SGU Episode 1010

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SGU Episode 1010
November 16th 2024
1010.jpg

"Revolutionizing surgery with advanced robotic technology for precision and efficiency."

SGU 1009                      SGU 1011

Skeptical Rogues
S: Steven Novella

B: Bob Novella

C: Cara Santa Maria

J: Jay Novella

E: Evan Bernstein

Quote of the Week

“I have a foreboding of an America in my children's or grandchildren's time - when the United States is a service and information economy; when nearly all the key manufacturing industries have slipped away to other countries; when awesome technological powers are in the hands of a very few, and no one representing the public interest can even grasp the issues; when the people have lost the ability to set their own agendas or knowledgeably question those in authority; when, clutching our crystals and nervously consulting our horoscopes, our critical faculties in decline, unable to distinguish between what feels good and what's true, we slide, almost without noticing, back into superstition and darkness. The dumbing down of America is most evident in the slow decay of substantive content in the enormously influential media, the 30-second sound bites (now down to 10 seconds or less), lowest common denominator programming, credulous presentations on pseudoscience and superstition, but especially a kind of celebration of ignorance.”

- Carl Sagan, Demon Haunted World

Links
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Show Notes
SGU Forum


Intro[edit]

Voice-over: You're listening to the Skeptic's Guide to the Universe, your escape to reality.

S: Hello, and welcome to the Skeptic's Guide to the Universe. Today is Wednesday, November 13th, 2024, and this is your host, Steven Novella. Joining me this week are Bob Novella. Hey everybody, Cara Santa Maria.

E: Howdy.

S: J Novella, Hey guys. And Evan Bernstein.

E: Good evening everyone.

S: The year is going fast. It's almost the end of 2024.

E: My gosh, we will be recording our year end episode before you know it. That's right.

S: There's always a good time here to remind people that we have published 2 books, Skeptic's Guide to the Universe and The Skeptic's Guide to the Future. So if you are have joined us recently and they're not aware of this fact, check us out. You could get to those books through our website or through Amazon. They make fantastic holiday gifts. You can spread the gift of skepticism to everyone in your life. So check them out if you haven't read them already and some people have asked us sort of do they are they in digital form? Yes. Are they in audio form? Yes. You can get they are read both are read by me, but you can also if you like to read on Kindle they you can get them in digital form as well. So check that out we.

J: Were working on a version of Darth Vader reading it so I'll let you know when that comes out.

S: Right. Oh, have you guys seen any of the latest UAP congressional testimony today?

C: I have not.

E: I heard I didn't get. A chance to watch it.

S: Yeah, Jay and I watched some of this. Was it talked about it on the live stream today. It's as worthless as, you know, as it's been essentially, you know, UAP is the new, new name for UFOs, you know, unidentified anomalous phenomena. OK. Phenomena. Technically more more accurate, more more inclusive, but it's still the same thing. It's the same people talking about the same crappy evidence for the last 50 years. They had nothing new. There's just simply nothing going on the like one of the bits that we saw today the the UFO proponent was saying there was this, you know, it's the residue argument, what I call the residue argument. I guess you could explain 98% of whatever of these sightings of UAP reports, but there's that subset that you can't explain as if like that's, that means there must be something interesting going on. But that's going to be true of anything. Anytime you have hundreds or thousands of whatever, you're not going to have enough information to necessarily definitively explain everything. There's always going to be some unusual cases and then.

B: For without good evidence of it.

S: Yeah, yeah, exactly. So the people who have reviewed this said that the reason you can't explain that one or two percent is not because they're fantastical, it's because the evidence is crappy. It says we don't have enough evidence to know what they were, which fits something else that we say all the time, which is like with UFOs, just like with Bigfoot and with everything else. The ambiguity, right? The fuzziness is the phenomenon. That is the phenomenon. It's it is just the residue of low quality evidence that or cases that are gonna be there for any phenomenon.

C: Yeah, this is gonna apply to like every field of every I think about medicine, right? Like there's a drug and you take the drug and you get better, but that percentage of people didn't get better. And you look at the autopsy and you can't figure out why. You're not going to assume they didn't get better because magic.

S: Right, exactly.

C: You're just. Going to assume you couldn't figure it out, but something biological was happening.

E: I believe it called this logical fallacy. Good analogy care. God of the Gaps fallacy.

C: Yes, exactly. Yeah, I can't explain it. Therefore, magic.

E: Right therefore. Something therefore alien.

C: Fantastic.

E: Yeah, fill in the blank and that is where. But that is where all paranormal and all pseudoscience lives. It lives in that gap.

S: Yeah, so nothing new, same old crap.

E: More of the same, thank you Congress. Waste our time. Waste our movement once again.

Quickie with Evan: Advertising Magic Banned in Kyrgyzstan https://24.kg/english/311033_Advertising_of_fortune_telling_magic_shamanism_prohibited_in_Kyrgyzstan/ (03:58)[edit]

S: All right, Evan, you're going to get us started with a with a quickie about, yes, advertising magic in Kyrgyzstan, Kyrgyzstan, Kyrgyzstan.

E: Good news everyone. We're all moving to Kyrgyzstan and that thing I'm going to call these segments going forward. Good news everyone, because, you know, occasionally there is some good news in the world of skepticism and and rational thought to talk about and this could be one of them. 2024, Yes. Kyrgyzstan enacted earlier this year legislation prohibiting the advertising of services related to the occult and mysticism, which includes things like fortune telling, shamanism, divination, spiritualism, clairvoyance and magic. What were we just talking about? Yep, and this band extends across various media platforms including the Internet, outdoor advertising, radio and television.

C: Whoa, does that mean they can't advertise church?

E: Well.

C: That's interesting.

E: I was going to bring up that more towards the. End OK, sorry. But no, that's OK. Since you brought it up, I will mention it. So this is a primarily Muslim country and the banning of these kinds of practices is very much in accord with with Muslim practices. You're not supposed to be doing this thing because it is in violation of the tenants of the religion. So it's as much a protective measure probably for the people of the country, which it is, as it is a, you know, further sort of solidification of the religious culture that permeates. So it's kind of a combination of both. But you know what? I'll take it because I think other countries should also be doing this stuff. Do we know Kyrgyzstan is?

C: It's one of the stands one.

S: Of the.

E: Yes, it is one of the stands. And you've been to which one? Kazakhstan.

C: Kazakhstan. I've been Kazakhstan which is borders China.

E: It does, yeah. Yep. So yeah. And this Kyrgyzstan does also border Kazakhstan, Ubekistan, Tajikistan and China. And it's 90% covered by mountains, this country. So about 6 million people live there, and they have a nomadic lifestyle, traditionally in rural areas. Yurts. Have you ever heard of yurts? Those are those deaths I actually saw. AI don't know one of these decoration shows, house decor shows and they talked about yurts. So it was the whole show was all about. Yurts. I love a good yurt. It was pretty fascinating.

C: I do, I've stayed in a yurt before I. Like it?

US#06: Wow.

E: And oh, they are the first country in the world to commit to protecting snow leopards, which is an endangered species found in their mountains. So good, good on them for that as well. Now the ban extends to, yes, all the medias, broadcast media, social media. The measure is designed to prevent unscrupulous citizens from taking advantage of vulnerable segments of society, says Marlon Mamataalayev, who's one of the sponsors of the amendments. It aligns with similar actions in neighboring countries, Tajikistan, as I mentioned before, they have criminalized sorcery and fortune telling as well. They characterize these practices as being perpetrated by fraudsters and they implement strict measures against these activities. In fact, the fines, if you're fined for this activity, it's usually about like 1/2 a year worth of your money that you would earn in a year, right? So, so it's, that's pretty steep, relatively speaking. Here's one example of the kind of stuff that they've been doing with the fortune tellers, right? So the fortune tellers will purport to offer anything from predicting the future to helping find suitable spouses and also to make your businesses flourish. So there was this woman. Her name is Mabzuna, a housewife from the northern city of Kunjand. That's her first name, didn't offer her last name. She paid $30 to help find appropriate husbands for her three daughters, who are aged 24 to 30. The fortune teller conducted separate sessions with the women, with these women in order to trigger their luck. Then here's what she said. She gave me an egg to throw into the river and now she's expecting eligible men to turn up to ask for her daughters hands in marriage, All kinds of things. Apparently this is this is seems to be a common practice and they'll take these eggs or whatever. Trinkets mostly, a lot of like talismans and metal jewelry and stuff. And they'll throw them into water bodies, into rivers and into ponds and other things as part of this. But it's getting, the problem is getting so bad that authorities there are concerned that these metal pieces are lying at the bottom of these ponds, riverbeds and other places where people go or animals go and it's injuring them, right? They said authority. There's one example. Authorities recovered half a cart of locks from the bed of a of one of the rivers that could have split the heads open of unsuspecting swimmers or people diving into the water. And the locks were actually discovered accidentally by police who were looking for evidence of some other crime that was going on. So, so many of these things that it's clogging, you know, that it's polluting their water ways and their water systems. That's how many of these charms and these fortune tellers are selling these people for total, total, you know, garbage and things that just won't come true. So that is the good news from Kyrgyzstan and as I said, other countries I think should perhaps look to them as an example and try to help their citizens in any way they can from these fraudsters.

S: To be so, they're just banning the advertising, they're not banning the practices.

E: Correct, Yes, yes, although they do, right. Although if you are caught, although if you are caught and determined to be fraudulent in some in whatever capacity that these courts decide, you can be in big time trouble. So it is considered kind of mostly an underground practice. It's, it's, it's, you know, the authorities have their eyes on you if you are doing these things to begin with. So it's, it's definitely frowned upon. Oh, and by the way, fun fact, there's a Kursig epic poem called the Epic of Man of Manas MANAS, which is one of the longest poems in the world. It has over 500,000 lines. Whoa, yes, poem.

C: That is an epic poem.

E: It would be, it would take up three large volume books basically. So imagine it's kind of like I, I envision it like memorize if you know this poem, it's like memorizing the Lord of the Rings trilogy basically as a, as a poem, as one poem.

S: Oh, boy. All right. Thanks, Evan.

E: Yep.

News Item #1 - Do Armed Police Make Schools Safer (10:30)[edit]

S: Kara, Does having an armed police officer in school make kids safer?

C: What do you guys think?

S: No, I. Think you probably wouldn't be talking about it if the answer were right.

E: You're right.

C: Bob says no, Evan says.

E: I I had I have no information. To base I've noticed. That statistics to base that.

J: Off I mean to base the decision I would say it it that schools are are benefit. I don't know what to what degree.

