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By Fred Phillips | November 5th 2009 06:01 PM | 2 comments | Print | E-mail | Track Comments
About Fred

After a dozen years as a market research executive, Fred Phillips was professor, dean, and vice provost at a variety of universities in the US, Europe...

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Carl Sagan conjectured that early diurnal mammals feasted on the eggs of nocturnal dinosaurs. He remarked whimsically that a modern breakfast of chicken eggs is among the few relics of our immemorial joust against the dragons. So I think he wouldn’t mind that I spoof his book’s title for this nonsense column.

When you carve that other relic, the Thanksgiving turkey, be sure to ask your physicist guests whether they want light matter or dark matter. Gaah, can you get over the fact that they’ve lost more than 90% of the universe’s mass? (I'll need to lose some mass after Thanksgiving dinner; maybe they can give me some tips.) “Oh no,” they say, “we’ve just misplaced it.” You reply, simply and politely, “Gravy or cranberry sauce?” (Your subtext being, “Or bullshit?”)

Speaking of cosmology (were we?), the just-out second book by the author of The Time
Traveler’s Wife
is, according to reviewers, not as good as the first. I wondered what the big deal was anyway. I travel into the future at the rate of about one day per day, and so do you. Some people don’t keep up, of course; the glaze in some of my students’ eyes is a giveaway. Then there are people who don’t twitter. Obviously “behind the times,” time-traveling at maybe 0.9 days per day.

Ah, you say, but what about going back in time? I can do that too, and my wife can verify
it. Yesterday I left our house in the morning, headed for the university, but, because she insisted, I went back in time for dinner.


Comments

logicman
Carl Sagan conjectured that early diurnal mammals feasted on the eggs of nocturnal dinosaurs.

Fred: do you have a source for that?

I have a conjecture that live birth evolved through accelerated egg-hatching.  Once an egg hatched at the moment of deposition, the shell would not be needed.  Breast-evolution and yolk-loss could have co-evolved.  The driving force would have been egg-eating predators.

Trilobites and dinosaurs, who were each around for more than a hundred million years, might be amused at a species here only a thousandth as long deciding to appoint itself the guardian of life on Earth.

Carl Sagan


Fred Phillips
Yes, Patrick, it was in Sagan's book "The Dragons of Eden: Speculations on the Evolution of Human Intelligence." The book's in my bedroom; do you need the page number?

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