The Naked Scientists
  • Login
  • Register
  • Podcasts
      • The Naked Scientists
      • eLife
      • Naked Genetics
      • Naked Astronomy
      • In short
      • Naked Neuroscience
      • Ask! The Naked Scientists
      • Question of the Week
      • Archive
      • Video
      • SUBSCRIBE to our Podcasts
  • Articles
      • Science News
      • Features
      • Interviews
      • Answers to Science Questions
  • Get Naked
      • Donate
      • Do an Experiment
      • Science Forum
      • Ask a Question
  • About
      • Meet the team
      • Our Sponsors
      • Site Map
      • Contact us

User menu

  • Login
  • Register
  • Home
  • Help
  • Search
  • Tags
  • Member Map
  • Recent Topics
  • Login
  • Register
  1. Naked Science Forum
  2. Profile of profound
  3. Show Posts
  4. Messages
  • Profile Info
    • Summary
    • Show Stats
    • Show Posts
      • Messages
      • Topics
      • Attachments
      • Thanked Posts
      • Posts Thanked By User
    • Show User Topics
      • User Created
      • User Participated In

Show Posts

This section allows you to view all posts made by this member. Note that you can only see posts made in areas you currently have access to.

  • Messages
  • Topics
  • Attachments
  • Thanked Posts
  • Posts Thanked By User

Messages - profound

Pages: 1 2 [3] 4 5 ... 13
41
Physiology & Medicine / Why has high dose Vit C and Vit D treatment been ignored for covid19?
« on: 04/04/2020 22:38:09 »
The only real defense against COVID-19 is your own immune system, which works best when fed right. While changing your diet is a commonsense solution for the long term, a rapid-response strategy would be to use vitamin C
   
Vitamin C strengthens your immune system and kills pathogens, including viruses, when taken in high doses.


Other important immune boosting nutrients are vitamin D, magnesium and zinc

  A Korean doctor who’s giving patients and hospital staff 100,000 IUs of vitamin D and 20 to 24 grams of vitamin C by IV reports virus-infected patients are getting well in a matter of days

As noted by Dr Saul, much of the information about vitamin C for the coronavirus is currently coming out of China. Meanwhile, in the U.S., a lot of nutritional advice is being censored and tagged as “fake news.' by vested interests.

Vitamin C Boosts Immunity and Reverses Viral Pneumonia?

For now, the only real defense against COVID-19 is your own immune system. There’s no vaccine, and even if one is fast-tracked, there would be cause for caution, as we’d have no proof of effectiveness or safety.

“Your immune system is infinitely adaptable. This is how nature made us,” Saul notes. “However, your immune system works better when it's fed right.” While changing your diet is a more long-term solution, a rapid-response strategy would be to use vitamin C.

“Vitamin C is going to strengthen your immune system. This is in every nutrition textbook ever written, so we start with that,” Dr Saul says. “The RDA in the United States is about 90 milligrams; in Korea and China it's 100 mg; in the United Kingdom it's a miserable 40 mg a day and we are sometimes not even getting that.

 Studies have shown that even 200 mg of vitamin C a day will reduce the death rate in elderly people with severe pneumonia by 80%. Studies have shown babies with pneumonia, when they get 200 milligrams of vitamin C — the adult equivalent of about 2,000 to 3,000 mg — they have an improvement in their oxygen levels in less than a day. The mortality goes down and the duration and severity of the illness is less.

Now, it is not coronavirus per se that actually kills people, it is the pneumonia and the SARS, the severe acute respiratory syndrome, that can follow it. Most people that get coronavirus will have a mild case; some will have the virus and not have any symptoms at all. We don't even know how many those people are because they have no symptoms.

Those who get COVID-19 that actually are sick are going to have the flu and it's going to be a nasty flu — it's going to be miserable. People will be sick for a week or two. The people at risk of dying tend to be the elderly and those that are immune-compromised.

 The media sort of skirts around this but this is where we have to start because the fear is based on dying. And when we have even a small amount of vitamin C, our risk of dying — even in the most severe cases — goes down.

 It is pneumonia and SARS that kills people and vitamin C has been known to be effective against viral pneumonia since the 1940s when Dr. Frederick Robert Klenner published a series of papers and was able to reverse viral pneumonia in 72 hours. Now, Klenner was a board-certified chest physician. He was a specialist and he published over 20 papers on this. The media has been silent on this therapy.”

