@ Uncouth Reflections
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Recent Posts
- Note to B—-: Science and Religion
- Watching Freedom of Speech Speed Atrophy in Real Time
- SCENES WE’D LIKE TO SEE*
- Note to K—-, on the morning of January 6
- Note to pals at S—–: Lin Wood Shocker
- Notes on Barbara and Night Train to Lisbon
- Is Culture Stuck?
- You Can Never Be Too Thin, Too Rich or Too Woke
- Notes on Fargo
- Boomers Won’t Go Away, Part XXV
Recent Comments
- ia on Watching Freedom of Speech Speed Atrophy in Real Time
- fenster on Watching Freedom of Speech Speed Atrophy in Real Time
- ia on Watching Freedom of Speech Speed Atrophy in Real Time
- Epaminondas on SCENES WE’D LIKE TO SEE*
- bluecat57 on Note to K—-, on the morning of January 6
- flulrich on Note to K—-, on the morning of January 6
- bluecat57 on Note to K—-, on the morning of January 6
- Fenster on Note to K—-, on the morning of January 6
- fenster on Note to K—-, on the morning of January 6
- bluecat57 on Note to K—-, on the morning of January 6
- bluecat57 on Note to K—-, on the morning of January 6
- fenster on Note to K—-, on the morning of January 6
- bluecat57 on Note to K—-, on the morning of January 6
- fenster on Note to pals at S—–: Lin Wood Shocker
- bluecat57 on Note to pals at S—–: Lin Wood Shocker
Tag Archives: Star Trek
Science Fantasy
Fabrizio del Wrongo writes: Gawping at “science” evangelists has developed into one of my favorite pastimes. I use the scare quotes because, more often than not, the people who are celebrated as science evangelists (typically at places like Reddit) seem to … Continue reading
Posted in Computers, Science, Technology
Tagged artificial intelligence, Elon Musk, Hari Seldon, Isaac Asimov, Neil deGrasse Tyson, nerds, Science Fiction, Star Trek
9 Comments
Return On Investment
Fabrizio del Wrongo writes: Pop culture can be stultifying. It grinds us down, appeals to our lowest impulses, sometimes sells us out. But every once in a while it manages to harness the full weight of its resonances, to … Continue reading