C: Interesting. OK, so according to Education Week's School shooting Tracker, as of the last update, which was November 11th, 2024, so far there have been 35 school shootings in the United States this year that have resulted in injuries or deaths, 217 total since 2018. There were 38 last year, so this year again, up to two days ago as of this recording, 35 school shootings with injuries or death, 65 people killed or injured. So that 16 people killed, 7 students, nine employees and 49 people injured. And they keep a map of all the school shootings. Very sad work. So this is, as we know here in the States, a big problem, a scary problem. And a lot of parents are afraid and a lot of people are clamoring to solve this problem. And there have been policy decisions, some of which are misguided, some of which are based in the evidence, but they're up to date, really hasn't been a lot of evidence to answer that question. You know, are schools with armed police officers actually safer? Does deploying officers in public schools deter criminal activity? And so I'm going to talk about a few studies today, which were compiled by Rod Mcmullum in Undark magazine. He wrote kind of a long feature article about this. First, a little bit of statistically, more than 41,000 schools employ at least one law enforcement officer, or sometimes they're called school resource officers. And there have been big changes during COVID. Things got kind of interesting because, of course, we saw the Black Lives Matter movement kind of take a big upswing after the murder of George Floyd. And we also saw a lot of schools, you know, closing or modifying their practices. And so during this time, many school districts decided to decrease funding or end school resource officer programs altogether, and others have gone in the opposite direction, increasing the presence of armed officers within their schools. But this article talks specifically about Chicago, which was one of the largest public school systems in the US. There are 325,000 students in Chicago schools that returned to classes this year without armed officers present. And this was the first time in Chicago since the year 1966. And so they've already started to collect some data on the outcomes of not having armed resource officers present. And in this model, they actually took the funding that they would have put towards paying these armed police officers and they put it towards having social workers, trauma informed mental health interventions and social and emotional learning. So we're going to get to some of these Chicago studies because it's really early, the information is really early. And we're going to turn to a couple of large studies, one of which is a systematic review that was published in November of 2023 called School Based Law Enforcement Strategies to Reduce Crime, Increase Perceptions of Safety, and Improve Learning Outcomes in Primary and Secondary Schools. A systematic review. This study looked at 32 different reports yielding 1002 effect sizes to ask a number of different questions. But one of the big outcomes that they found was that there was no evidence that there is a safety, and I'm quoting them directly, no evidence that there is a safety promoting component of what they call SBLE school based law enforcement. And the authors based on this large study come out in support of the criticism that school based law enforcement actually criminalizes students and schools. So not only did they find that gun violence was not reduced, and actually other forms of violence specifically in this study were not reduced, there was an increase in what is often referred to as the school to prison pipeline. So the types of disciplinary actions that were taken against students, which were especially high among black and Hispanic boys, led to either suspension or in some cases, incarceration. And there is a ton of evidence, and we won't get into like that whole body of literature, but there's a ton of evidence that sort of like punitive action at a young age leads to higher rates of incarceration later. And this is there have been randomized control trials where students are assigned to middle schools where there's stricter punishment versus middle schools without that strict punishment. And they find that the kids who are assigned to those stricter middle schools on average are more likely to drop out of high school, less likely to attend a four year college, and are more likely to be come incarcerated as adults. So we know that these punitive practices have a detrimental effect on children's development and well-being. And studies are showing that having sworn law enforcement officers in the schools not only do not reduce gun violence, and in some cases they don't even reduce violent crime. Another study showed that there was a small but significant a decrease in fighting, probably because of just the physicality of the police presence, but that they do actually increase the number of infractions that are being reported against these children, which can have detrimental effects later in life. There's a couple of other things I want to point out. So one study showed that over 90% of schools that have a law enforcement officer present have an officer who's routinely armed, although some of those officers have special training, and violence prevention and youth mental health requirements vary by state, and in many cases there is no required special training in these areas. This article does a really interesting job of going back to the history. I didn't realize that resource officers started in 1953 in Flint, MI and then efforts increased in the 60s in large cities like LA, Chicago and Cincinnati. And then there's a dramatic increase after Columbine in April of 1999. And we saw that after this huge increase by 2020 to about 48% of public schools has at least one school resource officer. And again like I said, more than 90% of those schools have an armed officer. So that led to the 2019 to 2020 year about 23,004 school resource officers being employed. Now let's cut back to Chicago. In Chicago, they actually reduced that presence. They, you know, this year was the first year that students went back to school without school resource officers present. Removing. OK EU of Chicago Consortium on School Research put out a brief in June of this year removing police officers from Chicago schools and they call it SRO in this case school resource officers. School resource officer removal was significantly related to having fewer high level discipline infractions and it was not related to changes overtime in perception of physical safety or student teacher trust either by students or teachers. So when school resource officers were removed, students did not say that they felt less safe and neither did teachers. They also found that schools that had resource officers, the ones that attained them, were more likely to serve predominantly black students. Black students became more than twice as likely as other students to have a resource officer. They tended to be smaller schools, but they tended to have higher suspension rates and they tended to be schools where students who are eligible for free or reduced lunch, non-english learners or kids were in special education. So these are schools where obviously populations are more vulnerable, are more likely to have these resource officers there. And those resource officers were not overtime reducing or effective in reducing gun violence or gun crime, but they were in effective in criminalization of students who were there to go to school because infractions were identified and magnified. So across the board, what we're starting to see and there's not much literature on this subject, but it's gaining across the board. We are starting to see that while some of the studies have cited kind of small benefits. Bits, most of them are showing very large detriments and there is no like detectable. There's no significant difference in outcomes when it comes to school safety. So the children are no safer, the children and the adults are no safer, and there is no detectable evidence saying that having police in schools is reducing gun violence at all.

S: Yeah, that's interesting.

C: There's a lot of. Good stuff here. It's not surprising to me. I think this is an area where I have like dug a little bit deep into the research in the past. But I think for some people it is surprising and it is pretty counterintuitive that putting police officers in school leads to more arrests and more expulsions of students, very often disproportionately black and brown students and very often student disproportionately students with disabilities. But what it doesn't do is it doesn't make them safer from physical harm and violence, which was very often the whole argument, right? It's the whole reasoning behind having these police officers present.

S: Yeah. I mean, it seems to imagine for most schools, you know, there's probably not going to be events that require an armed officer present. And even if they are present as we know like from that it was in that Texas case, it doesn't always help, right?

C: No. Not only does it not always help, sometime there is some evidence to show that when teachers are armed, it can actually lead to more detriment, not less. But we are seeing that there are laws that are being passed. Like there's a law in Texas right now that requires schools to have armed guards. And the Florida law, I think, is even more intense. It requires that somebody in the school be armed. It doesn't even have to be a guard. It can be a teacher.

S: Well, I mean, I think it's also a good area to continue to do research. I doubt this one study is going to change or there are a few studies is going to change the.

C: Policy. Yeah, yeah. And there they are. Systematic reviews, by the way. So these are reviews of, you know, multiple studies.

S: Right. OK. Thanks, Kara.

News Item #2 - Training Medical Robots (22:14)[edit]

S: Jay, tell us about training medical. Robots.

J: Yeah. I really like this one, guys. Johns Hopkins University researchers collaborated with Stanford University researchers, and they achieved something that's pretty significant. They're calling it a breakthrough in medical robots. So, you know, for the first time they were, they were able to train a robot to perform surgical procedures by using video recordings of human surgeons. And this is definitely different than any other way this has been done in the past. This method is called imitation learning. And it, it essentially eliminates the need for manual programming of the robotic movements, right? This is like when a, a surgeon will actually, you know, a surgeon's movements will be recorded as they go, right, which is very difficult. This moves robotic surgery a lot closer to full autonomy, like in the movies and stuff like, you know, we've seen this in different, different science fiction movies where you're seeing like, you know, some type of extensive type of surgery being done, you know, in outer space or whatever. What they now know can be done as robots can perform complex procedures without any human involvement. I know that sounds kind of outlandish, but it they were able to do it. The researchers focused on an existing system called the da Vinci Surgical System. This is a widely used robotic platform. It's, you know, it's considered to be cutting edge modern medicine. And to overcome that system's current limitations in precision, which is a, you know, obviously a huge problem, they turned to video recordings captured by wrist cameras attached to the da Vinci robots arm during surgeries. Right. So what this means is these videos were originally created for post operative analysis, where they document techniques and movements of experienced surgeons, right? With nearly 7000 Da Vinci robots today in use globally and more than 50,000 trained surgeons, the researchers had access to a massive archive of surgical footage. This was really the base of this whole achievement that that footage was absolutely significant. It it proved to be an an amazing amount of data for them to incorporate into computer learning. So they used hundreds of these recordings, I guess they picked the absolute best ones. And the research team trained their robotic model to perform the basic surgical tasks such as things like needle manipulation, something called tissue lifting and searching, searching. So unlike traditional programming methods that which we have today, this, these require manually coding every step of a procedure. You know, think about that. They in order for a, a robot to perform surgery the old way, they literally have to hand code in all those procedures and it takes an incredibly long time to do it. The new approach relies on machine learning, which is incredible at this. It's like machine learning was, is, is so powerful when it comes to things like this. So the model combines imitation learning with advanced AI architecture that's similar to those powering ChatGPT, of course. However, instead of processing language, the model speaks in something called kinematics. Have you guys ever heard of that?

C: It's just. Like movement.

J: Right, It's the mathematical representation of robotic movement. So think about that. A ChatGPT like AI system was programmed to speak in mathematical robotic movements. That is so brilliant. I just love that. So historically, training the da Vinci robot to perform any single task was like I said, incredibly labour intensive and I want to give you more details about that. It required programs to code every single movement meticulously. And this took, you know, if you if you want to pick one specific movement that would be involved in one procedure, modelling the steps involved in searching for particular types of surgery could take up to guess how many years guys. I would guess a decade. Right. A decade. Wow.

B: Yeah, read the article. Yeah, that's to program every discrete step and all the exceptions and stuff. Yeah, the decade still seems like a little long to me. But yeah, it's, it's a, it's a hugely onerous process supposed to compared to this, this little breakthrough they got here, this seems pretty sweet.

J: Yeah. So the like that decade long process was incredibly restrictive in the flexibility and scalability of robotic surgery. It was one of the reasons why it didn't proliferate as much as we'd like it to. So by contrast, the new imitation learning methods allow robots to learn these complex, complex tasks. And just a few days, guys, a few days, 10 years to days.

B: That's incredible. Unreal. But don't forget though, I think it said something that 100 videos is a good sample for it to get a a good handle on what's required. So 100 videos, it's 100 surgeries essentially. That's that's a lot.

J: That's a lot.

C: Those surgeries are being done anyway.

B: Right, exactly.

J: The fact is we have those surgeries, yeah, on video, we have them, you know, it's amazing, you know, and as new, new met, new surgery methods come out, you know, of course, I'm sure that they, they would videotape them in the correct way to, you know, continue to let this happen, right. So one of the key advancements reported lies in the robots ability to adapt its movements, right? Which is really important because every human body isn't the same and every single situation isn't going to be exactly the same. So traditional robotic systems had to rely on this rigid pre programmed actions and that that's very error prone in the real world.

B: It sounds totally brittle, yeah.

C: It's really scary, actually.

J: Training the models to use relative movements instead of fixed motions, the researchers enhanced the robots precision and flexibility. Right. This allows the robot to perform tasks tasks with skill comparable to experienced human surgeons, and even recover from mistakes like retrieving a drop needle and then continuing on with the procedure. So the.

B: Break is that one, Jay, that one caught my my attention because yeah, that's cool that it's kind of like some emergent behavior where it knew just to pick it up and continue but then I thought well, wait a second, should that needle be sterilized now that it's fallen on the.

J: Floor, I think it fell in the in the in the person being operated on. And I'm sure it would be an easy thing to fix if they'd said, you know, don't pick up anything that hit the floor unless it's a heart or something and you got to pick it up.

B: Yeah, well, those are the kinds of errors that I'd be afraid of. Something that's, you know, that's unusual and rare, something you wouldn't necessarily find even within 100 surgeries, but still kind of like, oh boy, don't do that. A human, any human, would know not to.

E: Do organs really fall on the floor?

C: But would you actually be afraid of that, Bob? Because here's the thing, I think it's a little silly to have this standard be that there is no human involved at all. There will always be a human involved. But maybe they're just observing as opposed to actually, right?

B: Operate, or even someone partially knowledgeable enough to know if something's really going off the rails. Yeah, would be nice too, but not necessarily a surgeon because that's the.

C: Thing, Oh yeah, you need to have a surgeon involved.

B: But you're still right.

C: If there is a bleed to qualify, if somebody codes like and anesthesia is never going to be done this way, there's going to be an anesthesiologist there.

J: Well, I wouldn't say never. I mean, look, of course.

C: Oof.

J: We'd be able to achieve all these things with enough time and and.

C: But I but I don't want that to happen. I want there.

J: You got to think about it in a completely different way, right? Because, yeah, ideally you feel better with the human doing it for, for, you know, all these implied reasons. But the point is the this will make surgeries probably cost less money and makes them much more readily available to people everywhere, including people in outer space or on, you know, ships that are crossing the ocean or whatever. I mean, I think, you know, the benefits here dramatically outweigh any of the negatives.

E: That was the one good thing about Prometheus. The movie was that medical pod thing. Oh yeah, But dude, dude, dude.

B: But still, still, they kind of blew it because, you know, this is like centuries in the future. There's an auto doc which is which is so cool. And then she has some like abdominal surgery and then it staples. Her gut is terrible. Like really? You're using staples in two?

J: Centuries a foam that heals the the the flesh.

B: You know some bio? Blue or something. It was just like, oh all. Right.

