest performance with a minimum amount of energy’. He thus invokes a biological version of Adam Smith’s invisible hand in maintaining that ‘[j]ust as natural selection drives organic evolution by competition among genes to produce more copies of themselves per unit cost in the next generation, raising benefit-to-cost of production drives the evolution of the economy’ and asserting, without any evidence, that ‘[a]lmost all of the competition in a free market, other than in military technology, raises the average quality of life’.

Remarkably, this utopian optimism about technology and the workings of the free market leads Wilson to converge on a position rather like that of the Anthropocene conservationists he so dislikes, advocating a vision of ‘decoupling economic activity from material and environmental throughputs’ in order to create sustainable livelihoods for a population herded into urban areas to free space for self-willed nature. The Breakthrough Institute has recently promoted its own, quite similar, manifesto for land sparing and decoupling to increase terrain for conservation.

In this vision, science and technology can compensate for some of humanity’s status as the world’s ‘most destructive species’. And at the pinnacle of science stands (conservation) biology, according to Wilson. He argues: ‘If people are to live long and healthy lives in the sustainable Eden of our dreams, and our minds are to break free and dwell in the far more interesting universe of reason triumphant over superstition, it will be through advances in biology.’ How exactly humans are to ‘break free’ is not explained and is, in fact, impossible according to Wilson himself, given ‘the Darwinian propensity in our brain’s machinery to favour short-term decisions over long-range planning’. As far as Wilson is concerned, any worldview that does not favour protected-area expansion as the highest goal is by definition an irrational one. In this way, the world’s poor are blamed not only for overpopulating biodiversity hotspots but also for succumbing to the ‘religious belief and inept philosophical thought’ standing in the way of environmental Enlightenment.

Let us finish by making a broader point, drawing on Wilson’s approving quotation of Alexander von Humboldt, the 19th-century German naturalist who claimed that ‘the most dangerous worldview is the worldview of those who have not viewed the world’. In viewing the world, we also construct it, and the world Wilson’s offers us in Half-Earth is a truly bizarre one. For all his zeal, (misplaced) righteousness and passion, his vision is disturbing and dangerous, and would have profoundly negative ‘consequences if played out’. It would entail forcibly herding a drastically reduced human population into increasingly crowded urban areas to be managed in oppressively technocratic ways. How such a global programme of conservation Lebensraum would be accomplished is left to the reader’s imagination. We therefore hope readers will not take Wilson’s proposal seriously. Addressing biodiversity loss and other environmental problems must proceed by confronting the world’s obscene inequality, not by blaming the poor and trusting the ‘free market’ to save them.


Half-Earth (AEON)

29 February, 2016

Half of the Earth’s surface and seas must be dedicated to the conservation of nature, or humanity will have no future

by Edward O Wilson

Header essay nationalgeographic 381719

The Serengeti National Park. Photo by Medford Taylor/National Geographic

Edward O Wilson is a professor emeritus in entomology at Harvard. Half-Earth concludes Wilson’s trilogy begun by The Social Conquest of Earth and The Meaning of Human Existence, a National Book Award finalist. 

Edited by Pam Weintraub

Unstanched haemorrhaging has only one end in all biological systems: death for an organism, extinction for a species. Researchers who study the trajectory of biodiversity loss are alarmed that, within the century, an exponentially rising extinction rate might easily wipe out most of the species still surviving at the present time.

The crucial factor in the life and death of species is the amount of suitable habitat left to them. When, for example, 90 per cent of the area is removed, the number that can persist sustainably will descend to about a half. Such is the actual condition of many of the most species-rich localities around the world, including Madagascar, the Mediterranean perimeter, parts of continental southwestern Asia, Polynesia, and many of the islands of the Philippines and the West Indies. If 10 per cent of the remaining natural habitat were then also removed – a team of lumbermen might do it in a month – most or all of the surviving resident species would disappear.

Today, every sovereign nation in the world has a protected-area system of some kind. All together the reserves number about 161,000 on land and 6,500 over marine waters. According to the World Database on Protected Areas, a joint project of the United Nations Environmental Program and the International Union for Conservation of Nature, they occupied by 2015 a little less than 15 per cent of Earth’s land area and 2.8 per cent of Earth’s ocean area. The coverage is increasing gradually. This trend is encouraging. To have reached the existing level is a tribute to those who have led and participated in the global conservation effort.

But is the level enough to halt the acceleration of species extinction? Unfortunately, it is in fact nowhere close to enough. The declining world of biodiversity cannot be saved by the piecemeal operations in current use alone. The extinction rate our behaviour is now imposing on the rest of life, and seems destined to continue, is more correctly viewed as the equivalent of a Chicxulub-sized asteroid strike played out over several human generations.

