Month: July 2021

New Orleans Can’t Stand in Nature’s Way

By Dr. Robert Thorson `This is our tsunami.” That was the haunting phrase of Biloxi’s mayor, which I read beneath the televised images of destruction from Hurricane Katrina. But the comparison between the late August Mississippi Gulf Coast storm and last December’s Indonesian tsunami is terribly inadequate – – even misleading — with respect to […]

For Mad Humanist, Life’s Trials Written in Stone

By Dr. Robert Thorson The “mad scientist” is a staple of American culture. Brilliant, driven and wielding great power, he works in secret laboratories until he launches various nightmares: Dr. Frankenstein’s stitchedtogether monster; Dr. Strangelove’s atomic bomb; and, as some would argue, Dr. Jerry Yang’s three generations of cloned cows, which could have a family […]

An Invasion Launched From Water Gardens

By Dr. Robert Thorson Someone’s idea of beauty has escaped from a private home, sneaked up behind me, and bit me where it hurts, my wallet. I’m not referring to the 4-foot-long spiked iguana that went missing after escaping from a private home last summer in East Lyme. Instead, I mean the spread of aquatic […]

Science Isn’t Facts — It’s Learning to Understand

By Dr. Robert Thorson Albert Einstein strengthened science through his contributions, but he may have inadvertently crippled science education through his example. This notion is supported by an editorial, “Redefining Science Education,” published in January by Bruce Alberts, editor in chief of the journal Science. His main concern is that “many college-educated adults in the […]

Perpetuating a Polarity Between Black and White

By Dr. Robert Thorson As the only working scientist writing regularly for The Courant’s Other Opinion page, I feel it’s my responsibility to speak out when another scientist crosses the line between science and racism. I refer to James Watson, the pioneering geneticist and Nobel Prize winner who was recently quoted by London’s The Sunday […]

Rising Waters Should Erase All Doubts

By Dr. Robert Thorson When it’s cold, you can argue that global warming isn’t so bad after all. But global drowning? Now that’s a climate-change problem of a different color, a universally negative concept for creatures with lungs like us. That’s what’s now underway, thanks to irreversible trends in ice sheet decay. When you’re looking […]

An Ugly Ghost of Environmental Present

By Dr. Robert Thorson The true purpose of the New Year’s holiday is to contemplate the flow of time through our lives. Charles Dickens captured this theme in “A Christmas Carol,” arguably the most beloved story about the winter solstice season. Though the pivotal day in the story is Christmas Eve, the pivotal idea parallels […]

Set Children Straight On Climate Change

By Dr. Robert Thorson The climate-change disaster movie “The Day After Tomorrow” is finishing its opening run in the theaters. For most adults, I think it was a pretty neat film, especially the special effects. For schoolteachers, however, it may end up being a bigger disaster than the movie itself. My prediction — one supported […]

Green is Just a Color – Not a Virtue

By Dr. Robert Thorson My wife often reminds me that I take things too literally. Of course, she’s correct. Nonetheless, the phrase “going green” bugs me like a pebble in my shoe. The naturalist in me knows it’s unethical, the scientist knows it’s inaccurate and the writer laments the ruination of yet another perfectly good […]