J: But more importantly than that, Bob, which Star Wars robot would you want surgery? Would you want to be your robotic surgeon? I'd rather. Pick a Neil Asher polity. Unit, I didn't give you that to do it, that option, it's got to be Star Wars and you got to answer in five seconds, whoever.

B: Handled the Luke's amputated hand I'm sure would probably be pretty damn good.

J: I thought you was pretty wanted IG you know.

B: Oh yeah, I don't know if he's, I don't know if he's signed off on on surgery if I go into combat.

J: He'd pretty he'd probably probably tear you apart, but.

B: Yeah, if I if I go into combat I want egg, but for surgery and I'm not sure.

J: So one last point here guys. So what they were able to do was have the the robot perform discrete pieces of surgery and now they're they're haha they're stitching it all together. So they're working on making it be able to do the whole process from beginning to end. And again, you know, when you, when you're doing any kind of computer programming, you just break it down into smaller and smaller bits to make it easier. And I, and I apparently that's what they were doing here. But I'm, I'm excited about it. I mean, again, if if people that can't afford expensive surgeries can have that be affordable to them, I think this would be fantastic.

B: Oh yeah, this, I think this clearly has got a pretty bright future, especially after, you know, these robots seem to be doing better than than what would have been anticipated just after like 100 video. It's got a solid handle on these complex surgical procedures. That's that's fantastic. Imagine, you know, when AI improves even more and you've got even more videos. Imagine if they got, you know, 1000 or 5000 videos from, from like really high end surgeons. And then maybe throw in some like biological context of of a body and, and what a body is and how it should behave like during surgeries and things like that so that there's some more context. I think it would be even even better.

S: All right.

News Item #3 - New Imaging Technique (32:16)[edit]

  • [None None] [3]

S: Thank you, Jay. Bob, tell us about these new imaging techniques. This is another sort of medical breakthrough kind of topic.

B: Yeah. Oh, don't get me started. All right, I'll say it anyway. So yeah, this is a new imaging technology called HIP CT, which caught my attention this week. This technology uses 4th generation synchrotron radiation for medical and materials imaging, far better in many ways than others like MRI's or CAT scans. This started when I was reading a news item recently about imaging celicanth fossils and the article kept going on and on about the celicanths, but I kept thinking that they were kind of burying the lead with this revolutionary imaging technology that they just kind of mentioned almost as an aside. And then so I was looking at another article, this one was from a couple of months ago, but it was an interesting news item about imaging human hearts with unprecedented detail. And they mentioned the same imaging technology and they did the same thing. It was just kind of like an aside. So I'm like, I, I want to learn about this thing. So I did some research where they weren't burying the lead and, and I learned about hip CT or hierarchical phase contrast tomography and it was fascinating. So hip CT was funded by Chan Zuckerberg Initiative. It's a multinational collaboration between scientists, mathematicians, clinicians, and more. So these images, these imaging advances that they made are based on an upgrade of the European Synchrotron radiation facility to create brighter X-rays. And that's kind of the crux of this whole news item. And and about these X-rays, it's all about, it turns out synchrotron radiation, which was fascinating to study and I knew a little bit about it, but I really deepened my understanding. So secretron radiation is it's simply light, it's electromagnetic radiation that's been emitted by charged particles like electrons that are accelerating. But I'm not talking about accelerating like Stevens wife does in her high torque Tesla going faster and faster on the highway. In physics, that's called linear acceleration, right? You're going faster or you're going slower, you're slowing down, which is it's still called acceleration. It's just negative acceleration. We we of course call it deceleration, but it's still acceleration. But there's another type of acceleration in physics called centripetal acceleration. That means that essentially you're, you're not going straight, you're on a curved path. So even if your velocity is the same and you're not accelerating classically, colloquially, but but you're on a curving path, technically that's acceleration as well. And I remember first learning that years ago and it's still hard for me to imagine that acceleration is moving on a curved path and having nothing to do with your, with your velocity. But that's what it is in physics now in electrons, in the magnetic field, going around and around a circular facility, they're experiencing this centripetal acceleration, right? Because they're going around, they're, they're not going straight. So this is centripetal acceleration. And if they're also moving very, very fast at relativistic speeds, then they will emit significant amounts of synchrotronic radiation, which can be anything from infrared to hard X-rays. So why does that happen? Why? Why is that even happening? I was trying to figure out why. Why does it release energy like that? One reason is because that's what Maxwell's equations say will happen and it does. So he was right. If you're not familiar with the Maxwell's equations, definitely check them out. But another, another common explanation that you'll find is that if you imagine this electron going around and around, a tiny bit of its kinetic energy is being converted into that radiation as its path changes. OK, so that's one way to to think of what's happening. And that's why these electrons will slow down over time, because if you're losing some energy, some kinetic energy that's being converted into radiation, you were going to slow down. And that's why these facilities that create synchrotronic radiation, they have to keep continually pump more energy into the Collider so that it it will stay at the at the same linear, you know, linear velocity. So OK, so it's these synchrotron X-rays that are changing many fields of science. They're millions to billions of times brighter than the X-rays that you got, Steve, when you broke your both your arms playing Tarzan in that tree. I'm sure you got an X-ray.

S: Oh no. My wrists, not my arms.

B: My wrists, arms, lower arms, whatever. So they're so so the so the X-rays that you got were millions to billions of times dimmer than what than what they're creating here. These are the brightest X-rays on Earth that I could find. And the relatively new 4th generation synchrotrons are even better than the generation 3 that was that were around for years. Kind of like going from ChatGPT three to four. These electrons are traveling at something like 99.999999% the speed of light. So these are like ultra relativistic, hyper relativistic. Now this this intense light can be focused to to reveal super high resolution images. So it would it would be like using X-rays to not only see Steve's entire mangled wrist bone, but also the individual bone cells anywhere in that bone. So that's kind of we can't do that now we can't use this radiation to look at living people yet, but that's kind of like what we're dealing with here from seeing this this one image of this one discrete object to be able to also zoom down into into into the cellular level. But it, but it's not just the light intensity that's been changing the the X-ray beam itself can be tuned to specific wavelengths to analyze specific elements in the, in the sample that you want to learn about the common film X-rays that you use to to image your broken bones would use a broad spectrum X-rays. So these are using it's kind of like a almost kind of like a laser where you're, you're tuning to very specific wavelengths. So the main benefit, the main benefit of this imaging technology is if I, if I had to distill it into a few words, is that it decouples the field of view from resolution. So that means that that a wide field of view, which historically would mean low resolution, no longer needs to be that way. You could have a wide, a wide field of view that gets the whole image. They'll say an entire human body can also be extremely high resolution. And that's, that's one of the major advances here. So how are they, how is this being used today? So I'll go back to the Celicant story that they're using this technology to image celicanth fossils. Now, do you remember that, that those celicanth fish, they were extinct apparently for millions of years until a fisherman caught one. Like what was that in the 70s, Steve? Something like 60s or 70s, somebody caught one. It's like, it's like pulling up a fossil that you thought that was long dead, that should not exist. The guy found one from the depths. So they were. So they're using these Sycotron Sycotron X-rays to image these, this, these new silicon silicon fossils that were like 250 million years old that were still in the rock. They, they didn't excavate this fossil. It was still in the rock. So they imaged every bone in the fossil that was in the rock. And they were able to create a full 3D model of the fossil bones with a level of detail that they've never seen with this type of fossil before. They created a complete virtual skeleton with amazing detail. Basically, they discovered that this was a third species of celiacanth that they that they become aware of the two that are the two that they have found extant that are still living and now this other fossil is 1/3 fossil that they're aware of. In this heart news item that I read about this, the researchers were able to X-ray a heart with amazing detail. Senior author Peter Lee de Phil. He's a professor of material science. University College London he said the Atlas that we created in this study is like having Google Earth for the human heart. It allows us to view the whole organ at global scale, then zoom into St. level to look at cardiovascular features in unprecedented detail. So that's a really cool analogy, he continues. One of the major advantages of this technique is that it achieves a full 3D view of the organ that's around 25 times better than a clinical a clinical CT scanner. In addition, it could zoom into cellular level and selected areas, which is 250 times better to achieve the same detail that we would get through a microscope but without cutting the sample. Being able to image whole organs like this reveals details and connections that were previously unknown. Cool stuff. So they say that the primary limiting factor was not even the image itself, but processing the huge amount of data that's created by this hip CT technology. Now the so the future of hip CT looks even brighter than the X-rays it produces. So I mean medical imaging, material science, biological research, they are already benefiting from this tool. But going further in the future, as I'd love to do, of course, perhaps using a fifth generation radiation source which probably will eventually arrive at some point, the resolution will likely go from the already awesome Micron scale, which is a millionth of a meter. It could get even more awesome to the nanoscale, of course, course, a billionth of a meter looking at molecular interactions and what's going on within cells. So as this becomes more radiation efficient and safer, this could eventually allow for cellular level detail on living humans without doing any nasty tissue sampling. Because right now it's ex vivo, which means that you could take a living sample, but you've got to remove it from whatever your, you know, whatever living creature. So if it were a human, you'd have to take a sample. So that's you can't do it on on people yet. So of course, typical hospitals don't have access to syncotron facilities. So in the future, accessibility for routine imaging is probably what's going to be one of the biggest hurdles. You know, they will make this smaller, more efficient and cheaper, but I think there's probably going to be a limit to how small it can be. So it's not going to be something that's going to like be at a local small hospital, but who knows? Who knows what's going to happen. And but it's not just, this isn't just medical, we're also talking material science as well. We'll be able to use this to 3D image micro and nanostructures of composites. And that could lead to more advanced alloys, nanotubes and polymers and more. And like we've said on the show many times, material science is the shit. That's the stuff that, that's the stuff. If you make fundamental advances in material science that can impact society at such a, at a huge level. So many industries, so many levels of society, those are the, those are the real big changes that can really make it make a difference. So I'll definitely be tracking this tech.

News Item #4 - Physician Misinformation (42:55)[edit]

S: All right. Thanks. All right, everyone. We're going to take a quick break from our show to talk about our sponsor this week, Rocket Money.

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S: All right, guys, let's get back to the show. You guys. Let me ask you guys a question. You know, I'd like to start on the answer questions.

E: Yes, you do what?

S: Should we police what physicians say in public on healthcare topics? Specifically, how should the regulatory agencies respond to physicians spreading medical misinformation?

B: I think they should be drawn and quartered well, I I think they should follow it. They should track it and there should be ramifications for for spreading misinformation or disinformation.

S: So who gets to decide if it's misinformation?

C: Well, how is that not already part of the ethical chef Right Code of the medical board it is. OK, OK then. Yeah, the medical board policing should do something about it.

B: So who is? Police.

S: So in the US, in the US there are state medical boards, right? They license physicians, They license all professionals at the state level. And the medical board also regulates those licenses. So if you're, yeah, if you're a physician in Connecticut, the Connecticut State Medical Board can hold you to the standard of care and also to a code of ethics, and they can take actions against your license.

C: Yeah, they can fully revoke it if you do something bad enough.

S: Censor you. They could suspend your license. They could revoke your license. There's a range of things that they could do if there is a complaint that you've, you know, violated the standard of care or the code of ethics and they and an and an investigation finds that to be true. So the question is, should you know a physician making anti vaccine statements, for example, should that count? Should that be something that violates?

C: Absolutely, absolutely. What you're saying to the public is no different than what you say to a patient.

S: Yeah. So there's two, there's two contexts there. 1 is a physician giving misinformation to directly to their patient. And then another context is, is giving it to the public, right? Not to like somebody that is actually their patient, but just like making statements and in public.

E: But this question was specifically about the public.

S: Well, it's like it covers both.

C: No, I'm saying both of those things should be violations.

B: Yeah. I mean, I, yeah, I think there'd be maybe a little bit more leeway for public, but not that much. And anything egregious should absolutely should be dealt with.

