LinkFest 2016-06-10
A review on Night Enhancement Eyedrops using Chlorin e6
This is pretty nutty, but really interesting. Self-experimentation involving a photosensitizer compound to enhance night vision.
I came across this physics teaching post about the effect of gravity, and how a philosophy grad student misinterpreted it. Possibly apocryphal, but it sounds about right. The author of the post tried to be generous, but I think the philosophy TA wasn't dumb, he just didn't know anything, which is a separate problem.
Who Benefited From North American Slavery?
Not who you think.
A damn good question. Tyler gives a decent answer to a question that is inherently hard to answer, because this movement is still inchoate. The comments are pretty interesting too.
The Pro-National Suicide Argument
James Chastek gives a pretty good summary of the bad things nationalism has wrought, and why you might seek to get rid of it.
Pseudoerasmus retweeted one of the entries in this series, and it caught my eye because the inability of the CIA, or anyone else really, to understand the economy of the Soviet Union played a big part in the Cold War.
An older blog post by Razib Khan. Khan rightly notes that genetic engineering could give us the opportunity to help those who have unfairly lost the genetic lottery. I commend this line of thinking, while at the same time suspecting that it won't actually work out that way.
There is no exception in Islam
A more recent post by Razib. He talks about the role of religion, and views of religion, in shaping the world. Razib is not a believer himself, but he takes religion seriously, and knows a lot about it.
The 2016 election will be horrible for America. But also, endlessly entertaining
My thoughts exactly.
I have strong disagreements with Steven Greydanus' assessments of the relative merits of Pixar movies, but I like this piece anyways.
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