On Vitamin C Dosing

More recently, Dr. Paul Marik has shown a protocol of intravenous (IV) vitamin C with hydrocortisone and thiamine (vitamin B1) dramatically improves survival rates in patients with sepsis. Since sepsis is one of the reasons people die from COVID-19 infection, Marik’s vitamin C protocol may go a long way toward saving people’s lives in this pandemic.

That protocol calls for 1,500 mg of ascorbic acid every six hours, and appears radically effective. However, I would recommend taking even higher doses using liposomal vitamin C if you’re taking it orally. Liposomal vitamin C will allow you to take much higher dosages without getting loose stools.

You can take up to 100 grams of liposomal vitamin C without problems and get really high blood levels, equivalent to or higher than intravenous vitamin C. I view that as an acute treatment, however.

I discourage people from taking mega doses of vitamin C on a regular basis if they’re not actually sick, because it is essentially a drug — or at least it works like one. Saul adds:

 “What I suggest, and have for some 44 years of professional life, is to take enough vitamin C to be symptom free, and when you're well, that isn't very much. I knew one lady who would take 500 mg of vitamin C a day and she was just fine. [Another person] with multiple chemical sensitivity, she needed 35,000 mg a day. Any less and she wasn't fine …

Chinese physicians who are showing tremendous interest in using vitamin C as prevention and cure. It’s been so effective that the government of Shanghai has issued official recommendations that vitamin C should be used for treating COVID-19.

    They are testing up to 24,000 mg a day by IV. Some of us think that's a little on the low side for people that are in the ICU. I would like to see 50,000 mg a day and there is a doctor … who has used 50,000 mg [on] quite a few people and we're getting more reports as we go.

They're also doing it in Korea. Right in the center of the outbreak in Korea we're in contact with a doctor who has a small hospital and he has given a single shot of vitamin D — a big shot of about 100,000 units to each patient and every staff member — and also about 20 to 24 grams (24,000 mg) of vitamin C by IV. And he's reporting that these people are getting well in a matter of days.”

Why is the news media blanking out this information and why are doctors failing it to use to save lives?

42
Geology, Palaeontology & Archaeology / Re: Why has no one STOPPED the Hawaii volcano as plenty of warning was had ?
« on: 08/06/2018 07:17:43 »
Quote from: evan_au on 07/06/2018 12:33:13
Quote from: profound
my idea is not to drill into the caldera but into a the gaseous region above it to release the gas pressure.
A volcano is not like a can of baked beans - there is no air pocket at the top.

The gas that drives the explosion is dissolved in the molten rock, under immense pressure.
Just like when you shake a bottle of cola, and open the lid: it is when you release the pressure that all the dissolved gas comes out of solution, and you get an explosive eruption.


See: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Caldera


"The gas that drives the explosion is dissolved in the molten rock, under immense pressure.
Just like when you shake a bottle of cola,..."

That is not true at all.

go get a bottle of cola.shake it violently.

now turn the screw lid very slowly and gently until you hear the the hiss of escaping gas...leave it for a few minutes and all the excess gas will have been released gradually.no explosion whatsoever...see?

43
Geology, Palaeontology & Archaeology / Re: Why has no one STOPPED the Hawaii volcano as plenty of warning was had ?
« on: 07/06/2018 07:39:31 »
Quote from: Tomassci on 28/05/2018 19:23:26
Common ideas of stopping volcano according to me:
Water- explosion happens
Throwing things in: ineffective/explosion happens.
Other ideas guys?

no.my idea is not to drill into the caldera but into a the gaseous region above it to release the gas pressure.

 imagine a sealed can of Heinz baked beans being heated on a cooker.

the pressure will eventually build up and cause it to explode.

if you drill a 0.1 millimeter hole in the lid it will start releasing  the gas pressure and delay it exploding avoiding pressure buildup.not the small size of the hole in relation to the size of the tin

the more holes you drill the more quickly you release the pressure and with enough holes you can prevent it exploding forever.

500 people dead in Guatemala from a volcano.but who cares?

they are poor and black and far away.