S: OK, so you know, obviously I agree with you. So there's umm, you know, basically a discussion going on within like the medical profession as well as the legal profession about this issue. And there's also the question of our state medical boards enforcing any kind of of standard in terms of public information. Give me, let me quote from you a couple of sources here. The federally, the Federation of State Medical Boards, this is the organization of state medical boards in the US. Their position is the following. Physicians who generate and spread COVID-19 vaccine misinformation or disinformation are risking disciplinary action by state medical boards, including the suspension or revocation of their medical license. Due to their specialized knowledge and training, licensed physicians possess a high degree of public trust and therefore have a powerful platform in society, whether they recognize it or not. They also have an ethical and professional responsibility to practice medicine in the best interests of their patients and must share information that is factual, scientifically grounded, and consensus driven for the betterment of public health. Spreading inaccurate COVID-19 vaccine information contradicts that responsibility, threatens to further erode public trust in the medical profession, and puts all patients at risk. The AMA basically agrees with them. Right? That's basically the same, different words.

US#05: What's the problem?

S: The problem is they're not doing it.

US#05: No. Jesus.

S: So there was a recent study, which is what triggered this whole review, that asked the question, are state medical boards disciplining physicians for spreading misinformation? Now, this is a difficult question to get at, right? When you think about how would you research, how would you answer this question? They basically looked where the light was available, right? So they got the information that they were able to get. And then we have to use that as a way to kind of infer how they're doing. So this is a JAMA article. They looked at 3128 medical board disciplinary proceedings involving physicians and they found that only .1% of them were for spreading misinformation to the community. That was the least common reason, .1%. Direct patient misinformation and inappropriate advertising were tied for the next two least common reasons at 0.3%. So these are way below all the other reasons that physicians get disciplined Now. Of course we don't know. Is that representative? Yeah, we don't know how many times physicians are violating this or how many complaints there were. What the percent. The thing is that complaints against physicians if they are found to not be worth acting upon, right? If the physicians are essentially cleared, that information is not made public, that is.

C: Yeah, and the complaints have to be filed in the 1st place. Nobody is right monitoring or policing physicians.

S: Yeah, so we. Don't like there's no way to know how how often physicians are spreading misinformation and how often complaints are being made and and how they're being decided. All we know is of those complaints that are made public, it's a very teeny tiny slice of .1% basically for spreading public misinformation. So the the authors of the study were saying, yeah, you know, this suggests that they're just not doing their job, that they, they also say that we have some indirect information. So the there is an increase in the number of complaints about physicians spreading misinformation.

C: OK, that's good.

S: So we know that while that's happening, the number of disciplinary actions is not increasing.

C: That's not good.

S: Yeah. So it doesn't appear. There does appear to be a disconnect, but yeah, so, but you know, we don't have really perfect information here.

C: Also, how many I'm I'm curious how many physicians and I know that that's a special division of doctors that you're here talking online are actual medical doctors. How many of the COVID misinformation is being touted by people who never who like didn't maintain their license?

S: I don't know what the percentage is, but I know a lot of the ones that I am aware of are MD's.

C: And they're and they still they have.

S: Their MD and they're practicing, yeah.

C: Yeah, that's scary. That's really scary.

S: Yeah, it is. The other side of the coin, though, is the question. If we think it's reasonable for medical boards to hold physicians accountable for spreading misinformation, are they the right people to do it? And.

C: Yeah, probably not.

S: Yeah, the, the, the consensus seems to be that whether or not you think they should be doing it, they don't have the resources to do it. They're basically not in a position to do it. They don't have the the infrastructure of people who can first of all determine if something crosses over that line to. All right, this is demonstrable, egregious misinformation. Not something in the Gray zone, not a matter of opinion, not something about which a ethical physician can have a minority, but reasonable opinion. This is demonstrably wrong, harming the public health, and is something that we could say is over the line.

C: Well and there's enough examples I mean they're famous examples like doctor death in Texas and like these different, but there are enough examples yeah of individuals who it took far too long for them to be stripped of their license like they caused so much harm before enough evidence was amassed and a license was actually revoked. I don't think people are losing their licenses left and right for small things like it has to be really egregious and a lot of people have to be harmed.

S: Generally speaking, state board, state boards are very, very forgiving. Yeah, they.

C: They yeah. And so and so that's already worrisome that they would then be tasked with policing this public health issue because it really is. It's a public health issue.

S: So I think the answer is that they need to reconfigure themselves to be able to do this. And there's the, the, the other way to think about this is that there are other resources out there that they could be availing themselves of for skeptic groups, for example. No, actually, no. What I would say is that this is not something that we should be doing. We, we should be educating the public about this and maybe pointing the, the, the finger at individuals, but we can't be the ones to be deciding like whose license gets acted against. But there are other layers of state of quality control within medicine, right? It's not just state medical boards. There's also specialty boards, right? So if you're an internal medicine doctor, you can get boards certified by the Board of Internal Medicine, which means they can withdraw your certification if you violate their standards. You also have to be credentialed at your hospital. You also have to be credentialed at your hospital. Of course. You could have your own private practice somewhere affiliated with no other institution. You don't have to be board certified. You can just have a license and do whatever you want. So then there's there's always 2 layers. There's the state medical board and then there's the law. You could always be sued, right? There's the malpractice standard. Of course, that's not the one we want to rely upon, because that only kicks in after harm has already been done, right?

C: But is there, should there be like some sort of CDC, NIH, like some sort of like public?

S: There's no federal level regulation of licenses. This would be.

C: No, I don't mean of licenses, I mean of taking some form of action against an individual who is causing a viable risk to public health.

S: Yeah. So again, there's no legal infrastructure right now for this to happen at the federal level.

C: So if we want to.

S: Existing infrastructure, What we could have is, say, for example, the, the, the, the specialty boards are in a great position. They're in the best position to determine what is misinformation because this is what they do all the time. They are the experts. They put together panels of experts to review the scientific evidence and come up with practice this guidelines, and that could include communication guidelines as well. And then the all the state has to do is says, yeah, whatever these guys say, right? All they have to, we're going to utilize the recognized American board certification organizations and their practice guidelines. And they do this all the time. The state boards don't reinvent the wheel 50 times for every state they use, you know, like the AMA ethical standards, they say, Yep, we'll, we'll adopt those, right. They will use with you if when you're sued for or you know, there's an action, a complaint that you violated the standard of care, for example, they don't determine themselves what the standard of care is. They refer to published guidelines or experts or whatever, you know, other people. So it's it's not a stretch to say that, you know, that these that the speciality boards need to get way more involved with this and can be a resource for the state medical boards who then also need to be acting on these much more aggressively and availing themselves of the specialty boards to determine who is violating who's spreading misinformation and disinformation.

C: But then there's another layer here, a wrinkle, and I don't know if you want to get into it, Steve, but there is a wrinkle that comes down to straight up political pressure. And when the zeitgeist of the state, whether we're talking about the directives of the state attorney general or the directives of a surgeon general, are explicitly saying no, we promote these practices, we promote this misinformation, Now things get really murky because there may be political pressure being leveraged on to that state medical board.

S: Well, there shouldn't be, and by and almost by definition, there really can't be any pressure by any federal person or agency.

C: No, I'm talking about at the state level.

S: Oh yeah, at the state level. Yeah, it's all at the state level.

C: But that's what I'm saying, there are states in which. This, but they should be independent. Pro misinformation.

S: Is the governor going to put pressure onto the professional board who licensed it to professionals that they should be independent?

C: See this. Yeah, if it happens, it's. Completely all the time.

S: Yeah, it should be. It should not happen.

C: The state attorney or the state surgeon general or whoever it is putting, do they have a surgeon general of each state?

S: No, usually.

C: Yeah, I don't either the.

S: Attorney General.

C: Handles yeah, the AG so but but I mean, I saw this when I was living in Florida. These directives coming from state officials saying don't get vaccinated.

S: Oh yeah, absolutely. But but but that does that does not tie the hands of any professional organization. And I, I have been involved with professional organizations essentially fighting with the state over this and also the like the regulate, like a state medical board, you know, again, sort of relying upon professional organizations in order to act against somebody who was being protected politically, for example. So I think they are at cross purposes, which is the way it should be. Yeah, which is good, yeah, because it avoids that conflict.

C: Yeah, right.

S: And then and then the the National Board Certification, you know, boards, they are completely independent, right? They are not even part of the government. They are just academic kind of professional organizations whose purpose is really to just promote and certify high standards within their specialty. Again, I think they're optimally positions to deal with these issues and I think they just need to functionally connect with the state medical boards, right? So and unfortunately they've been gun shy though because they've been burned so often, but by both States and by individual quacks, right? So for example, and all and competing professional organizations like the famously like in the 80's, the chiropractor sued the AMA for practice infringement and 1:00. And so the AMA has like been completely gun shy about dealing with pseudoscience and medicine ever since then. In Connecticut, for example, the the state government went against the American Infectious Disease Society right on the on the question of chronic Lyme disease. They sided with the quacks against the professional organization. So the states should absolutely not do that, but they absolutely do do that right? The legislature, the legislature takes on the regulatory roles, or Superman's the regulatory role for purely political purposes. Always causing mischief, never in a good way in my experience. They should just basically let the professionals handle it and stay the freak out of it.

C: Well, and that's what I'm so afraid of is deregulating and the increased distrust of these professional organizations of institutional knowledge as a whole. What happens when you get to a scary place where in certain states these types of licenses are no longer even regulated and anybody can call themselves a doctor?

S: Yeah. Well, if you have a complete erosion of expertise and professionalism and any kind of quality control, the game is over. But we're not there. We are not there.

C: Yet we're not there, but we have holes.

S: Yeah, absolutely. Yeah. And they're mainly legislative. They are mainly. Legislative. Yeah.

C: But that's where a lot of power lies, and that's the part that scares me because the deregulation is happening at the legislative level.

S: Yeah, there's the healthcare freedom laws which are all happening at the at the health that they let the state legislative level, that's where all the mischief is happening. But while they still have the power to, you know, to protect the public with some level of ethical and quality control, they should do their job. And and right now, they're really not doing it. Because I just think they're not set up for it. You know, Again, they have not adapted to this new world of misinformation and they need to. That's the bottom line.

C: 100% because otherwise who is going to protect protect vulnerable individuals who literally do not know any better and are trying to listen to smart people giving them good advice.

S: Yeah, you end up with the dueling ex experts, you know, and everyone just whatever I could believe, whatever I want, and I'll just go with my tribe, you know, because everyone has their own experts.

C: Exactly. Yeah. And they're expert. It seems legitimate. They're licensed, they're practicing, they're credentialed, and nobody's taking that away yet.

S: If you want the the benefits of being licensed and credentialed and certified, you have to actually adhere to the standard. You can't have it both ways. You can't say, yeah, I'm a board certified physician, so you, so you should can trust me and not be liable to those very certifying entities saying, Nope, you can't say that. That's not true. That's misinformation. So the whole there is no First Amendment defense here. There is a cuz this is not personal speech or private speech. This is professional speech. Nobody deserves to be licensed. Nobody deserves to be certified and your board certified. And so yes, you can absolutely lose your board certification if you violate whatever standard the board decides to have. It's completely up to them, right? As long as it's being applied fairly and not selectively, you know, but if they say this is the standard, you have to abide by our standards in order to be board certified. And that includes passing an exam and maintaining your continuing medical education and practicing within the standard of care, blah, blah, blah. And for any reason, they could say, Nope, you no longer meet the, whatever we consider to be the requirements for certification, it can be removed. So anyway, I think it's, I think it's pretty clear, but the, but the, the bottom line is there needs to be pressure to, to take, to take a more active role in policing misinformation and disinformation coming from licensed and certified physicians.

Who's That Noisy? + Announcements (1:02:16)[edit]

S: Jay, it's who's that noisy time?

J: All right guys, last week I played this noisy. You guys have any guesses?

E: Yeah, shots of Ready Whip being passed around everyone open your mouth.

J: So a listener named Matthew Morrison wrote in and said, Hi Jay. My wife Nicole, daughter Nevada and I all agree this sounds like a fire extinguisher being used. I.

E: Think it would be louder than that if it were a fire exting. Those things can be loud.

J: Yeah, when you're right on there, sure, if they're crazy loud, it's not a fire extinguisher, but that's a that's a good guess. A listener named Joel Harding said. Hi skeptics guide my 6 year old son Reed guest guess is that this who's that noisy for this week is an axolotl and I you know I have I didn't know that they made noise Do they make noise? I mean, do they make?

C: Noise like that, they're like teeny tiny.

