Monday, January 05, 2009 | Congress Blog
Jun 17

Written by: 5th World Congress Blogger
6/17/2008 4:55 PM

“What you’re asking for is the redesign of the rationale for science centres…I’d love to think it through. Let us continue this conversation at the Ontario Science Centre.”

Stephen Lewis delivers keynote address at the Fifth Science Centre World Congress in Toronto Mr. Lewis was responding to provocative questions from the audience following his eloquent – and frequently humorous – keynote address: How can science centres – traditionally seen only as “fun” places for family and school visits – change? How can they better engage their publics with controversial issues such as climate change and global warming, HIV/AIDS, gender inequality and working towards the UN Millennium Goals for 2015?

Admitting that those questions were impossible to answer in the moment made it only more clear to delegates listening to his speech on Social Responsibility and Science Centres that Mr. Lewis would be a valuable source of insight for the evolution of our field.

One of the world’s most influential and riveting orators on human rights, social justice and international development, Stephen Lewis has had a distinguished career with the United Nations since 1984 and is currently Professor of Global Health, Faculty of Social Sciences at McMaster University, co-Director of AIDS-Free World and head of the Stephen Lewis Foundation helping to ease the pain of HIV/AIDS in Africa at a grassroots level.

Jokingly describing his former political career as an NDP leader as one of “transcendental futility”, the self-deprecating Mr. Lewis was passionate about the ways in which we should be shouldering our social responsibilities and working to improve the human condition.

Stephen Lewis addresses delegates at the Fifth Science Centre World Congress Elaborating on the repercussions of climate change, Mr. Lewis said, “I think we’re heading for an apocalyptic moment in the 21st century”. He noted that well-known climate change activists such as Al Gore and economist Sir Nicholas Stern would be much more radical today in their predictions about the consequences of climate change than they were even a year ago.

Quoting climate change experts, Mr. Lewis said we need to reduce our carbon emissions by 90 percent by 2030. If we don’t, he warned, “we’re heading for calamitous events and it’s happening already”, giving examples such as the flooding in Bangladesh “which would potentially unleash millions of environmental refugees over the next ten years”, the current famine in southern Ethiopia, and the relocation of entire communities – such as Vanuatu in the South Pacific – threatened by rising sea levels. He said that climate change is striking Southern Africa most forcefully, calling it “a conspiracy against millions of people” through drought, famine and disease.

What should we be doing about this as nations? It seems there are no easy answers to reversing the environmental problems created by industrialized Western societies. Mr. Lewis touched upon carbon taxes and the cap and trade system used in Europe as examples of initiatives that are not without their own problems. He also referenced carbon sequestration as a new approach that has potential – but he admitted that much-touted biofuels come at a cost within the context of global food shortages. 

In addressing the HIV/AIDS pandemic, Mr. Lewis said that “the virus is outwitting the science on every front”, and currently infecting 23 million people worldwide. While one million people underwent treatment for HIV/AIDS in 2007, another 2.5 million became infected.

He blasted South Africa’s President and the Minister of Health for not only ignoring their nation’s most pressing problem (800 to 1000 South Africans die every day from AIDS-related illnesses) but also claiming that they “still can’t accept that HIV leads to AIDS.”

Kevin von Appen of the Ontario Science Centre And he praised the resilience and heroism of African grandmothers who have stepped in to care for their grandchildren orphaned by AIDS. He revealed that females account for 61 percent of those living with the virus in Africa – and in the 15 to 24 age range, the percentage of HIV-infected who are female rises to 75 percent.

Mr. Lewis was especially impassioned on the subject of gender inequality, referring not only to their vulnerability to HIV/AIDS, but also to the “vaginal destruction” of women in places such as Darfur, the Congo and Liberia, where violent rape has gone from being “a weapon of war to a strategy of war”. He said “the work of empowering women, raising awareness in the communities, raising consciousness…thinking creatively of the use of science to make some of these realities vivid and searing in the eyes of the observer would make all the difference in the world.”