The only hope for the species still living is a human effort commensurate with the magnitude of the problem. The ongoing mass extinction of species, and with it the extinction of genes and ecosystems, ranks with pandemics, world war, and climate change as among the deadliest threats that humanity has imposed on itself. To those who feel content to let the Anthropocene evolve toward whatever destiny it mindlessly drifts, I say please take time to reconsider. To those who are steering the growth of reserves worldwide, let me make an earnest request: don’t stop, just aim a lot higher.

see just one way to make this 11th-hour save: committing half of the planet’s surface to nature to save the immensity of life-forms that compose it. Why one-half? Why not one-quarter or one-third? Because large plots, whether they already stand or can be created from corridors connecting smaller plots, harbour many more ecosystems and the species composing them at a sustainable level. As reserves grow in size, the diversity of life surviving within them also grows. As reserves are reduced in area, the diversity within them declines to a mathematically predictable degree swiftly – often immediately and, for a large fraction, forever. A biogeographic scan of Earth’s principal habitats shows that a full representation of its ecosystems and the vast majority of its species can be saved within half the planet’s surface. At one-half and above, life on Earth enters the safe zone. Within half, existing calculations from existing ecosystems indicate that more than 80 per cent of the species would be stabilised.

There is a second, psychological argument for protecting half of Earth. The current conservation movement has not been able to go the distance because it is a process. It targets the most endangered habitats and species and works forward from there. Knowing that the conservation window is closing fast, it strives to add increasing amounts of protected space, faster and faster, saving as much as time and opportunity will allow.

The key is the ecological footprint, defined as the amount of space required to meet the needs of an average person

Half-Earth is different. It is a goal. People understand and prefer goals. They need a victory, not just news that progress is being made. It is human nature to yearn for finality, something achieved by which their anxieties and fears are put to rest.

The Half-Earth solution does not mean dividing the planet into hemispheric halves or any other large pieces the size of continents or nation-states. Nor does it require changing ownership of any of the pieces, but instead only the stipulation that they be allowed to exist unharmed. It does, on the other hand, mean setting aside the largest reserves possible for nature, hence for the millions of other species still alive.

The key to saving one-half of the planet is the ecological footprint, defined as the amount of space required to meet all of the needs of an average person. It comprises the land used for habitation, fresh water, food production and delivery, personal transportation, communication, governance, other public functions, medical support, burial, and entertainment. In the same way the ecological footprint is scattered in pieces around the world, so are Earth’s surviving wildlands on the land and in the sea. The pieces range in size from the major desert and forest wildernesses to pockets of restored habitats as small as a few hectares.

But, you may ask, doesn’t a rising population and per-capita consumption doom the Half-Earth prospect? In this aspect of its biology, humanity appears to have won a throw of the demographic dice. Its population growth has begun to decelerate autonomously, without pressure one way or the other from law or custom. In every country where women have gained some degree of social and financial independence, their average fertility has dropped by a corresponding amount through individual personal choice.

There won’t be an immediate drop in the total world population. An overshoot still exists due to the longevity of the more numerous offspring of earlier, more fertile generations. There also remain high-fertility countries, with an average of more than three surviving children born to each woman, thus higher than the 2.1 children per woman that yields zero population growth. Even as it decelerates toward zero growth, population will reach between 9.6 billion and 12.3 billion, up from the 7.2 billion existing in 2014. That is a heavy burden for an already overpopulated planet to bear, but unless women worldwide switch back from the negative population trend of fewer than 2.1 children per woman, a turn downward in the early 22nd century is inevitable.

And what of per-capita consumption? The footprint will evolve, not to claim more and more space, as you might at first suppose, but less. The reason lies in the evolution of the free market system, and the way it is increasingly shaped by high technology. The products that win are those that cost less to manufacture and advertise, need less frequent repair and replacement, and give highest performance with a minimum amount of energy. Just as natural selection drives organic evolution by competition among genes to produce more copies of themselves per unit cost in the next generation, raising benefit-to-cost of production drives the evolution of the economy. Teleconferencing, online purchase and trade, ebook personal libraries, access on the Internet to all literature and scientific data, online diagnosis and medical practice, food production per hectare sharply raised by indoor vertical gardens with LED lighting, genetically engineered crops and microorganisms, long-distance business conferences and social visits by life-sized images, and not least the best available education in the world free online to anyone, anytime, and anywhere. All of these amenities will yield more and better results with less per-capita material and energy, and thereby will reduce the size of the ecological footprint.

