silent_cat
silent_cat t1_jad9uks wrote
Reply to comment by Empire2k5 in TIFU Update: I accused my boyfriend of cheating on me with his dead husband by TIFUWife2
I think what OP can do is plan some "remembering" moments. Like, a special day a year where he remembers the good things. Tells stories, that kind of thing. He dead, he's not competition.
silent_cat t1_ja57jgc wrote
Reply to comment by Qyro in TIFU by texting my ex-wife by LaVieEnRoseLavelle
Dunno about elsewhere, but here (NL) if you're travelling by yourself with a kid under 18, you need some kind of proof at the border that the other parent consents.
Of course, you can go a bloody long way before you hit border controls, but it's usually a problem for countries like Morocco and Turkey.
Edit: it's not foolproof obviously, but it prevents a lot of the simple cases.
silent_cat t1_ja4wisq wrote
Reply to comment by NotTooDeep in Is there any possible relation between the recent earthquakes in Turkey/Syria, Japan and Papua New Guinea? by Corvid-21
Inattention blindness? From the famous invisible gorilla experiment.
silent_cat t1_j8hwizj wrote
Reply to comment by masterofshadows in Light traveling through a medium that slows it. Does the same photon emerge? by TheGandPTurtle
Think of the ripples on a lake made by throwing a stone. The water is only going up and down, but the waves move forward. Is that the same wave, or is it a new one?
How would you label a wave to distinguish it from a different wave?
silent_cat t1_j5o5oeb wrote
Reply to comment by PlotRatio in What are the forces on Earth’s Inner Core that change its speed? by BayRunner
> Otherwise something highly compressed would radiate heat indefinitely which ain't going to happen.
Sure, the earth is cooling down. The mantle however is a reasonably good insulating layer though (mostly because it's so damn thick). The heat loss is is estimated at 47±2 TW (or about 3 times to total energy usage by humans). Still, the Earth will be destroyed by the Sun before it cools down.
silent_cat t1_j28didp wrote
Reply to comment by canadave_nyc in How fast does the Milky Way spin? How far does Earth move through space in a year? by Sabre-Tooth-Monkey
I think the bit you're missing is that when you move in a particular direction, light from that direction becomes slightly bluer and light behind you becomes slightly red.
If you assume the "expanding balloon" is expanding everywhere at the same rate, by looking at the colour of the expanding balloon you can determine a speed relative to you where the balloon will have the same colour everywhere.
Yes, it would have been more logical if we'd have been stationary relative to the global frame, but it turns out we're not. Science is more interesting when it gives you answers you don't expect.
(It could be that the "bubble" is not expanding at a uniform rate everywhere, but we (currently) have no way of distinguishing that. And it seems the weaker assumption that we're simply moving than some fancy new physics.)
silent_cat t1_ixcimtd wrote
Reply to comment by Furrypocketpussy in Why do immune reactions take place in the lymph nodes closest to the site of infection? by arlomurfett
That's how I'd heard it explained: rather than having antigens spread across you body in the hope they match, they hang around in the lymph nodes and monitor the stuff coming past.
It's said the mammalian immune system is the second most complex known system in the world, after the brain. Every time I hear more about it I'm amazed.
silent_cat t1_iw2bsj4 wrote
Reply to comment by KornPuf in TIFU by putting my debit card in my pocket by KornPuf
Honestly, just ring up and say you found your card and you forgot the transaction and offer to pay it back. You're surely not the first person this has happened to. And it gives you the piece of mind they're not going to suddenly find out.
I once reported my card lost because I couldn't find my wallet. I was panicing about all the stuff I was going to have to replace. Turn up to work on monday and there it is on my desk.
silent_cat t1_ivkf0db wrote
Reply to comment by PurpleSunCraze in If the Human Genome Project represents a map of the genome of a few individuals, why is this relevant to humans as a whole if everybody has different genetics? by bjardd
> Is it “it may be possible but the tech isn’t there” or “fundamentally, it is not possible”?
For a god it may be possible, for us, not so much. For comparison it's like modifying a program in a language we don't understand. This program has grown randomly over aeons and the strangest things relate to each other. You're basically stuck with randomly changing things and seeing what happens. But since people mature so slowly that's very slow progress.
During the maturation process of a foetus, there's lots of little tripwires to abort if something weird is going on.
That said, if you find some baby born with gill like structures or four arms, if you sequence them you might get a head start. But the slow testing phase will be a problem.
Evil science fiction villain mode: unless of course we figure out how to grow foetuses into babies without a woman being involved, you could build a factory to test 100,000 variations all at once. That would speed it up a bit.
silent_cat t1_iu9hztp wrote
Reply to comment by ABinturong in ELI5: What is a “Strawman” argument? by dclover27
There isn't really a good response. See also the Gish Gallop where your opponent floods the public with plausible but incorrect statements that you simply don't have time to refute them all.
The only solution I can think of is to educate people to recognise it when it happens. And hopefully someone will interrupt with: hey, that's a strawman, please go back to the original argument.
Yes, I just suggested the only way to save the world is to educate people. So we're basically f*cked.
silent_cat t1_itz4rmc wrote
Reply to comment by ZairyMonkey in How can the chicks breathe in their shell? by You_Smiled
And the reason they do it this way is because if you remove the eggs they just lay more.
The same things works for pigeons by the way. You get them to lay in a special nest where you simply make sure they don't hatch.
Though in this example they simply shake the eggs, which is apparently enough to prevent them hatching.
silent_cat t1_jady8y2 wrote
Reply to comment by viridiformica in Why does temperature determine the sex of certain egg laying animals like crocodiles? by insink2300
Well, there are all sorts of genetic abnormalities that cause genetic males to appear female. But none that cause genetic females to appear as male.
Sure, there are any number of hormonal triggers, but if you miss all of them you appear female. Note, it's the appearance that relevant, because with these various syndromes they still tend to have testes rather than ovaries. It appears that the signal to produce a penis however requires an actual on signal.