"no Britons were on aboard crashed airplane" says the smug newscaster so it's ok.

no 24/7 rolling news coverage for  them....when all they had to do was release the gas pressure in the volcano by drilling into the side gas pockets.

44
Geology, Palaeontology & Archaeology / Re: Why has no one STOPPED the Hawaii volcano as plenty of warning was had ?
« on: 24/05/2018 19:47:18 »
its not enough.you need to build enough stations to stop the eruptions.at lwa
Quote from: evan_au on 24/05/2018 11:59:27
Quote from: profound
Just drill a few oil pipeline holes a few hundred meters below the surface into the main stem which feeds the volcano and release the pressure/excess lave into the sea or a unused area of the island.
People have already done it in Hawaii - the Big Island gets a quarter of its power from pipes drilled into hot rock.
But now that geothermal power plant is about to meet some really hot rock - and they expect it to fail.
- They have siphoned off large amounts of volatile organics.
- They have bulldozed a hill of dirt between the plant and the lava,
- but if lava hits industrial equipment, I expect the lava to win!
See aerial Photo: https://thenewdaily.com.au/news/world/2018/05/22/hawaii-volcano-lava-power-plant/

its not enough.you need to build larger and more numerous stations which pour huge amounts of cooling water and harden the rock and also carry away the heat and excess gas from the area.

i see you ignored the NASA report to deny me vindication.I feel sad for your selfishness.

45
Geology, Palaeontology & Archaeology / Re: Why has no one STOPPED the Hawaii volcano as plenty of warning was had ?
« on: 24/05/2018 07:16:14 »
Quote from: Kryptid on 23/05/2018 21:06:38
Quote from: profound on 23/05/2018 19:52:13
Even Nasa SUPPORTS me when last year they annouced it..

Announced what?
Yellowstone national park is famous for its hot springs, geysers, and picturesque vistas. However, it’s the supervolcano lurking under Yellowstone that we have to thank for all of that. An eruption in Yellowstone could be a global cataclysm, but NASA has a plan to reduce the risk while also generating power. The plan is not without risks, and the price tag is high. Still, if it keeps us from being wiped out by clouds of hot ash, it might be something to consider.

Yellowstone hasn’t erupted in about 630,000 years, and there’s no way to predict when it will happen again. It could be tomorrow, or it could take another million years. The point is, it will happen. Well, it will if someone can’t come up with a way to stop it. The NASA plan involves drilling into the caldera from sites outside of Yellowstone to gain access to the magma pocket that powers the supervolcano. That’s the dangerous part — a full eruption of Yellowstone wouldn’t kill that many people, but it would create a 500-mile wide ashfall with areas of the West and Midwest receiving up to four inches of ash. Total sunlight reaching croplands would be substantially (though temporarily) reduced.

Assuming you can drill deep enough to open a channel to the supervolcano, you could use it to generate geothermal power. NASA’s plan calls for water to be piped through the volcano, which would emerge super-heated to about 662 degrees Fahrenheit (350 degrees Celsius). The steam could be used to generate power, but that energy doesn’t just appear from nowhere. It’s coming from the supervolcano, which would cool over time and lower the risk of eruption. Setting up this system would probably cost on the order of $3.5 billion, according to NASA estimates.

The Yellowstone Caldera: Deceptively picturesque.

NASA’s is considering this ambitious plan because of the extreme threat a supervolcano like Yellowstone presents. The Yellowstone Caldera has erupted three times in the past, and each of them has been orders of magnitude larger than the volcanic eruptions with which we’re familiar.  There have been three eruptions in Yellowstone, the first of which occurred about 2.1 million years ago. It spread ash across much of North America and left a 50-mile wide crater in Yellowstone, which is now known as the Island Park Caldera. Supervolcanoes like Yellowstone can pump many cubic miles of ash into the atmosphere, which could alter global climate for a decade or more. These types of eruptions are extremely rare, but the Lava Creek eruption rated a VEI (Volcano Explosivity Index) score of 8, and covered a huge swath of the United States.
LavaCreekTuff

The Lava Creek eruption was 640,000 years ago with an ejection volume of 1,000 cubic kilometers. Image by Wikipedia

To put this in further perspective: The eruption of Krakatoa, which destroyed an entire island, is ranked as a VEI 6 event. The most powerful eruption in the past 200 years was Mt. Tambora in 1815. This eruption kicked off what’s known as the Year Without a Summer, in which famine and wild temperature fluctuations occurred worldwide — and Tambora threw “just” 120 cubic kilometers of material. A Yellowstone eruption of comparable size to those we know happened 640 – 2.1 million years ago could be nearly 10x worse.