In viewing the future this way, I wish to suggest a means to achieve almost free enjoyment of the world’s best places in the biosphere that I and my fellow naturalists have identified. The cost-benefit ratio would be extremely small. It requires only a thousand or so high-resolution cameras that broadcast live around the clock from sites within reserves. People would still visit any reserve in the world physically, but they could also travel there virtually and in continuing real time with no more than a few keystrokes in their homes, schools, and lecture halls. Perhaps a Serengeti water hole at dawn? Or a teeming Amazon canopy? There would also be available streaming video of summer daytime on the coast in the shallow offshore waters of Antarctica, and cameras that continuously travel through the great coral triangle of Indonesia and New Guinea. With species identifications and brief expert commentaries unobtrusively added, the adventure would be forever changing, and safe.

The spearhead of this intensive economic evolution, with its hope for biodiversity, is contained in the linkage of biology, nanotechnology, and robotics. Two ongoing enterprises within it, the creation of artificial life and artificial minds, seem destined to preoccupy a large part of science and high technology for the rest of the present century.

The creation of artificial life forms is already a reality. On 20 May 2010, a team of researchers at the J Craig Venter Institute in California announced the second genesis of life, this time by human rather than divine command. They had built live cells from the ground up. With simple chemical reagents off the shelf, they assembled the entire genetic code of a bacterial species, Mycoplasma mycoides, a double helix of 1.08 million DNA base pairs. During the process they modified the code sequence slightly, implanting a statement made by the late theoretical physicist Richard Feynman, ‘What I cannot create, I do not understand,’ in order to detect daughters of the altered mother cells in future tests.

If our minds are to break free and dwell in the far more interesting universe of reason triumphant over superstition, it will be through advances in biology

The textbook example of elementary artificial selection of the past 10 millennia is the transformation of teosinte, a species of wild grass with three races in Mexico and Central America, into maize (corn). The food found in the ancestor was a meagre packet of hard kernels. Over centuries of selective breeding it was altered into its modern form. Today maize, after further selection and widespread hybridisation of inbred strains that display ‘hybrid vigour’ is the principal food of hundreds of millions.

The first decade of the present century thus saw the beginning of the next new major phase of genetic modification beyond hybridisation: artificial selection and even direct substitution in single organisms of one gene for another. If we use the trajectory of progress in molecular biology during the previous half century as a historical guide, it appears inevitable that scientists will begin routinely to build cells of wide variety from the ground up, then induce them to multiply into synthetic tissues, organs, and eventually entire independent organisms of considerable complexity.

If people are to live long and healthy lives in the sustainable Eden of our dreams, and our minds are to break free and dwell in the far more interesting universe of reason triumphant over superstition, it will be through advances in biology. The goal is practicable because scientists, being scientists, live with one uncompromising mandate: press discovery to the limit. There has already emerged a term for the manufacture of organisms and parts of organisms: synthetic biology. Its potential benefits, easily visualised as spreading through medicine and agriculture, are limited only by imagination. Synthetic biology will also bring onto centre stage the microbe-based increase of food and energy.

Each passing year sees advances in artificial intelligence and their multitudinous applications – advances that would have been thought distantly futuristic a decade earlier. Robots roll over the surface of Mars. They travel around boulders and up and down slopes while photographing, measuring minutiae of topography, analysing the chemical composition of soil and rocks, and scrutinising everything for signs of life.

In the early period of the digital revolution, innovators relied on machine design of computers without reference to the human brain, much as the earliest aeronautical engineers used mechanical principles and intuition to design aircraft instead of imitating the flight of birds. But with the swift growth of both fields, one-on-one comparisons are multiplying. The alliance of computer technology and brain science has given birth to whole brain emulation as one of the ultimate goals of science.

From the time of the ancient human-destined line of amphibians, then reptiles, then mammals, the neural pathways of every part of the brain were repeatedly altered by natural selection to adapt the organism to the environment in which it lived. Step-by-step, from the Paleozoic amphibians to the Cenozoic primates, the ancient centres were augmented by newer centres, chiefly in the growing cortex, that added to learning ability. All things being equal, the ability of organisms to function through seasons and across different habitats gave them an edge in the constant struggle to survive and reproduce.

Little wonder, then, that neurobiologists have found the human brain to be densely sprinkled with partially independent centres of unconscious operations, along with all of the operators of rational thought. Located through the cortex in what might look at first like random arrays are the headquarters of process variously for numbers, attention, face-recognition, meanings, reading, sounds, fears, values, and error detection. Decisions tend to be made by the brute force of unconscious choice in these centres prior to conscious comprehension.