J: I mean, if they did make a noise that I suppose it would be something like that with them, like screaming. My lungs are on the outside. You know, it's pretty scary thing that they got going on there, another listener named Adam Russell wrote in and said this week's noisy is the mating call of a my knock.

E: Hey, Adam.

J: A good job, right? I don't know if everybody got that. Anybody know what a my knock is?

E: I do. Yeah, from Star Wars Star. Wars. Specifically like to chew on wire lines. Yeah, the cables, you know. Specifically, The Empire Strikes Back.

J: Another listener named Nick wrote in. He said hello, second time guesser. My guest this week is a brush tail possum letting you know you're in its territory. I've recently had two of these cute looking monstrous sound creatures move it in under my house. They are not the brush tail possum and I wouldn't be happy if I if I met one of those. We have a winner from last week. Guys, are you prepared? You're all brimming with excitement, I could tell.

Voice-over: I'm not ready, Jesse.

J: Now I'm. Ready, Jesse Babonis wrote. I think this noisy is the call of a Kiwi bird. That is, that is the sound of a Kiwi bird. Listen again. Not happy creature. Steve, I have to ask you did. Did you have any idea that it was a bird?

S: That was my, that was my, would have been my guess.

J: You did, but you had no idea what the actual bird was.

S: Yeah, I haven't heard that one before.

E: Kiwi, huh? Kiwi had a little thing that we saw it night in in in New Zealand.

S: Well, yeah, we actually saw it during the day, didn't we?

E: Did we? I thought. It was night.

S: Well, it was day to us, but it was in a night. Every switch enclosure and the enclosure was flipped so that it's night was our day so that we could see it right. Remember that it.

E: Was like a trick.

S: Yeah. Oh yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah. Well, apparently they make that noise. So not the most inviting noise, huh?

E: No, Sounds terrifying.

J: All right, guys, I have a new noise for you this week. I'm going to play it for you right now. Yes, it's not a bird. That is most definitely not a bird. I will give everybody that unbelievable hint. So guys, if you think you know what this week's noisy is or if you have a cool noisy that you heard, give me an e-mail, send me an e-mail. The only place I want you to send me the e-mail is wtn@theskepticsguide.org. Few quick things, Steve. So you could always become a patron of the SGU in these times where the world needs skepticism, I believe. I wouldn't say now more than ever, but now is definitely inflection point where we really feel the need to help educate people on how to think and how to be reasonable and how to use reason to come to your conclusions. That's why we're here guys. So if you would like to support the work that we do, go to patreon.com/skeptics Guide All one word. You can also join our mailing list. Every week we send out an e-mail. It gives you a summary of all the things that the SGU has done in the last week. And you could sign up going to theskepticsguide.org and on our homepage, you'll see a button to join there. And we have three shows coming up, the DC, Washington, DC private Show, which is a live recording of the SGU. And also we do an extra hour of fun and audience interaction. It's different every time. If you haven't been to one, go to one. There's only a certain number of these that we will ever do left correct, guys. Mm hmm.

S: It's an unknown number, but it is.

E: That is a. Correct that. Is a correct statement.

J: We also on the same day this is happening all on December 7th of this year, we have a skeptical extravaganza. This is our stage show. This is a live performance that includes all of the SGU and George Robb. Ian is manning the tech table and this is a show that we have been perfecting over the last 10 years. It's a ton of fun. I really do hope that you decide to come join us in DC. We will be, we also will be scheduling more of these around the country in 2025. We are happy, you know, the talks are happening right now. So this is a great show to grab. You can also go to theskepticsguide.org to buy tickets for that. And then and the thing that I'm most excited for is not a con 2025. This is our conference. We started last year in 23 and it is a, it is an SGU celebration. That's the best way I could describe this. The conference is largely around socializing, but we do of course provide an incredible amount of content during the two days that the conference is going on. And there is going to be a lot of fun new things that we do this year. If you're interested, you can go to nadaconcon.com. Evan, what was that URL?

E: Nada con con dot com.

J: Correct.

E: Yes.

J: Please do join us. It's an awesome time. It's a great place to meet new people. We had such a blast last year that people are still talking about it. I know I am. And and Sharon made us a ton of of biscotti, right guys?

E: Oh boy. Oh boy, that was just. So good, yeah. Yeah, but you know, we ate it all so. Yeah. So that's why we're doing it again. The only way to get it is to make to do Nautica Biscotti con.

S: Yeah, that's a rap. Steve. All right. Thanks Jay.

Emails (1:08:49)[edit]

S: One quick e-mail, we had a number of people write us to follow up with our Mid-Atlantic accent discussion. Cool. I file this under. It's always more complicated than you think.

E: It's a big file.

S: So mostly they were referring to a video by a phonetics expert, Doctor Jeff Lindsay, who argues that the notion that the Mid-Atlantic accent is fake is itself a myth. And then he sets about to debunk that myth, citing a lot of evidence, you know, about the origins of the accent. I got to say I'm not convinced by his video. I mean, clearly he understands a lot more about this than I do. But I looked up, just did tried to research it as best as I could, and I could certainly find other experts that seem to be as legitimate as this guy saying something extremely different. So at the very least, I think we need to say that this is a controversy or it's contested. I don't know if this guy, this guy has a YouTube channel, right, where he has a lot of videos about language. That doesn't necessarily mean that he's the definitive authority and everything just because he has a YouTube channel, but he certainly is an expert and he has, you know, a reasoned argument to make. He's basically saying that the quote UN quote Mid-Atlantic accent is a northeastern regional accent. And it's kind of what you know it by the early 20th century, what was settled on as sort of a generic American accent. And he cites evidence from like the aspects of the Mid-Atlantic accent that were were that exist in the regional accents of the Northeast. These those features all pre existed. So he said how could that be fake? However, I also find references that say that not only was the mid Mid-Atlantic accent manufactured, they named the guy who did it. They said this Australian phonetician, William Henry Till. Yeah, phonetician created the Mid-Atlantic accent basically for the purpose of saying there should be an English like A1 accent that any educated person who speaks English anywhere in the world should speak, right? And that's the quote UN quote Mid-Atlantic accent. So I'm not sure how to square the apparent history here that is being cited, you know, authoritatively by some experts with this guy's analysis. Who's saying that? No, it there was it was a it was a Northeastern American regional accent. So I don't know it, it seemed it's it's complicated. I do. There are some points which I think we've some of which we made ourselves and I and I've I actually, interestingly, I first learned that the Mid-Atlantic accent was just as generic American. It was picked because it was a generic American accent. It was sort of the most neutral accent. I only later read that it was sort of an invented or, or or a crafted accent, and now this guy's saying, no, it actually is just sort of the regional accent that is the most neutral and that's why it was kind of preferred by actors. Also, a lot of Hollywood actors were British. That's why they might sound like half American, half British, you know, etc. I also have, you know, in researching this and I've read before that a lot of the quote UN quote regional accents. They're laid on top of that is a socioeconomic accent. So if you, what we might be hearing is just a northeastern upper society accent, which sounds more similar across regions than do the lower socioeconomic class accents, right. So in other words, a upper class person living in Boston, NY and London would sound a lot more similar to each other than a lower socioeconomic class person from those three cities, right?

C: That's also it's interesting to think too, Steve, about like when did like when we think of a neutral broadcast accent today, kind of a generic American accent today, When did that actually start? Yeah, because in the 1600s and 1700s, we were all British, you know what I mean? Like, that's how people or French. Yeah, it depends on where they were. But the the the English accent was probably a British accent.

S: So.

C: And that would have been regional as well.

S: What do you mean by English?

C: I mean from England.

S: Yeah, it was a yeah, of course it was a British accent. I'm not sure what you're saying.

C: I'm saying that early Americans, I'm not talking about indigenous Americans. Yeah, they were settlers. Oh yeah, so. Colonial.

S: Well, we know that, for example, the New York accent is a Dutch accent.

C: Right, so.

S: Southern accent is actually closer to a British accent than the Northern.

C: Accent and the Appalachian accent is very Scottish. Like, At what point, though, did it become definitively American?

S: Well, that's what this guy's saying that there around this time is when it sort of coalesced into a distinctive American accent, and this was just the Northeastern version of that.

C: That feels very late.

S: Yeah, I don't know.

C: Because it feels like we skipped the whole 1800s.

S: I don't know it's.

C: Yeah.

S: So I don't, I don't, I have not come to a comfortable place where I think I've wrapped my head around this. I think it's complicated. I think there are a lot of moving parts here. I don't it may not be so simple as this was a fake accent that was, you know, taught in finishing schools and affected by actors and actors. I think there's multiple things going on, but I'm not convinced that it's entirely a natural regional accent either. I think there is an element of education and socioeconomic status in here as well.

C: And it may be both. It may be that some people naturally spoke that way and other people go, I like the way that person is talking, I'm going to emulate that.

S: Totally. And I know you know that if you go to like radio broadcast school right now, they will teach you how to talk in a very specific way. There is there is a broadcast quote UN quote accent today. We just take it for granted because it's normal for us. But.

C: It's it's the neutral American and it's what it's like. I have friends who are actors, right, but are from other countries. So they go to dialect coaches and they learn how to speak neutral American like broadcast. They also learn how to speak in different accents.

E: Whale Pilgrim.

S: So that that neutral American accent is not fake, but it's not natural either. It is affected even though it is based upon regional accents, so I think it's a complicated.

C: Yeah, that's an interesting way to even look at it, Steve. Like I speak with more of a neutral broadcast accent. I have never had a Southern accent, but my entire family does.

B: Right.

C: So like maybe?

B: You were adopted.

C: But did I fake that? Did I choose that at a certain point in my life? Did I unconsciously choose that? Like, it's very interesting. Some people have thick accents and some people don't.

E: Could it be your peers may have influenced it?

C: I'm sure a lot of things influenced it. I I watched television growing up. I don't know. Well, it's funny.

S: I remember I had a conversation, I had a conversation with somebody from the South, and we were talking about the accents on television, and it was their impression that people on TV spoke in a Southern accent. Well, it was our impression, you know, coming from Connecticut, that they spoke in a Northern accent that well.

E: Then they were using.

S: A the the Southern accent is the exception. And they thought the northern accent was the exceptions. Really. Yeah.

C: And I think that both of those are really obvious. Yeah, right. I hear York and medicution accents all the time on the show. But my parents, I'm from Texas. My parents sound Southern. I definitely hear their accents as well.

S: But it's funny, everyone thought their own accent was the rule, and the other ones were the exception. Yeah. You know, it's like, oh, yeah, that show. Yeah, that's 'cause that, like Barney Miller, they're in New York, so of course they're speaking with a New York accent. That's not the TV accent, though. The TV accent is my accent. That's what, that's what everyone perceived. That's funny.

J: Hey, Steve.

S: Yeah.

J: I forgot to mention something, and this one's pretty cool. So we just turned on on our Patreon the ability to gift somebody a membership. Oh, neat. Oh yeah, nice. I thought this would be a cool thing to do for the for the holiday season. So you just go to Patreon docket?

S: Buy them our books and give it and give them a yes. No accent required.

J: So all you got to do is go to patreon.com/skepticsguide/gift and that link will be on the SGU home page as well. And what you could do is you could do two things. 1 you could give it to anybody you want as a gift in any parameters that you want and it could be a cool Christmas present or whatever. The other thing you could do is you could donate a gift membership to someone in the skeptical community that we will find. You know what, you know, Ian and I are working on this right now that we will be very easy to locate people that want a free membership and then they'll know who you are if you want them to as the person you know, giving the gift. So check it out. I think it's a really cool thing to do and it also can support the SDU.

S: All right. Thanks, Jay. Guys, we have a great interview coming up with Michael Mann.

Interview with Michael Mann (1:18:05)[edit]

S: So let's go to that interview now. We are joined now by Michael Mann. Michael, welcome back to the Skeptics Guide.

US#02: Thanks to you, it's great to be with.

S: You yeah, always pleasure to have you on the show. So you were obviously you're a famous climate scientist and that's had both good and negative aspects in that you've been you've been targeted because you're have spoken publicly what the sign says about climate change. So since we've talked to you last time, it's been a few years actually I think since we spoke last time. How do you think things are going in terms of like hearts and minds, climate change, etcetera?