The more recent Yellowstone eruptions haven’t been quite as large as the first, but any eruption in Yellowstone has the potential to cause widespread destruction. Working on ways to mitigate the danger is a good idea, even if it’s expensive. It would probably take many years to know whether NASA’s plan was just slowing the buildup of pressure or actually reversing it, and in the best case scenario, it would take thousands of years to cool the caldera completely. However, that’s thousands of years Yellowstone could power a large chunk of the US.


46
Geology, Palaeontology & Archaeology / Re: Why has no one STOPPED the Hawaii volcano as plenty of warning was had ?
« on: 23/05/2018 19:52:13 »
Quote from: Bored chemist on 22/05/2018 20:22:58
Quote from: Bored chemist on 21/05/2018 19:39:04
So, the question is, do you want to play with something that has perhaps 500 times as much stored energy as the entire world's nuclear arsenal?
Quote from: profound on 21/05/2018 21:42:36
i can shake a fizzy drink bottle and instead of taking the lid and causing it to explode as you said above all i have do is slowly rotate the cap and hear the hissing of escaping gas and over a few minutes the gas will be released reducing the pressure.

see?
no sudden release involved.

I guess we can take that as a "yes"- you do want to play with a huge explosive.


I am afraid you forgot water C0OLING pipes in the drill pipe line in the same way as any other object like reactors,etc.

Also failed to understand this is pressure reduction exercise.who cares if lava comes out or not as long as gas comes out.
Because gas coming it is more important as it drives the explosion.

Even Nasa SUPPORTS me when last year they annouced it..

(They actually stole the idea from me after i sent them the idea after watching a program about supervolcanos on bbc called Horizon.

47
Geology, Palaeontology & Archaeology / Re: Why do so many people feel ashamed at this discovery?
« on: 23/05/2018 19:36:55 »
bUT YOU
Quote from: alancalverd on 23/05/2018 07:29:19
I am intrigued that anyone can discern the color of an invisible author, but anyway....

(a) the fact that some whites in the past (or even today) assumed (and asserted by violence) some level of superiority over blacks has no impact on my thinking. There are still flat-earthers and aetherists among us - even in this forum!

(b) what kind of moron gives a crap about twitter? Has it ever spread joy or wisdom?

(c) the advantage of being an overweight  white male Jewish pro-Brexit vegetarian intellectual is that everyone else thinks they have a reason to despise you but it doesn't matter because you know you are the best - your mum told you!

But you still have not explained your feelings and reaction when you first heard the news and how people around you reacted  and how your sleep was that  night.

Twitter is a snapshot of people feelings.

I suggest you look at the reactions on twitter going back to Feb this year.

48
Geology, Palaeontology & Archaeology / Re: Why do so many people feel ashamed at this discovery?
« on: 22/05/2018 20:17:16 »
Quote from: Colin2B on 22/05/2018 07:20:22
Quote from: Kryptid on 22/05/2018 05:41:42
It's been widely accepted for a long time that we are all descended from dark-skinned people in Africa, so it's not like this discovery is news in that regard. It makes no difference to me what color my ancestors were.
I agree, I had always assumed our ancestors were black/dark skinned, but slowly adapted to the lower light levels of northern lattitudes. Can’t see why anyone would get upset about that?
In the UK we are a very mongrel race anyway with invaders from way back.


But white people have assumed superiority over blacks so it must mean hidden resentment and anger to your I D to be a descendent of the inferior folks as portrayed by the media.
Did you not listen to the massive S*** STORM on twitter?

49
Geology, Palaeontology & Archaeology / Re: Why has no one STOPPED the Hawaii volcano as plenty of warning was had ?
« on: 22/05/2018 08:07:44 »
Quote from: Kryptid on 22/05/2018 00:30:14
Exposing equipment to the 2,000 degree Fahrenheit temperatures of magma continuously for years sounds tricky. Sure, there are metals with much higher melting points than that, but you don't have to heat a metal all the way to its melting point in order for it to be structurally compromised. It's also possible that the metal will dissolve to some extent in the magma in a similar way that salt dissolves in water. On top of all of that, you'd have to worry about tremors and earthquakes bending or breaking any pipes inserted into the ground there. Volcanoes are very seismically active.

