Archive for May 15, 2008

Richard Saunders is on his way here!

Posted in GUSSF Events! on May 15, 2008 by gussf

The Griffith University Society for Skeptics and Freethinkers invite you (yes, you) to check out our upcoming event.

This Wednesday the 21st of May we are presenting our first guest speaker of the year, Richard Saunders. Richard is Vice President of Australian Skeptics http://www.skeptics.com.au/ and founder of Mystery Investigators http://www.mysteryinvestigators.com/richard/ and is taking the time to fly up from Sydney to give a presentation for us. The very same presentation in fact that he will give at James Randi’s Amazing Meeting 6 in Los Vegas this June, sharing the floor with Dr. Neil DeGrasse Tyson, PZ Myers, Matthew Chapman, and Sharon Begley, Phil Plait (the Bad Astronomer), Penn & Teller, Dr. Richard Wiseman, Dr. Michael Shermer, Adam Savage (from the Mythbusters), Steve Novella, and many more!

Richard has appeared on channel nine’s “A Current Affair” and channel seven’s “Sunrise” program multiple times in his role as a skeptic, debunking such topics as so called psychic detectives, ghosts, crop circles and more. Richard also runs the Tank vodcast in which our group has featured and I currently report for.

Admission is free for members of the GUSSF and a gold coin donation is all that is asked of anyone else who would like to come so feel free to invite/coerce/ drag as many people as you like both from on campus and of course the wider community, the more the merrier!

The event starts at 6.30pm in G17, lecture theatre 3 of the Gold Coast campus http://www.griffith.edu.au/__data/assets/pdf_file/0006/51549/gold-coast-buildings-january-2008.pdf

Jayson D Cooke

Griffith University Society for Skeptics and Freethinkers

Why science really is the career of the 21st century……..

Posted in Science on May 15, 2008 by gussf

On Monday the 27th August, a few GUSSF members (Jo, Jayson, David and I) attended a lecture by the renowned Dr. Karl Kruszelnicki at Griffith University Nathan Campus. The lecture began with an introduction of Dr. Karl, whom holds degrees in Physics and Mathematics, master’s degrees in Astrophysics and Biomedical Engineering and to top it all off, a degree in medicine and surgery. Wow. Most people will know him from his science show on Triple J or the many pop-science books and articles he has written.

The topic of the lecture was “Why Science is the Career of the 21st Century”. I must say, Dr. Karl made a convincing argument; although, I don’t think I really needed convincing. The lecture covered the creativity in engineering, the wonder of physics, the amazing potential of genetics research and the complex but rewarding future of computer science. During the address Dr. Karl held the audiences attention, as you would expect a speaker of his experience would, with fascinating side stories and clever use of multimedia.

So why is science the career of the 21st century?

Dr. Karl used examples of humans living to 1000 years old and inhabiting other planets, he spoke of being able to regrow a lost limb and of computing power far beyond what we have today. But I think it’s simpler than that. Sure, it would be cool to discover a way to reverse aging or live on Mars or even just design a kick-ass computer; but let’s face it, discoveries such as those don’t happen everyday. My reason for believing that science is the career of the 21st century is because it’s all we have. Science is the only method by which we can understand more about the world, ourselves and this massive place we so casually call the Universe. Nothing else comes even close to giving us such a phenomenal insight into pretty much anything we wish to investigate. It’s time to shake off the juvenile ideas of centuries past and face the world with a sense of wonder that can only be truly satisfied through science.

“Even if the open windows of science at first make us shiver after the cosy indoor warmth of traditional humanizing myths, in the end the fresh air brings vigour, and the great spaces have splendour of their own.” ~Bertrand Russell, What I Believe, 1925

By William Bennet

GUSSF