Mr. Lewis was encouraged by references in the Congress agenda to the UN Millennium Goals for 2015, which include striving to: eradicate extreme hunger and poverty; achieve universal primary education; promote gender equality and empower women; reduce child mortality; improve maternal health; combat HIV/AIDS, malaria and other diseases; ensure environmental sustainability; and develop a global partnership for development. He added that these millennium goals provide an excellent framework for science – and science centres – to address these global issues.

Stephen Lewis after his keynote address at the Fifth Science Centre World Congress When asked by an audience member if he still has hope for humanity with all the problems in the world today, he said, “When the administration changes in the U.S.”, an administration he claimed spends “$13 billion a week on war in Iraq…the world will have hope again.” Specifically, Mr. Lewis confessed that he draws “hope from the people on the ground”, of citizens “overcoming things at the grassroots level”.

As for what science centres can do to become agents of social responsibility, Mr. Lewis expressed confidence in the intentions and abilities of the audience to assume larger, more proactive roles. “We are on this planet to secure social justice and equality…What you do at your centres makes it possible for people to understand the complex forces at work – whether scientific, technological or intensely human.”

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5 comments so far...

Re: "Science is a Language of Hope and Inspiration"

Every science centre should have a motivational speaker like Stephen Lewis working for them! If only we could make him one of the exhibits :) LOVED his presentation.

By Vanessa C on   6/17/2008 5:24 PM

Re: Stephen Lewis: "Science is a Language of Hope and Inspiration"

Truly inspiring. At the beginning of his presentation he quoted a definition of the value of science that was one of the best I have ever heard. Unfortunately, I did not write down the reference, and I couldn`t find it on the videos. I would be grateful to anyone who can provide it.

By Arnet on   6/18/2008 4:14 PM

Re: Stephen Lewis: "Science is a Language of Hope and Inspiration"



It came from an op-ed piece in the New York Times by Brian Greene, Columbia physics prof and author of "The Elegant Universe".




By Christine on   6/18/2008 4:51 PM

Re: Stephen Lewis: "Science is a Language of Hope and Inspiration"

Here's the article by Brian Greene from the New York Times:

Put a Little Science in Your Life

By BRIAN GREENE

Published: June 1, 2008

A COUPLE of years ago I received a letter from an American soldier in Iraq. The letter began by saying that, as we’ve all become painfully aware, serving on the front lines is physically exhausting and emotionally debilitating. But the reason for his writing was to tell me that in that hostile and lonely environment, a book I’d written had become a kind of lifeline. As the book is about science — one that traces physicists’ search for nature’s deepest laws — the soldier’s letter might strike you as, well, odd.

[Marker]But it’s not. Rather, it speaks to the powerful role science can play in giving life context and meaning. At the same time, the soldier’s letter emphasized something I’ve increasingly come to believe: our educational system fails to teach science in a way that allows students to integrate it into their lives.

Allow me a moment to explain.

When we consider the ubiquity of cellphones, iPods, personal computers and the Internet, it’s easy to see how science (and the technology to which it leads) is woven into the fabric of our day-to-day activities. When we benefit from CT scanners, M.R.I. devices, pacemakers and arterial stents, we can immediately appreciate how science affects the quality of our lives. When we assess the state of the world, and identify looming challenges like climate change, global pandemics, security threats and diminishing resources, we don’t hesitate in turning to science to gauge the problems and find solutions.

And when we look at the wealth of opportunities hovering on the horizon — stem cells, genomic sequencing, personalized medicine, longevity research, nanoscience, brain-machine interface, quantum computers, space technology — we realize how crucial it is to cultivate a general public that can engage with scientific issues; there’s simply no other way that as a society we will be prepared to make informed decisions on a range of issues that will shape the future.

These are the standard — and enormously important — reasons many would give in explaining why science matters.

But here’s the thing. The reason science really matters runs deeper still. Science is a way of life. Science is a perspective. Science is the process that takes us from confusion to understanding in a manner that’s precise, predictive and reliable — a transformation, for those lucky enough to experience it, that is empowering and emotional. To be able to think through and grasp explanations — for everything from why the sky is blue to how life formed on earth — not because they are declared dogma but rather because they reveal patterns confirmed by experiment and observation, is one of the most precious of human experiences.