EDIT: I found a study relevant to this. Unfortunately, only the abstract is available for free: https://link.springer.com/article/10.1007/BF00603755

It says that platinum and rhenium were found not to be corroded by basaltic lava over extended periods. Given that rhenium is significantly harder than platinum, I'd suggest using that for any hypothetical pipes. Unfortunately, both platinum and rhenium are very expensive. Even if you could get the funds to build a large, sturdy pipe of rhenium that was a few miles long, it could still be potentially damaged by earthquakes.

these are minor engineering issues.

you seem to forget drilling for oil all these problems have been encountered and solved including the high temperatures.look it up.

for example if you drill at an 45 angle into one of the lava stems from the sea then the sea water will keep the pipe cool.also you can mold the lave into a pipe  or channel as well ...

one the pressure has gone down you don't need to keep the pipes in place.

see?

i have an answer for everything.



50
Geology, Palaeontology & Archaeology / Why do so many people feel ashamed at this discovery?
« on: 21/05/2018 22:01:26 »
https://www.theguardian.com/science/2018/feb/07/first-modern-britons-dark-black-skin-cheddar-man-dna-analysis-reveals

''The first modern Britons, who lived about 10,000 years ago, had “dark to black” skin, a groundbreaking DNA analysis of Britain’s oldest complete skeleton has revealed.

The fossil, known as Cheddar Man, was unearthed more than a century ago in Gough’s Cave in Somerset. Intense speculation has built up around Cheddar Man’s origins and appearance because he lived shortly after the first settlers crossed from continental Europe to Britain at the end of the last ice age. People of white British ancestry alive today are descendants of this population.
Combing human genome reveals roots of hair diversity
Read more

It was initially assumed that Cheddar Man had pale skin and fair hair, but his DNA paints a different picture, strongly suggesting he had blue eyes, a very dark brown to black complexion and dark curly hair....'''

In feb 2018 it was confirmed via genome that white people are descended from black skinned people with curly hair.

This caused a huge storm on twitter with many people angry and enraged and calling into doubt the
science.

Many people were shocked and furious

Many white people feel ashamed at being descended from perceived inferiors and want the research to be discredited.

Since most people here are white how do you feel 3 months later?

Do you feel ashamed?

embarrassed?

angry?

enraged?

When you see black people how do you feel?

betrayed ?

In your daily life how do you cope?

When in bed at night and when you are staring at the ceiling in the dark what thoughts come to your mind now?

51
Geology, Palaeontology & Archaeology / Re: Why has no one STOPPED the Hawaii volcano as plenty of warning was had ?
« on: 21/05/2018 21:42:36 »
Quote from: Colin2B on 21/05/2018 11:02:12
Quote from: profound on 21/05/2018 08:20:06
Quote from: Kryptid on 21/05/2018 08:13:50
Ironically, doing that could actually trigger an eruption. Magma contains dissolved gases under high pressure that can come out of solution suddenly when that pressure is reduced.

so?    let them come out at high pressure.whats the big deal?
 
The big deal is an eruption on the scale of Mt St Helens.
As @Kryptid says the magma below the surface is under high pressure which keeps the gasses in place. As the magma surfaces to the cone there is less weight of material to hold the gasses in and they are released relatively slowly, but still create the violent explosions and ejections of molten rock. If you tap below the cone you are suddenly releasing a much greater pressure and the magma chamber deep down will fizz and you will get a catastrophic explosion. This sudden release is basically what happened at Mt St Helens, the lava doesnt just flow out, it explodes out like a shaken fizzy drink when you release the cap.



But you have already admitted some of the gas is being released slowly via fissures.Just not fast enough.The pipeline holes would simply improve that under controlled conditions.

i can shake a fizzy drink bottle and instead of taking the lid and causing it to explode as you said above all i have do is slowly rotate the cap and hear the hissing of escaping gas and over a few minutes the gas will be released reducing the pressure.

see?
no sudden release involved.