US#02: It's, it's a great question. This is sort of the topic of my penultimate book, not the most recent one or fragile Moment, but the new climate war back in 2020. Sort of. There's this evolution away from denialism because it's it's difficult to deny something that people can see with their own two eyes, literally being told to not believe what you're seeing with your eyes, what you're hearing with your ears. And so I think polluters, other bad actors, sort of promoting the fossil fuel agenda, if you will, recognize that denialism doesn't really cut it anymore. So they've turned to other tactics. And among them, ironically, is doomism. So I mean, and I mentioned this, you know, in my talk today, that's in some ways a greater threat today than denialism because you have people who would otherwise sort of be mobilizing, would be on the front lines demanding action, becoming convinced it's too late to do anything. And it potentially leads them down this path of disengagement. And you've got some bad actors who are sort of feeding the flames of doomism. It's it's a really diabolical. It's it's absolutely diabolical and Machiavellian. And yeah, it's. It's and that's what we face today.

S: Yeah, and that's it's it's incredibly effective. And in fact, even like among ourselves, we've had to be vigilant about not falling for the doomism, right? Because, and again, just to put it my perspective on this is that and then this is the same thing with like anti vaxxers or whatever. Like you can, the big tell is that they're a denialist is that the answer is always do nothing right, or it's always the negative, or it's always the vaccines, or it's like with climate change, the is always, well, we just shouldn't do anything.

US#02: Reverse engineer with the. Reverse engineer and it's different.

S: The argument changes, but the conclusion is always the same. So at first it was like, it's not happening. Then it's like, well, it's natural cycles. And now it's like nothing you can do about it anyway, so why bother? And, and unfortunately, we've kind of been playing into that. You know, the people were like, the, that's right, yeah, we're saying, hey, we gotta do something, it's gonna get too late, it's gonna be bad, blah, blah. And now they're saying, yeah, you're right. It's like, in fact, it's too late, so why bother doing anything? It's like shit, like we're we've inadvertently been playing into that narrative. And as you say, it's like undercuts the very people who are probably the most activists. Right.

US#02: Yeah. It's it, it, it, it, it is truly pernicious. And, you know, the, the, the good news, I suppose, is in a sense, it's an evolution, you know, towards the stages, you know, evolving, you know, in terms of the stages of denialism or delay, you know, and towards something that we can hopefully the, the point I make in terms of our messaging on climate, it it's good that there's a sense of urgency. We, we can make use of that. People clearly understand the urgency. It's the agency that we have to convince them of. But we're sort of halfway there and we need to sort of deprogram them from the misinformation that they've been fed. And and that's what, again, is so sort of pernicious here is the way that misinformation has been used and weaponized to to feed this sort of agenda of despair and doomism. And, you know, so it's a matter of telling people, look, the science action, look how look what the models predicted and look what the observations show. The models done a really good job. And those same models tell us that we can limit warming below catastrophic levels. The only obstacle is politics, right? Action. It's not physics, right? The physics doesn't tell us we can't do it. The technology. Right.

S: We have the technology too. I make that point too. We actually don't need any technology that we don't already have. That's right. And it's only going to get better even. But even if we flatlined our technology, we could still solve it, and it's going to get better.

US#02: Exactly the economies of scale, there's learning, learning by doing the new efficiencies that, you know, arise when you start deploying that new technology. So yeah, we will do better than sort of the, the, the, the, the baseline scenario, but even the baseline scenario of, you know, a, a shift towards these new energy options will get us there.

C: But how do you, how do you maybe convince is the wrong word? How do you have a conversation with individuals who are are despairing and are despairing for legitimate reasons, Right. Because they look at the political will and they look at every global summit and we're constantly falling short of these arbitrary goals. And they go like we're, yeah, we might have the technology, we might have whatever. We're not going to get there because they don't want to enough. And I'm just a person and I can't control this.

US#02: Yeah, no, absolutely. And that's, that's, that this is often the, the first point I make, we have to sort of parse out the different sort of sources of despair and doomism, because the doomism based on the idea that we've triggered runaway warming. And I mean, that's all just nonsense. And we've got to debunk that nonsense. The, the argument that we'll look at how fraught our politics are, look at the election that, you know, we're in right now, that's much more difficult to combat because it's, it's understandable. Young folks, especially, I teach the university to Pennsylvania. I interact with, you know, Gen. Z, you know, folks every day. And and I understand that and, and, and I understand where it comes from, the cynicism that we can ever rise to the challenge. What I would say is that, you know, I remain sort of a stubborn optimist. Who's the expression I would use in that? You know, I see in those same students a level of fortitude and just sort of Gen. Z ers. To me, they get it in a way that previous generations didn't. They understand that it's their future that's on the line. They are very savvy. They're very when it comes to communication and me, because they grew up in this sort of social media world and they have tools and abilities that my generation didn't have. And they're using those tools to make a real difference. So when I see the students that I teach every day, they sort of inspire me and they convince. They convince me that we can do it. Yeah, yeah, yeah.

S: Yeah, I've described myself as a pragmatic optimist same way I'm an optimist. Because that's the only thing that's going to work, right? Because. Yeah, because being a doomist is a self defeating like and then the same thing with political like. It's all there's nothing we could do about it that's a self fulfilling.

US#02: Prophecy, that's exactly right. And, and, and that's the struggle here, right, is that as scientists and as critical thinkers, we understand that we've got to be truthful to what the science is. That's we, we cannot violate that, that oath that we have to be truthful to the science, which means that if the science really did tell us it was too late to prevent runaway warming, we'd have to come forward and say so. I mean, and and so, you know, Steve Schneider referred to this as as sort of an ethical double bind that we have to be truthful to the science and we have to be effective at the same time it's. Looking to the side has never had to do.

C: I I often see a parallel. It's interesting in in my work working with cancer patients, I see a big parallel and I learn a lot from my patients that there's often a hope for the best but prepare for the worst mentality and understanding that there are some things that are that are written in stone and there are other things where when it comes to hope, I think this is the biggest thing that has kept me from diving into cynicism. Hope is a moving target. You can adjust and adapt your hope based on the available evidence, right? And you, it doesn't have to be all the way over here, right? You can have hope for something over here.

S: That's achievable.

C: Yeah. And when you when you're constantly sort of allowing that, it can keep you looking at the next step in the. Next step, Yeah.

US#02: And we're sort of wired that way.

S: Yeah, yeah. And along those lines, because I was going to ask you this question too, because one of the the tacks that we also take is, yes, there are tipping points, but climate change also is a spectrum. It's like. And yeah, even if you think it's going to get bad, it could get worse. So at this point, our goal is always to make it less bad, right?

US#02: No, absolutely. And this is, I always try to disabuse folks from the notion that there's like this Cliff, like this tipping point that we warm the planet to 1.5 Celsius and we go off the climate Cliff. That's not how it works. I liken it to a highway. We're going down this dangerous highway and we want to get off at the earliest exit that we can, right? If we we missed the 1.5 exit, we don't drive all the way to Topeka, right? We get off at the 1.6 exit.

B: But isn't there though? Isn't there something though to the the idea though that a tipping point could be achieved where the climate basically resets itself into a new stable configuration? I mean, isn't that a thing though?

US#02: Yeah. So let me clarify. So there's no one tipping point. It's there are many possible tipping points with various subsystems of the climate. There are certain tipping elements. There are aspects of the climate system that are, you know, that, that have tipping point dynamic.

S: But no one tipping point is catastrophic.

US#02: Yeah. So if you look at global temperature, for example, that behaves very linearly, at least as far as we can see with the observations and the models. It's the amount of warming is linearly proportional to the carbon emissions. No obvious tipping point. There's no runaway methane feedback of the sort that, you know, some climate doomers, you know, argue the, the, the, the, the warming is a very linear function, and the models have predicted it very well. Where there is the potential for tipping points is in the nonlinear components of the system. And the ice sheets are a good example. There are feedback processes that once you start the collapse of the ice shelves and the, the ice starts surging into the ocean, it sort of feeds back on itself. There's something called the ice clip instability. There are these various positive feedback mechanisms. And of course, positive feedback is not a good thing here. Yeah. And and so that there are elements of the climate system, ice sheet collapse is one of them. There's been a lot of press coverage over the last week or so about the ocean conveyor, the. Amok. The amok exactly Atlantic meridianal overturning circulation. Tell us to see why we don't spell it out.

J: You were you were a researcher on that, weren't you?

US#02: I I was. I signed my name to A to a letter from a number of scientists. Stefan Rahmstarf, a friend of mine from Germany, leading climate scientist from the Potsdam Institute, was it sort of the spearheaded this, but I signed my name to it. And for some reason in the States anyway, I got mentioned quite a bit in the in the coverage. I was sort of like a minor signatory of it. And I agree with the overall tenor of what it said. And there's some fine print that didn't get much coverage in the in the tell us about it that, you know, it's speculative that we don't know where the the tipping point is. There are uncertainties in the models, the observations, you know, are incomplete. And so it's more speculative than definitive.

S: And this is about like the Atlantic conveyor belt turning off is.

US#02: That, Yeah, basically saw the movie The day after Tomorrow. Yeah. I mean, and what happens in that movie is unrealistic, right? You're not going to have tornadoes destroy Los Angeles. You're not going to have super cooled plumes of air killing people or an ice sheet forming, you know, within three days over the northern half of North America. And you're certainly not going to have Jake Gyllenhaal winning an academic decathlon.

J: There's just no way that's complete. Least believable they they did. I mean you.

US#02: I could not suspend my disbelief in that.

J: They did say, though, like it could be, it could be within a few decades or it could be, you know, by the end of the century, You know, I mean, the time span is, is big, but.

US#02: The models, there's a huge spread in the models that we use. Some of them it collapses within a couple decades. Some of them it goes along happily to the end of the century. The other thing is, if it happens, the consequences aren't quite as catastrophic as you might.

B: That's encouraging.

US#02: Yeah. I mean, So what would happen is you'd get cooling in the North Atlantic. And we wrote an article in Nature in 2015 showing that there's there's like if you look at the global temperature pattern over the last century, there's warming just about everywhere, everywhere. But there's this little hole, the South of Greenland in the North Atlantic, where temperatures have actually been cooling.

J: Is that what they call it? The cold BLOB.

US#02: The cold BLOB. There you are, absolutely.

C: Ireland, they complain a lot about this. It's getting colder in Ireland.

US#02: Well, it's, they're in the periphery of where the area that could see. So I mean, in reality, there's only a small area in the North Atlantic that would likely cool. You would. Yeah. And maybe reaching in, you know, to like England, Ireland, slightly slight cooling that could happen, but it's competing against the overall warming and so it's a battle against and the further you get away from the bullseye, the more the warming is likely to win out over the cooling. The.

US#06: Heat Miser and.

US#02: Breeze. Miser, Absolutely. In fact, I talk about cold miser and heat miser in our fragile moment, as you should. Yeah. And you name it, we talk about it in the book. It's, you know.

C: You mentioned this idea that you're already starting to see some evidence of this, that you use the analogy of this really dangerous freeway and wanting to get off of it as soon as possible. And yes, there may be a couple of different identified cliffs. To be, you know, tipping points where? There are cataclysmic or maybe less cataclysmic events happening, but I think the an important point to reinforce there is that we are on the freeway now. And just because I am in a home with good air conditioning and I can wear a coat in the winter and I can wear a tank top in the summer and I have plenty of water, it might as well. There are people whose lives are already destroyed by this, and I think we often don't bring that we keep talking about.

US#01: Later on.

C: Instead.

US#01: Of right now.

J: So the climate refugees you're talking about, right? Like, yeah, absolutely. If you don't live, if you don't live near the equator, then not much has really changed from your people.

C: Coastal, yeah. Or if you're you know there are all of these.

J: Areas, yeah, there's people that are already just massively displaced.

C: I just covered, I just covered this famine that's happening across multiple countries where there's no that high nutrition yield food. Yeah, yeah. Children, this is climate change. Absolutely it's. Directly related.