As a practicing scientist, I know this from my own work and study. But I also know that you don’t have to be a scientist for science to be transformative. I’ve seen children’s eyes light up as I’ve told them about black holes and the Big Bang. I’ve spoken with high school dropouts who’ve stumbled on popular science books about the human genome project, and then returned to school with newfound purpose. And in that letter from Iraq, the soldier told me how learning about relativity and quantum physics in the dusty and dangerous environs of greater Baghdad kept him going because it revealed a deeper reality of which we’re all a part.

It’s striking that science is still widely viewed as merely a subject one studies in the classroom or an isolated body of largely esoteric knowledge that sometimes shows up in the “real” world in the form of technological or medical advances. In reality, science is a language of hope and inspiration, providing discoveries that fire the imagination and instill a sense of connection to our lives and our world.

If science isn’t your strong suit — and for many it’s not — this side of science is something you may have rarely if ever experienced. I’ve spoken with so many people over the years whose encounters with science in school left them thinking of it as cold, distant and intimidating. They happily use the innovations that science makes possible, but feel that the science itself is just not relevant to their lives. What a shame.

Like a life without music, art or literature, a life without science is bereft of something that gives experience a rich and otherwise inaccessible dimension.

It’s one thing to go outside on a crisp, clear night and marvel at a sky full of stars. It’s another to marvel not only at the spectacle but to recognize that those stars are the result of exceedingly ordered conditions 13.7 billion years ago at the moment of the Big Bang. It’s another still to understand how those stars act as nuclear furnaces that supply the universe with carbon, oxygen and nitrogen, the raw material of life as we know it.

And it’s yet another level of experience to realize that those stars account for less than 4 percent of what’s out there — the rest being of an unknown composition, so-called dark matter and energy, which researchers are now vigorously trying to divine.

As every parent knows, children begin life as uninhibited, unabashed explorers of the unknown. From the time we can walk and talk, we want to know what things are and how they work — we begin life as little scientists. But most of us quickly lose our intrinsic scientific passion. And it’s a profound loss.

A great many studies have focused on this problem, identifying important opportunities for improving science education. Recommendations have ranged from increasing the level of training for science teachers to curriculum reforms.

But most of these studies (and their suggestions) avoid an overarching systemic issue: in teaching our students, we continually fail to activate rich opportunities for revealing the breathtaking vistas opened up by science, and instead focus on the need to gain competency with science’s underlying technical details.

In fact, many students I’ve spoken to have little sense of the big questions those technical details collectively try to answer: Where did the universe come from? How did life originate? How does the brain give rise to consciousness? Like a music curriculum that requires its students to practice scales while rarely if ever inspiring them by playing the great masterpieces, this way of teaching science squanders the chance to make students sit up in their chairs and say, “Wow, that’s science?”

In physics, just to give a sense of the raw material that’s available to be leveraged, the most revolutionary of advances have happened in the last 100 years — special relativity, general relativity, quantum mechanics — a symphony of discoveries that changed our conception of reality. More recently, the last 10 years have witnessed an upheaval in our understanding of the universe’s composition, yielding a wholly new prediction for what the cosmos will be like in the far future.

These are paradigm-shaking developments. But rare is the high school class, and rarer still is the middle school class, in which these breakthroughs are introduced. It’s much the same story in classes for biology, chemistry and mathematics.

At the root of this pedagogical approach is a firm belief in the vertical nature of science: you must master A before moving on to B. When A happened a few hundred years ago, it’s a long climb to the modern era. Certainly, when it comes to teaching the technicalities — solving this equation, balancing that reaction, grasping the discrete parts of the cell — the verticality of science is unassailable.

But science is so much more than its technical details. And with careful attention to presentation, cutting-edge insights and discoveries can be clearly and faithfully communicated to students independent of those details; in fact, those insights and discoveries are precisely the ones that can drive a young student to want to learn the details. We rob science education of life when we focus solely on results and seek to train students to solve problems and recite facts without a commensurate emphasis on transporting them out beyond the stars.

