27 April 2009
Lovecraft Unbound
Thanks to Ellen Datlow, this can be revealed.
Lovecraft Unbound edited by Ellen Datlow. To be released in October from M Press.
Table of Contents
Introduction by Ellen Datlow
"The Crevasse" by Dale Bailey and Nathan Ballingrud
"The Office of Doom" by Richard Bowes
"Sincerely, Petrified" by Anna Tambour
"The Din of Celestial Birds" by Brian Evenson
"The Tenderness of Jackals" by Amanda Downum
"Sight Unseen" by Joel Lane
"Cold Water Survival" by Holly Phillips
"Come Lurk with Me and Be My Love" by William Browning Spencer
"Houses Under the Sea" by Caitlín R. Kiernan
"Machines of Concrete Light and Dark" by Michael Cisco
"Leng" by Marc Laidlaw
"In the Black Mill" by Michael Chabon
"One Day, Soon" by Lavie Tidhar
"Commencement" by Joyce Carol Oates
"Vernon, Driving" by Simon Kurt Unsworth
"The Recruiter" by Michael Shea
"Marya Nox" by Gemma Files
"Mongoose" by Sarah Monette & Elizabeth Bear
"Catch Hell" by Laird Barron
"That of Which We Speak When We Speak of the Unspeakable" by Nick Mamatas
22 April 2009
Hear the joke about the Vatican and the Science Ethics Prize?
A Eureka needs to be born again
The very cool Eureka Prizes are Australia's "Oscars of Science". Presented by the Australian Museum, the Eurekas celebrate outstanding work in many fields.
The Eureka Prize for Ethics Research is sponsored bythe Vatican Australian Catholic University.
The 2008 winner of the Ethics Prize is Garrett Cullity, a "Philosopher of Religion".
"Cullity has won the ACU Eureka Prize for Ethics for a book in which he argues that the altruistic model of restricting one's life to aid another is flawed and that it is not morally wrong to live a life of rich personal fulfillment."
- "Eureka Prize wins for the good life", CN Cath News
If the current sponsors of the prize continue, perhaps we can look forward to these issues as future winners:
"Australia waged the world's most effective war on AIDS by ignoring the Catholic Church."
— David Marr, "Pell rides papal bandwagon of death", Sydney Morning Herald, April 11, 2009
"If the Pope is right about condoms' effectiveness, surgeons will have to abandon latex gloves to reduce the likelihood of transmitting bugs. If latex won't work on a lone phallus, what chance does it have against 10 digits with nails on the tips?"
— Peter Robinson, letter, Sydney Morning Herald, April 20, 2009
"Church's condom stand based on religion not science"
— Professor Andrew Gulich, HIV Epidemiology and Prevention Program, University of New South Wales, "First Word", Sydney Morning Herald, April 21, 2009
Australia's science fiction and fantasy community: Arise!
The Sydney Morning Herald community is doing its part, with its letters and stories. But the Holey See is taking up our turf, and we should claim it back. We're the fictionistas. We know the difference between science and fiction, reality and fantasy, and we play with it every day, stretching the boundaries of possibilities, but never breaking them (except for the sinful fun of it.) Many of us are scientists! And some of us wear rubber gloves, even the ones with only one finger.
If we can't help to save the Ethics Prize, we should sponsor a Rubber Glove for Ethics. If, however the Ethics Prize were to be reborn, the God industry should be excommunicated from any part of it, and the judges should include people such as Gulich, Robinson and Marr, a mixture of science professionals and people from the 'community' at large. Then this prize could mean something and not be such a joke.
The very cool Eureka Prizes are Australia's "Oscars of Science". Presented by the Australian Museum, the Eurekas celebrate outstanding work in many fields.
The Eureka Prize for Ethics Research is sponsored by
"Because the world of higher education constitutes for the universal church 'a privileged field for her work of evangelization and her presence in the cultural sphere,' the university's health is a matter of great concern to every pope.With so many problems on so many fronts, and capabilities in life sciences never before achievable, the $10,000 Eureka Ethics Research Prize should be both controversial and exciting, something that also enhances Australia's image around the globe as much as our overabundance of brilliant (and sometimes very brave) scientists. One would think the Ethics Prize must be the hardest to decide, given the competition of ethical issues confronting scientists. The 2008 winner was a corker, avoiding the obvious problems and going for the underlying cause of our world financial crisis: The scourge of selflessness and asceticism amongst the wealthy.
"Of primary concern to the Vatican in all its interventions and initiatives in the sphere of education is the preservation and fostering of an institution's specifically Catholic identity."
- Michael J. Miller, Catholic Universities and their Catholic Identity, 2005
(Archbishop Miller is Secretary to the Congregation on Catholic Education at the Vatican. You might enjoy some of his thoughts on the Internet Padre's "Catholic Sexual Ethics" page. In 2007 the Australian Catholic University awarded him their highest honour.)
The 2008 winner of the Ethics Prize is Garrett Cullity, a "Philosopher of Religion".
"Cullity has won the ACU Eureka Prize for Ethics for a book in which he argues that the altruistic model of restricting one's life to aid another is flawed and that it is not morally wrong to live a life of rich personal fulfillment."
- "Eureka Prize wins for the good life", CN Cath News
If the current sponsors of the prize continue, perhaps we can look forward to these issues as future winners:
- Hope vs. incarceration for perpetrators of extreme random violence
- Improving the Lancet's scientific awareness
- Publishing the miracle proofs from beatifications. Nature, the Lancet, or PLoS
- Does indulgence abuse have a reverse effect in purgatory-time reduction?
"Australia waged the world's most effective war on AIDS by ignoring the Catholic Church."
— David Marr, "Pell rides papal bandwagon of death", Sydney Morning Herald, April 11, 2009
"If the Pope is right about condoms' effectiveness, surgeons will have to abandon latex gloves to reduce the likelihood of transmitting bugs. If latex won't work on a lone phallus, what chance does it have against 10 digits with nails on the tips?"
— Peter Robinson, letter, Sydney Morning Herald, April 20, 2009
"Church's condom stand based on religion not science"
— Professor Andrew Gulich, HIV Epidemiology and Prevention Program, University of New South Wales, "First Word", Sydney Morning Herald, April 21, 2009
Australia's science fiction and fantasy community: Arise!
The Sydney Morning Herald community is doing its part, with its letters and stories. But the Holey See is taking up our turf, and we should claim it back. We're the fictionistas. We know the difference between science and fiction, reality and fantasy, and we play with it every day, stretching the boundaries of possibilities, but never breaking them (except for the sinful fun of it.) Many of us are scientists! And some of us wear rubber gloves, even the ones with only one finger.
If we can't help to save the Ethics Prize, we should sponsor a Rubber Glove for Ethics. If, however the Ethics Prize were to be reborn, the God industry should be excommunicated from any part of it, and the judges should include people such as Gulich, Robinson and Marr, a mixture of science professionals and people from the 'community' at large. Then this prize could mean something and not be such a joke.
One Eureka that's a joy foreveryone
The Science Photography Prize, sponsored by New Scientist. The winners and runners-up are always outstanding—beautiful, surprising and in the spirit of curiosity that is the basis of all science.
The Australian Museum runs a travelling exhibit, The Top 25 Science Snap-shots ('snap-shot' is a joke. These are masterpieces, many of which took considerable skill and time to set up.)
The 2008 winner is, literally, a Blast Wave, by Phred Petersen, RMIT University.
16 April 2009
The relativity of hairiness
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