52
Geology, Palaeontology & Archaeology / Re: Why has no one STOPPED the Hawaii volcano as plenty of warning was had ?
« on: 21/05/2018 08:20:06 »
Quote from: Kryptid on 21/05/2018 08:13:50
Quote from: profound on 21/05/2018 07:33:23
What is a volcano?

high pressure and heat from below causes pressure buildup which  strong enough to melt,bend rocks and cause fissures.

How do we stop it?

Simple.

Just drill a few oil pipeline holes a few hundred meters below the surface into the main stem which feeds the volcano and release the pressure/excess lave into the sea or a unused area of the island.

It can't explode because the pressure has been released.Just like a boiler pressure valve.

Ironically, doing that could actually trigger an eruption. Magma contains dissolved gases under high pressure that can come out of solution suddenly when that pressure is reduced.

so?    let them come out at high pressure.whats the big deal?
 

53
Geology, Palaeontology & Archaeology / Re: Why has no one STOPPED the Hawaii volcano as plenty of warning was had ?
« on: 21/05/2018 07:36:11 »
Quote from: Kryptid on 20/05/2018 17:35:18
How do you propose to stop a volcano from erupting using current technology?

What is a volcano?

high pressure and heat from below causes pressure buildup which  is strong enough to melt,bend rocks and cause fissures and explosions due to said pressure.

How do we stop it?

Simple.

Just drill a few oil pipeline holes a few hundred meters below the surface into the main stem  which feeds the volcano and release the pressure into the sea or a unused area of the island.

It can't explode because the pressure has been released.Just like a boiler pressure valve.

54
Geology, Palaeontology & Archaeology / Re: Why has no one STOPPED the Hawaii volcano as plenty of warning was had ?
« on: 21/05/2018 07:33:23 »
Quote from: Kryptid on 20/05/2018 17:35:18
How do you propose to stop a volcano from erupting using current technology?

What is a volcano?

high pressure and heat from below causes pressure buildup which  strong enough to melt,bend rocks and cause fissures.

How do we stop it?

Simple.

Just drill a few oil pipeline holes a few hundred meters below the surface into the main stem which feeds the volcano and release the pressure/excess lave into the sea or a unused area of the island.

It can't explode because the pressure has been released.Just like a boiler pressure valve.

55
Physiology & Medicine / Could hitting a punch-bag cause abdominal pain?
« on: 20/05/2018 17:38:18 »
My son has been hitting a punch bag and now claims to have stomach pain located mostly near the middle of the stomach in a 6 inch diameter spot.

i wonder if it has any connection to hitting the punch bag.

The hospital doctor has proscribed 2 buscopan tablets 4 times a day.

56
Question of the Week / Re: QotW - 16.01.26 - Why do humans have such a variety of appearances?
« on: 20/05/2018 17:20:39 »
Quote from: thedoc on 26/01/2016 13:59:56
Ghayath asked the Naked Scientists:

   Why do we as Homo sapiens have a huge variety of facial features, and is this exclusive to the Homo sapiens?!

Please note that I'm not asking about different races and colors.

I'm just simply asking about why do we look different from each other even within the same racial group ?!

What do you think?
i think we should clone you and leave you on an isolated spot.

57
Geology, Palaeontology & Archaeology / Why has no one STOPPED the Hawaii volcano as plenty of warning was had ?
« on: 20/05/2018 17:17:11 »
I have seen many reports of this volcano with everyone just standing round and doing hand wringing
and "observing' while this volcano was predicted well in advance to blow but no one has bothered to do anything about it.

I find it really stupid and idiotic that not one of these 'scientists' had the wit to stop it .

All they are interested in is 'observing' it an academic exercise and doing the usual hand ringing in front of the cameras.

58
New Theories / Re: Is I.T. E.R. the wrong shape?
« on: 30/10/2017 21:59:43 »
Quote from: evan_au on 30/10/2017 09:26:59
Yet another fusion startup. This one tries to utilise plasma instability (and they aren't using a sphere either!).

ITER is pushing the boundaries of engineering capabilities. But trying a number of different approaches may yield advances in unexpected places.

See: https://spectrum.ieee.org/energy/nuclear/startup-lppfusion-embraces-instability
But trying a number of different approaches may yield advances in unexpected places.

you mean the wallet of tax payers on this fools errand?

