Feminism and Anti-Science

Mar 31, 2008 11:31

The syndicated feed for diffblog seems to be having trouble again. Today's post, "Feminism and Anti-Science" is posted.

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Comments 11

dancingwolfgrrl March 31 2008, 15:36:48 UTC
Last time, it did come through later; feeds only check some fixed number of times per day, so perhaps it's just checking hours after you post or something?

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differenceblog March 31 2008, 15:38:19 UTC
If you look on the syndication info page, it tells you the last time it checked, and the next time it's scheduled to check. It looked like it would be a couple more hours, and since a lot of people read at lunch, I wanted to make sure that people knew it was up.

:)

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dancingwolfgrrl March 31 2008, 17:49:35 UTC
Fair enough :) It would be handy if they'd let you set the time checked!

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differenceblog March 31 2008, 17:55:01 UTC
Especially since my personal deadline is to have it up by 10am every morning

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charlycrash March 31 2008, 16:27:33 UTC
I dunno, I haven't noticed any particular anti-science bias on the part of feminists myself.

Fair enough, I don't have much to do with feminist communities or anything else these days, but I don't recall much anti-science sentiment when I did. People's reactions was usually more or less "Oh. Okay then, fair enough." to studies citing whatever. Or they'd pick apart the methodology, which is fair enough.

All anecdotal as hell of course :)

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differenceblog March 31 2008, 16:34:14 UTC
do you mind if I copy this comment over to the main entry so people can respond?

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charlycrash March 31 2008, 16:46:41 UTC
Sure :) Sorry, I didn't know if I could post onto that one.

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differenceblog March 31 2008, 16:48:06 UTC
I've got the comments on the main site set to not require login or captchas. so far, the spam is low.

If you log in with a Google Account, however, you can set notifications for follow up comments.

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turkishb April 1 2008, 05:28:38 UTC
i would add that the application of that "knowledge" needs to be given some context in PoS... a lot of people take covariance for causation when they apply science. science is a form of intersubjectivity, perhaps the one with the most predictive power. but that doesn't mean that it is invincible methodologically either...

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differenceblog April 1 2008, 12:10:37 UTC
would you mind if I copied this comment to the main site, so we have everything in one place? I think this is a really good point.

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turkishb April 1 2008, 13:24:26 UTC
feel free. :)

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