US#02: Absolutely. I mean, this is something that I try to convey when I, you know, talk about where we are that dangerous climate change, there's this like false notion that again, that Cliff, like dangerous climate change is 1.5 Celsius. That's where dangerous climate change, you know, dangerous climate change is here. If you're, if you're, if you're in Puerto Rico, if you're California, if you're, I mean north. Carolina, North. Carolina as.

S: You said we can't, we can't ever say that hurricane was due to climate change, but we know that there's way too many things happening.

US#02: Well, we know that the, the rainfall, there's a study already an attribution study that knows that there was a 50% increase in the rainfall associated with Helene that can be attributed to the warming of the planet. And that's wow, that that that can be linked directly to human lives.

J: Yeah, absolutely. Lives lost.

US#02: And and huge amounts of property damage.

J: A friend of mine lives in Texas, right? And he's been telling me about the summers recently and, you know, and he's like, it's getting bad. You know, the the grid down there sucks. It can't handle anything extreme that's going on. You know, it's going to be a long time. Yeah. Oh, no. Yeah. They were way above 110. They're way above 110 last year, right?

US#02: That's OK, you can just fly off to Cancun if you're the. Senator Right.

J: Exactly. So it was funny, as I'm talking to him and in the conversation, we're like, what's happening with the people that live in Mexico or you keep going down in the equator. I mean, it's like, yeah, it's bad in Texas, but we're north.

US#02: Well, and that's very real. I mean, and so like the, you know, this leads us to, so all of these calamities mean that there are areas of the planet that are becoming increasingly unlivable. And that means more people, 8.2 billion people and growing, competing for less land and less food, less water. And that is a prescription for, you know, a dystopian, right?

S: Do you think we're having an immigrant problem now?

US#02: Right.

US#01: Imagine what that's going to be. Oh. My God. Yeah, what does that even? Mean like there are people who need a place to live.

J: Well, that's the thing, the thing that scares me the most is that right when we get to a point where let's say, you know, and I don't want to catastrophize, but this basically is a catastrophic. But the the idea is at some point there's something that there's going to be some point in time when a lot of people are going to be displaced. And it can't be like, it's not going to be a regional fix, like, oh, they just moved a little north here. Whatever. It's going to be like, we have to move people out. This is a global effort. It could be, it could be a thing where we have to say we have to save 100 million people from dying. You know it.

US#01: It is. We are in that.

J: Yeah, exactly.

US#01: It's already happening.

J: Exactly.

US#01: It's causing massive geopolitical.

J: But you know what they say, Kara? They say, well, we're not. the United States isn't the biggest greenhouse gas emitter. And if China's not doing it, why should we do it?

US#02: So we are, yeah, we put more. So the climate only cares about the cumulative carbon pollution that's been added?

J: Doesn't care about the country at all, right it?

US#02: Doesn't care about the country and doesn't care about what year it was added. So the United States has put more carbon pollution into the atmosphere than any other. Country.

S: It's a cumulative. They are the big yeah, Currently, per per capita, we're also the biggest yeah.

US#02: Exactly.

S: But China just has a big population. They're they're currently at the moment currently. Yeah, exactly.

US#02: Yeah.

S: So they're also kicking our ass on solar power and other.

C: Things so they may mitigate that long before you can even reach us cumulative.

US#02: That's exactly right. They're they're ahead of us on renewable energy front. They are. Yes, they may be emitting carbon, more carbon than us, but not on a per capita basis, not even close. So it, it's a diversionary tactic, right? Whenever when you hear that, oh, what about it's what about is?

J: What is what we call? It. Yeah, yeah. Yeah, I know it's frustrating because you're like, well, it's kind of start somewhere, you know, it's like, it's not like, OK, on three, we're all going to start doing this. It's like, well.

S: It's the exact same, same thing as the Doomism. It's like, well, unless everyone's doing it, what's the point? It's like, yeah, but every bit counts. It could always be worse, making it less bad, you know, we're doing our bit, all that stuff. It's like it's and I think it is part of the same bit counteracting the Doomism thing.

C: The analogy of like being in a rowboat and there's holes in the floor of the rowboat and you're not going to plug your hole because that guy over there hasn't plugged his hole. Like what are you doing? Yeah. Of course I'm going to plug my hole, then I'll go help you plug your hole once my hole is plugged.

J: And the, you know, the governmental bureaucracy, it's, you know, it's madding because like, you know, we're like, we see issues being discussed. Like, yeah, I get it. Yeah, that's not a bad issue. That's not a bad issue. But can global warming please take a front seat at some point in some recent administration, Right?

US#02: Well, what do you? I was going to ask you next. I actually wanted to like piggyback. Up. Go ahead, what you just said because I, I, I want to extend the analogy further. And, and then there are those who are telling us that no, we don't need to plug the holes the bottom of the boat. We just need spoons to spoon out the water.

J: Right.

US#02: Yeah, that's. Geoengineering. It's so. Obvious.

J: What we I had somebody e-mail me going, what if everything stays the same and we just get really good at carbon capture And I'm like, we will be very good at carbon capture in about 100 years. We'll have massive awesome technology, but we can't wait till then. That's exactly.

B: Yeah, speaking about that, speaking about that, some people I've read have a point of view where they say that at some point some of these maybe these, some of these non linear tipping points are will be kind of imminent apparently. And merely decreasing the warming isn't going to be enough and we need to actively cool the planet with some form of geoengineering. So what are what are your thoughts on geoengineering?

US#02: Yeah, so I have a whole chapter in the new climate war. I'll talk a little bit about it in our fragile moment, geoengineering or what could possibly go wrong?

S: Right. Oh, right. Like Snowpiercer?

US#02: You ever see that? Right, Yes, yeah, there, there. And there was also, it was an, there was an episode of this climate series that ran on one of the streaming services where they had a geoengineering sort of.

S: Mishap.

US#02: Mishap exactly. Oops. I think it involved the problem is that, you know, it's being used mostly as a crutch right now, as an excuse for business as usual. I mean, who's really, you know, who is really pushing geoengineering is, you know, Rex Tillerson, you know, former CEO of Exxon Mobil. Climate change is just an engineering problem. This idea that we can engineer our way out of it is sort of it's a license to continue to, you know, to pollute. And as you know, as we've already sort of alluded to here, this is not proven technology at scale. Like, yeah, it's theoretical at this point. There's no demonstration that it can be done at scale on the time frame necessary, like carbon capture now geoengineering other things like sulfate aerosol.

B: Yes, in the stratosphere, I mean, that's something that we have lots of. We've seen it happen with volcanic eruptions. We know what it can, the impact it can have to the Earth's albedo and stuff. So those are that seems more interesting to me because you put those up there and some studies show that diamond dust would apparently would be really efficient. Put them up there. They last for a while and they that sounds truly it was. It was.

S: $100 trillion.

B: 100 trillion or 200 trillion / 40 / 40 years over 40 years. But I mean, it could be they said 1.6° cooling in that time, but here's.

C: The part that's so infuriated, it's like, I think about these like, almost like a medical analogy, right? Like if you don't want cavities, brush your teeth. Don't just extract the tooth every time you get a cavity. Like, if you're allergic to shell, don't just eat a bunch of shellfish and keep giving yourself the. Medicine. Actually used that.

US#02: I used that framing in a piece I wrote for BBC once that, you know, you know, as sort of planetary doctors, if you will. We have an oath to first do no harm and and this violates that. Oh, potentially because what you're describing like, yeah, it's like a like a volcano. We know how it's during the volcano.

B: Corrupt rain. Acid rain.

US#02: What is acid rain? And it's also the climate that you get if you so the global. If all we cared about was the global average temperature, you can calculate how much sulfate aerosol you would need to pump in to cool off. But the problem is the, the if you look at the pattern of the climate response to a volcanic eruption, it it's not the inverse of the global warming pattern. So some areas will warm even faster, some will cool. The hydrological cycle globally over the continents is likely to slow down. So you get drying over the continents and and then ozone depletion and other potential unintended consequences. So sort of the it's the principle of unintended. There's uncertainty, and uncertainty isn't our friend here.

C: Right. This is the largest system we're in this system, it's a stochastic system. Everything we do changes it. And we got into this mess because we geoengineer. I think that's the thing we have to remember, right? The extractive practices, the utilization, the burning. This is geoengineering. And we think we're going to geoengineer our way out, when what we could do is stop geoengineering so much.

US#02: Well, this actually came up at the the VIP luncheon. Were any of you at that OK?

J: Yeah, we're not. Yeah, I had an extra ticket I would have given somebody.

US#02: We were interviewing people were interview.

J: Yeah, I know.

US#02: Is that got him? Yeah, it we had a good sort of panel discussion and, and, and one of the things that came up was like it was we were asked a question about time travel. I was.

B: Going to say that, yeah.

US#02: I was just going to say that and Neil deGrasse Tyson, you know, had an answer. Brian Cox had had had an answer sort of. And then the the question was posed to the physicist. I said, oh, wait a second. That was all but dissertation in physics. So let me give an answer like a story about time travel that and I the the story that I used is like when people ask me is there any techno fix to climate that would work? I said yeah, Time Machine. Right. That's the only techno fix that would full.

S: You know, fully work.

B: I'm afraid though, that 30, say 30 years when it's bad, really bad, because I'm not very, as you know, I'm not very optimistic that we're going to get our shit together enough to to to make this not even more disastrous. 30 or 40 years. I could see some countries getting together and say we got to do something dramatic. Now let's try this geoengineering Hail Mary. You raise a good point. That's scary.

C: Yeah, we don't have a global government.

US#02: Yeah, exactly.

C: It's a problem.

US#02: And so, and so you have people and so you have people now looking at global governance issues like if we're in, and I, I support that, like even if you don't support geoengineering, we should be thinking about what we do in the event like a rogue country like China decides it's favorable for its interests to. And, and part of the problem here is like one place cools at the expense of another place warming more. And so it becomes this very fraught sort of game theory problem if you have individual actors acting in a way to try to optimize their own climate in a way that may be destructive to the global climate. Yeah, it I don't want to be the sunny optimist Pollyannish about it. I I don't think it's too late to solve the climate crisis for the reasons that we've talked about. But I think we have a monumental battle on our hands. And the the larger battle here is the the battle to preserve democracy, to preserve fact based discourse and the the notion of objective truth. Yeah, yeah. Which and you know that which you guys are all we're.

S: Doing they're saying the solution is to become a patron of the SGU. That's what I'm that's what I'm hearing.

US#02: That's what I heard. That it is, and I'll be looking for the check in the mail. Thank you very much. Yeah, absolutely.

S: Well, we pay in bubble gum now. Well, Michael, thank you so much for sitting down with us. This was great.

US#02: It was a pleasure, guys. Thank you.

S: Thank you.

Science or Fiction (1:45:18)[edit]

Theme: None

Item #1: Analysis of a Martian meteorite indicates the presence of bodies of liquid water on the surface of Mars as late as 742 million years ago.[5]
Item #2: A recent study finds that doctors using ChatGPT Plus as an additional aid did no better at making diagnoses than those using only traditional methods.[6]
Item #3: In an animal study, researchers have demonstrated the ability to deliver functional mRNA through inhalation.[7]

Answer Item
Fiction Item #1
Science Item #2
Science
Item #3
Host Result
Steve
Rogue Guess


US#05: It's time for. Science or fiction?

S: Each week I come up with three Science News items or facts. 2 real, one fake, and then I challenge my panelists. Skeptics tell me which one is the fake. Three regular news items. You guys ready this week?

J: Let's do it.

S: All right, here we go. Item number one. Analysis of a Martian meteorite indicates the presence of bodies of liquid water on the surface of Mars as late as 742,000,000 years ago. Item #2A recent study finds that doctors using ChatGPT Plus as an additional aid did no better at making diagnosis than those using only traditional methods. And #3 In an animal study, researchers have demonstrated the ability to deliver functional mRNA through inhalation. Kara, go first.

C: OK, so scientists analyzed a Martian meteorite and found the presence or found something indicative of the presence of bodies of liquid water on the surfaces. Mars as late. Does that say 742? Yep, a million years ago yeah, I have no idea when the liquid dried up, but I do think there was liquid. A recent study finds that doctors using ChatGPT plus, I don't really know is that just like the most recent one? What's the difference? Okay, as an additional aid, did know better at making diagnosis than those using only traditional methods. Well, there's so much here like what were they diagnosing like a strep throat or were these complex complicated things? And then item number three. In an animal study, researchers have demonstrated the ability to deliver functional mRNA through inhalation.