59
That CAN'T be true! / Re: Why are so many cancer drugs Snake Oil?
« on: 29/10/2017 19:57:46 »
Quote from: Colin2B on 09/10/2017 05:30:00
Quote from: tkadm30 on 08/10/2017 20:28:17
Globalization may even promote cancer. https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC1299207/
The problem with this way of thinking is that you can lay many of the worlds ills against many factors without identifying the root cause and hence tackling the problem. Eg, in the paper you quote, the root cause is substance abuse - tobacco and alcohol. You could by the same logic blame globalisation for the Irish potato famine rather than reliance on monoculture.
Similarly you might single out exploration, eg discovery of the americas, rather than globalisation as promoting cancer.


Federal authorities arrested the billionaire founder and owner of Insys Therapeutics Thursday on charges of bribing doctors and pain clinics into prescribing the company’s fentanyl product to their patients,” reports the Daily Caller News Foundation, one of the best sources of real journalism in America today.

Addictive drugs that include opioids, we now know, are claiming over 64,000 lives a year in the United States alone.

From the DCNF:

The Department of Justice (DOJ) charged John Kapoor, 74, and seven other current and former executives at the pharmaceutical company with racketeering for a leading a national conspiracy through bribery and fraud to coerce the illegal distribution of the company’s fentanyl spray, which is intended for use as a pain killer by cancer patients. The company’s stock prices fell more than 20 percent following the arrests, according to the New York Post.

More than 20,000 Americans died of synthetic opioid overdoses last year, and millions are addicted to opioids. And yet some medical professionals would rather take advantage of the addicts than try to help them...

NEVER TRUST A DOCTOR.THEY ARE ON THE TAKE.

60
New Theories / Re: Is I.T. E.R. the wrong shape?
« on: 22/10/2017 11:43:25 »
Quote from: Bored chemist on 08/10/2017 16:52:40
Quote from: profound on 07/10/2017 20:45:19

Well it seems people listened to me a few years ago when I posted in various physics forums involved in fusion research and they have built it.

The spherical tokamak has a number of advantages over the standard tokamak design. It offers the promise of achieving fusion with cheaper construction costs and lessened energy demands. Results achieved so far indicate it would be a good design for a fusion power reactor, still using conventional deuterium and tritium fuel.

http://www.ialtenergy.com/spherical-tokamak.html

Don't feel too sad.




Now, even if you overlook the fact that the word says it's torroidal, there's still the issue of the magnetic field.
The only way to get that spherical is to have a magnetic monople at the centre.

Did you understand the bit where I wrote this
"Spherical vacuum chambers are commonplace for obvious mechanical reasons."


Wrong again.START proved Peng and Strickler's predictions; the ST had performance an order of magnitude better than conventional designs, and cost much less to build as well. In terms of overall economics, the ST was an enormous step forward.

Moreover, the ST was a new approach, and a low-cost one. It was one of the few areas of mainline fusion research where real contributions could be made on small budgets. This sparked off a series of ST developments around the world. In particular, the National Spherical Torus Experiment (NSTX) and Pegasus experiments in the US, Globus-M in Russia, and the UK's follow-on to START, MAST. START itself found new life as part of the Proto-Sphera project in Italy, where experimenters are attempting to eliminate the central column by passing the current through a secondary plasma.[25]

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Spherical_tokamak

http://www.frascati.enea.it/ProtoSphera/Multi-Pinch_Status/index_Multi-Pinch_Status.htm


Pages: 1 2 [3] 4 5 ... 13
  • SMF 2.0.15 | SMF © 2017, Simple Machines
    Privacy Policy
    SMFAds for Free Forums
  • Naked Science Forum ©

Page created in 0.086 seconds with 67 queries.

  • Podcasts
  • Articles
  • Get Naked
  • About
  • Contact us
  • Advertise
  • Privacy Policy
  • Subscribe to newsletter
  • We love feedback

Follow us

cambridge_logo_footer.png

©The Naked Scientists® 2000–2017 | The Naked Scientists® and Naked Science® are registered trademarks created by Dr Chris Smith. Information presented on this website is the opinion of the individual contributors and does not reflect the general views of the administrators, editors, moderators, sponsors, Cambridge University or the public at large.