Monday, July 31, 2006
Wednesday, July 26, 2006
Domesticated Apes
His strategy is to cross the tame rats with the ferocious rats and then score the progeny for how much of each trait they inherit. He hopes to identify 200 sites along the genome at which the tame and ferocious rats differ. If one or more of the sites correlate with tameness or fierceness in the progeny, they will probably lie near important genes that underlie one of the two traits.
The genes, if Mr. Albert finds them, would be of great interest because they are presumably the same in all species of domesticated mammal. That may even include humans. Richard Wrangham, a primatologist at Harvard, has proposed that people are a domesticated form of ape, the domestication having been self-administered as human societies penalized or ostracized individuals who were too aggressive.
Monday, July 24, 2006
Case Work
Wednesday, July 12, 2006
School Project Time
Thanks!
(if you're not feeling magnanimous, I understand. It is Wednesday, after all)
Tuesday, July 04, 2006
Monday, July 03, 2006
Where Words Go To Die
You too can delve into this otherworld of words (The Phrontistery), and ponder what has become of:
alabandical
adj
1656 -1775
barbarous; stupefied from drink
His behaviour after the party was positively alabandical.
And
foppotee
n
1663 -1663
simpleton
What a pitiful foppotee he was, always oblivious to our jeers!
Did we outgrow them? Grad school is going to lead me to need the word “alabandical” (RIP 1775) and “foppotee” (RIP 1663). Why would these gems fade out and others like “inebriated” and “moron” remain? Perhaps answers to all our philosophical queries can be found in these lost words… especially words like epalpebrate and stiricide:
(I include this one because I liked the sentence):
cacatory
adj
1684 -1753
accompanied by loose bowels
For the diners, the effects of the chicken cacciatore, alas, were cacatory.
epalpebrate
adj
1884 -1884
lacking eyebrows
If you don't stop plucking, soon you'll be epalpabrate!
jobler
n
1662 -1662
one who does small jobs
We've found a great jobler who takes care of our repairs quickly and cheaply.
murklins
adv
1568 -1674
in the dark
She stumbled murklins about the house until she found the light switch.
pigritude
n
1623 -1656
slothfulness
Despite the college student's pigritude, he continued to maintain a 'B' average.
stiricide
n
1656 -1656
falling of icicles from a house
The untended tenement was very dangerous in winter due to stiricide.
uglyography
n
1804 -1834
bad handwriting; poor spelling
Your uglyography conceals the cogency and brilliance of your ideas.