S: Meaning that it gets into the system and it functions, it does what it's supposed to do, it takes up shop makes.

C: Proteins, you know, so I could see them doing that with some sort of viral vector. You inhale the virus and then it, you know, inserts itself. I don't know that one doesn't bother me that much. I have no idea the age of the water though, so that's problematic. And then the ChatGPT plus no better making diet. There's just too many unknowns in this one. I believe that would be the case if they were diagnosing strep throat. I do not believe that would be the case if they were diagnosing some sort of kind of infectious disease that required understanding of Tropical Medicine or differentials that that weren't.

S: I mean, I'll say they were challenging diagnosis. Otherwise they were would. Have been a pointless study.

C: Yeah, yeah, I agree. So I think, I think in that case then the ChatGPT plus one is the fiction. I think that probably it did help to be able to ask. Wait real quick though, when you say traditional methods, does that mean they were still able to like, look stuff up in books? Yeah. Oh yeah. So they're still following it as standard differential model and they still had access to all the same information. OK, then I'll go with Mars. Maybe the dates wrong, I don't know.

B: OK, that's your answers.

C: Yeah, I don't know.

B: OK, Bob. Yeah, Martian meteorite, Yeah, that kind of makes sense. I don't have see any problems with that shit. Let's see the go to three, the inhaling mRNA. Yeah, I agree with Kara. If there's a viral vector, that makes a lot of sense. But I mean, viral vectors are scary. Would they use that route? And then if they had a viral effector, what wouldn't necessarily even need to use it for inhalation, but it kind of makes sense. But ChatGPT, yeah, I mean, I think there might be, I don't know, maybe unless you're using ChatGPT with a specific medical database, if you're just using, I'm not aware of the the insurance and outs of ChatGPT plus, but I think there, there might be a lot of, you know, medical misinformation mixed in in there. So generic ChatGPT might not be a great source for that kind of stuff, but it wouldn't. It wouldn't surprise me either way, but I'll say ChatGPT is fiction.

S: OK, Evan.

E: Yeah. So the Mars meteorite as late as 7 142,000,000 years ago with with indications of liquid water. I we know there has been liquid water on the surface of Mars, but when and a meteorite revealing that seems to I don't really see anything wrong with this one. Nothing is is saying hey red alert this doesn't jive I I think that's In Sync with with what's understood about Mars, but that we found it is kind of cool. The ChatGPT one. This is the one I think lends itself the most being the fiction only because not for any technical reasons just for a guest reason. It reads here as an additional aid did no better at making diagnosis. So that means if it's it would be fiction if it did better or worse. So you kind of have two directions you can go with this one. So I think that opens up the possibility that that one's fiction a little bit more. And the last one, I don't I I know nothing about, you know, mRNA through inhalation and just what I heard Karen and Bob say, yeah, I'll say that one's science. So, ChatGPT. I'll go with Bob Fiction.

J: And Jay, the Martian 1, I mean, I have no reason to think that the 742,000,000 years ago water thing, like I just, there's no reason to not believe that. Like there's just no information in here that you can test other than the date. And it makes sense, you know, I mean, I, I can't contest it in any way. So I'm I'm just going to assume that one is science. The second one about the ChatGPT being used as a diagnostic tool, does it actually help physicians or not? You know, if they have access to the latest information, it would be no different than asking ChatGPT if it has the latest information. The thing that I wouldn't watch at GPT to actually do though, is give any kind of medical advice. So I just don't think that's a good thing to do anyway. Now, if they specifically programmed ChatGPT with very specific information and instructions, it might it might help. I mean, I think it would definitely speed things up at the very least, but I just don't think today that that it's there. I don't think that that's it. So I'm definitely very suspicious about the, you know, breathing in an mRNA and have it function it can, you know, I know that breathing certain things in is a vector, right? It does work for certain things. I just don't think it would work for this. So I'm going to say that one's a fiction.

S: OK, so we're spread out.

C: I hate my first. I disagree with my answer.

S: You want to. Change the answer you want to change I.

C: Do but I can't.

S: Is that true?

J: We don't do that. Whoa.

C: I never let it. He's never let people do that. I will stick with my answer, but I think the ChatGPT 1 is the fiction.

S: OK, well let's start with #3 we'll go back.

J: Fucking right?

S: Animals, Liver, functional mRNA.

J: Can't say do inhalation.

S: Jay, you think this one is the fiction? Everyone else thinks this one is science anymore, and this one is science. Yes, sorry, Jay. What do you guys think? It's not a virus. And so if it's not a virus, what are they using as the carrier, as the carrier for the mRNA? Because it can't just beat naked mRNA lipids, CRISPR lipids, lipid. What?

E: Nanoparticles.

S: Nanoparticles. Lipid nanoparticles didn't.

C: You.

S: Yes, I did. Story last. Week yeah, lipid nanoparticles are magic. And now they are they are great, great technology. So they, they used lipid nanoparticles to house the mRNA. So basically it becomes aerosolized or nebulized and you breathe it in, it gets into the lungs, it sets up shop and they they they tested it in mice and it was just producing a marker and they and it was sustained production of the protein that it coded for. I think it made it light up or something. Now this this was also fixing an earlier problem because they had tried to use lipid nanoparticles previously for this aerosolized or nebulized delivery of mRNA. The problem was that the nanoparticles clumped together and they got too big and then that would provoke an immune response. And so which remember that was the problem with the other lipid nanoparticle news item that I talked about. So this study was figuring out how to keep the lipid nanoparticles from clumping so that they could they could remain individual and they could deliver their MRN to the lung cells and it worked. Yay. So this could be a way, you know, in the future we may like be inhaling our mRNA vaccines, no more shots, right? Or inhaling mRNA drug deliveries, You know, so this.

C: Is yeah, that's cool. We're already inhaling what, flu? Vaccine.

S: Yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah.

US#05: Did that come back? I thought they stopped doing that.

C: Oh, I don't know. But I mean, it has. It has been.

S: We have the technology to do that.

US#05: Yeah.

S: If it's a live only for live viruses.

C: Yeah.

S: And that's why they didn't want to necessarily. It was because of the live virus, not because of it was inhaled. So, yeah, this is an animal study. So it's got to go through. They got to. There was in mice. They got to do bigger animals and then people and then. So, you know, 5 to 10 years, whatever. I guess we'll keep going back. A recent study finds that doctors using Chet GPT Plus as an additional aid did know better at making diagnosis than those using only traditional methods. Bob and Evan think this one is the fiction. Kara thinks it's the fiction, although she didn't choose it officially. Jay thinks this one is science and this one is say it's science. What?

E: Science. No. Shit, what the hell?

S: Kara, man, you managed to pull it out.

E: Wow, awesome.

S: Like talk about being right despite being wrong.

C: That is amazing.

S: Yeah. So yeah, they did know better. Now I got it's again, this is an additional aid, meaning that the the doctors in the group using ChatGPT had access to everything the other group had plus ChatGPT plus, right. And it did not help them make any more accurate diagnosis. But here's the interesting thing I didn't include in the in the The Science of fiction, when they compared those two groups to just ChatGPT by itself, ChatGPT outperformed both groups of physicians. You should have included. That even the group of physicians using ChatGPT, which means that the introduction of a physician resulted in less accurate diagnosis.

E: Goodbye doctors, so much for all those boards and stuff.

C: That is bananas.

S: So. I know it's crazy.

C: So they were asking it more specific questions by then as opposed to just blanket saying what does this person have based on these symptoms.

S: Well, what what the the authors concluded they did not conclude that we should therefore be having ChatGPT make diagnosis. What they said was clearly we need to teach physicians how to optimally use these large language models as a diagnostic assistant because they're not using it right. Whatever they were just they didn't help them get to a more accurate diagnosis are clearly they were not leveraging that technology, even though it is capable of making a more accurate diagnosis by itself, which is it's incredible. Which means that analysis of a Martian meteorite indicates the presence of bodies of liquid water on the surface of Mars as late as 742,000,000 years ago is the fiction.

B: So here I'm looking at here I'm looking at a goddamn article that says meteorite contains evidence of liquid water on Mars 740.

S: Two, I know, I know. That's exactly. That is the type of the article.

B: Cool, then we were right.

S: And I was hoping, I was hoping that people who read that headline but didn't read into the the article itself, especially the actual article and not the press release, would would not have picked up on the fact that they're not saying that there was liquid water on Mars because liquid mortar water on Mars dried up 3 billion years ago. And what they're saying was that there was probably still some geologic activity, like some some volcanic activity, which there still is in pockets on Mars. That that activity melted the permafrost, causing a pocket of liquid water. And that that water affected the crystallization of the minerals in the meteorite that ultimately became a meteorite on Earth, you know, from Mars.

US#05: Yeah.

S: So that was that was the deception. But yeah, if you've just read the headline, you might be it was it was water, deep water interacting with rock, not water on the surface of Mars.

Skeptical Quote of the Week (1:57:59)[edit]


“I have a foreboding of an America in my children's or grandchildren's time - when the United States is a service and information economy; when nearly all the key manufacturing industries have slipped away to other countries; when awesome technological powers are in the hands of a very few, and no one representing the public interest can even grasp the issues; when the people have lost the ability to set their own agendas or knowledgeably question those in authority; when, clutching our crystals and nervously consulting our horoscopes, our critical faculties in decline, unable to distinguish between what feels good and what's true, we slide, almost without noticing, back into superstition and darkness. The dumbing down of America is most evident in the slow decay of substantive content in the enormously influential media, the 30-second sound bites (now down to 10 seconds or less), lowest common denominator programming, credulous presentations on pseudoscience and superstition, but especially a kind of celebration of ignorance.”

 – - Carl Sagan, Demon Haunted World, (description of author)


S: Evan, give us a quote.

E: Here it. Here it is. Steve, you requested this quote.

S: Yes, I like this quote.

E: I have a foreboding of an American, my children's or grandchildren's time. When the United States is a service and information economy. When nearly all the key manufacturing industries have slipped away to other countries. When awesome technological powers are in the hands of a very few and no one representing the public interest can even grasp the issues. When the people have lost the ability to set their own agendas or knowledgeably question those in authority. When clutching our crystals and nervously consulting our horoscopes are critical faculties in decline, unable to distinguish between what feels good and what's true, we slide, almost without noticing, back into superstition and darkness. The dumbing down of America is most evident in the slow decay of substantive content in the enormously influential media. The 32nd sound bites now down to 10 seconds or less. Lowest common denominator programming. Credulous presentations on pseudoscience and superstition, but especially a kind of celebration of ignorance. And we all should all know that as Carl. Sagan, Carl Sagan from. His book The Demon Haunted World, If you do not have a copy, you must must go get a copy along with a copy of our book The Skeptics Guide to the Universe.

S: Written in the 90s and, you know, basically very prescient, you know, my gosh, in terms of you basically nailed it and I.

C: May have shared that on my socials the day after the.

S: Election. I know this was very, a lot of people were shared like, yeah, we got to read this because this is unfortunately true. The idea that this is my giant frustration with this year is that the media does not meaningfully inform the the electorate that people do not understand the issues well enough to make an informed decision. And basically the majority of people are susceptible to propaganda and manipulation and this kind of lowest common denominator kind of arguments. And it's very disappointing.

E: Hugely.

S: Yeah.

E: We're gonna have some choice things to say about it at our year end review, yeah. In a few, yeah.

S: We have a lot of work to do. The the information ecosystem of America is broken, in my opinion. And we've been saying this for years. This is nothing new. You know, this is, it's just getting worse, you know, with social media and everything, the loss of good science journalism, the loss of good journalism, period, the, you know, rise of essentially propaganda media. It's just, you know, we've lost our ability to make informed decisions as voters in this country, at least in sufficient numbers that reality holds sway. You know, the the influence of reality and facts on people's decisions is too small, you know, to be definitive, like it should be unfortunate. OK. That's the world we're living in. Thank you all for joining me this week.

J: You're welcome.

S: All right, Steve, and until next week, this is your Skeptics Guide to the Universe.


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