Next in evolution came consciousness, a function of the human brain that, among other things, reduces an immense stream of sense data to a small set of carefully selected bite-size symbols. The sampled information can then be routed to another processing stage, allowing us to perform what are fully controlled chains of operations, much like a serial computer. This broadcasting function of consciousness is essential. In humans, it is greatly enhanced by language, which lets us distribute our conscious thoughts across the social network.

What has brain science to do with biodiversity? At first, human nature evolved along a zigzag path as a continually changing ensemble of genetic traits while the biosphere continue to evolve on its own. But the explosive growth of digital technology transformed every aspect of our lives and changed our self-perception, bringing the ‘bnr’ industries (biology, nanotechnology, robotics) to the forefront of the modern economy. These three have the potential either to favour biodiversity or to destroy it.

I believe they will favour it, by moving the economy away from fossil fuels to energy sources that are clean and sustainable, by radically improving agriculture with new crop species and ways to grow them, and by reducing the need or even the desire for distant travel. All are primary goals of the digital revolution. Through them the size of the ecological footprint will also be reduced. The average person can expect to enjoy a longer, healthier life of high quality yet with less energy extraction and raw demand put on the land and sea. If we are lucky (and smart), world population will peak at a little more than 10 billion people by the end of the century followed by the ecological footprint soon thereafter. The reason is that we are thinking organisms trying to understand how the world works. We will come awake.

Silicon Valley dreamers of a digitised humanity have failed to give much thought at all to the biosphere

That process is already under way, albeit still far too slowly – with the end in sight in the 23rd century. We and the rest of life with us are in the middle of a bottleneck of rising population, shrinking resources, and disappearing species. As its stewards we need to think of our species as being in a race to save the living environment. The primary goal is to make it through the bottleneck to a better, less perilous existence while carrying through as much of the rest of life as possible. If global biodiversity is given space and security, most of the large fraction of species now endangered will regain sustainability on their own. Furthermore, advances made in synthetic biology, artificial intelligence, whole brain emulation, and other similar, mathematically based disciplines can be imported to create an authentic, predictive science of ecology. In it, the interrelations of species will be explored as fervently as we now search through our own bodies for health and longevity. It is often said that the human brain is the most complex system known to us in the universe. That is incorrect. The most complex is the individual natural ecosystem, and the collectivity of ecosystems comprising Earth’s species-level biodiversity. Each species of plant, animal, fungus, and microorganism is guided by sophisticated decision devices. Each is intricately programmed in its own way to pass with precision through its respective life cycle. It is instructed on when to grow, when to mate, when to disperse, and when to shy away from enemies. Even the single-celled Escherichia coli, living in the bacterial paradise of our intestines, moves toward food and away from toxins by spinning its tail cilium one way, then the other way, in response to chemosensory molecules within its microscopic body.

How minds and decision-making devices evolve, and how they interact with ecosystems is a vast area of biology that remains mostly uncharted – and still even undreamed by those scientists who devote their lives to it. The analytic techniques coming to bear on neuroscience, on Big Data theory, on simulations with robot avatars, and on other comparable enterprises will find applications in biodiversity studies. They are ecology’s sister disciplines.

It is past time to broaden the discussion of the human future and connect it to the rest of life. The Silicon Valley dreamers of a digitised humanity have not done that, not yet. They have failed to give much thought at all to the biosphere. With the human condition changing so swiftly, we are losing or degrading to uselessness ever more quickly the millions of species that have run the world independently of us and free of cost. If humanity continues its suicidal ways to change the global climate, eliminate ecosystems, and exhaust Earth’s natural resources, our species will very soon find itself forced into making a choice, this time engaging the conscious part of our brain. It is as follows: shall we be existential conservatives, keeping our genetically-based human nature while tapering off the activities inimical to ourselves and the rest of the biosphere? Or shall we use our new technology to accommodate the changes important solely to our own species, while letting the rest of life slip away? We have only a short time to decide.

The beautiful world our species inherited took the biosphere 3.8 billion years to build. The intricacy of its species we know only in part, and the way they work together to create a sustainable balance we have only recently begun to grasp. Like it or not, and prepared or not, we are the mind and stewards of the living world. Our own ultimate future depends upon that understanding. We have come a very long way through the barbaric period in which we still live, and now I believe we’ve learned enough to adopt a transcendent moral precept concerning the rest of life.

Reprinted from ‘Half-Earth: Our Planet’s Fight for Life’ by Edward O Wilson. Copyright © 2016 by Edward O Wilson. With permission of the publisher, Liveright Publishing Corporation. All rights reserved.