Science is the greatest of all adventure stories, one that’s been unfolding for thousands of years as we have sought to understand ourselves and our surroundings. Science needs to be taught to the young and communicated to the mature in a manner that captures this drama. We must embark on a cultural shift that places science in its rightful place alongside music, art and literature as an indispensable part of what makes life worth living.

It’s the birthright of every child, it’s a necessity for every adult, to look out on the world, as the soldier in Iraq did, and see that the wonder of the cosmos transcends everything that divides us.


Brian Greene, a professor of physics at Columbia, is the author of “The Elegant Universe” and “The Fabric of the Cosmos.”

By Sabrina on   6/18/2008 6:48 PM

Cure for HIV/AIDS....Ambush

THE CURE for HIV/AIDS.......AMBUSH

THE IDEA that AMBUSH cures AIDS
is being proven by the more than 400 individuals who have taken a dose of 60 ml three times daily for 21 days. The result is that AMBUSH 'KILLS' the virus by causing the protein envelope to rupture and the viral particles are discarded by the white blood cells. AMBUSH is able to 'KILL' the virus that are 'hiding' in the lymph system by its 'natural radioactive' properties. This process allows the body to 'return to normal health' with a corresponding immunity to that or those strains of the virus.

What is AMBUSH ?
AMBUSH is a radioactive isotope of uranium that is found in the 'palm' plant of which there are more than 3000 species. When ingested, AMBUSH causes the body temperature in the trunk area to rise to about 102 degrees when the individual is sleeping. The preparation takes four hours per batch, which is then given to the individuals for consumption 60 ml three times daily for 21 days. AMBUSH is a herbal preparation in this form but it contains an active ingredient which is a 'NEW' crystalline substance, a drug from the 'palm plant' similarly to ASPIRIN originating from the willow tree bark

RESULTS:
After 21 days on AMBUSH, ALL the individuals experienced a decrease in viral load to undetectable, an increase in cd4, increase in RBC, an improvement in general health such as more color to the face, decrease in Buffalo hump, an increase in gluteal muscles, a decrease to having no joint pains whereby individuals can bend to touch their toes, and walk up steps are but a few examples. There is also a dramatic increase in their sexual appetite beginning after the first week of therapy

DISCUSSION:
In any plant concoction such as percolated 'tea', there are 30-40,000 compounds, whi ch would take the scientific community twenty years to isolate one particular ingredient if they knew what they were looking for. The LORD GOD has given me seven steps to isolate the active ingredient, which is soft and metallic in nature and has a carbon- uranium-sulfur-(classified)-phentolamine configuration or structure. This is similar to Federick Kekule and the discovery of the benzene ring where he dreamt the structure.

As an antiviral and 'natural radioactivity' producing agent, AMBUSH is also effective against leukemia, lupus and HPV. Here I am saying that I have 'GIVEN' AMBUSH in the same 'strength' and dosage to patients with leukemia, lupus and HPV. A 35 year old male with HIV found it difficult to impossible to urinate was put on 'green tea' and water while the doctors contemplated prostrate surgery. One of the doctors gave him my number , I sent him a supply of AMBUSH an d he has not been given any more ARV's, since taking AMBUSH 18 months ago, is in 'good' health and has expressed a willingness to be examined by HIV investigators like many others who have taken AMBUSH.

I have sent this 'IDEA' to most HIV research agencies, scientist of the field, universities, hospitals, clinics, politicians and news agencies to which it is REJECTED because the name of THE LORD GOD is mentioned. He has steered me scientifically through the processes such as which plant and how to produce the active ingredient. What are the odds of a Florida Pharmacist picking a plant would contain the CURE for HIV/AIDS ?
I have never charged any of the people for their supply of AMBUSH but a life saving has been spent on the project with NO renumeration from any sources because AMBUSH falls outside the walls of modern medicine and research.

PROPOSAL:

My proposal is that I PROVE that AMBUSH CURES HIV/AIDS by giving it to a number of END-STAGE or DRUG-RESISTANT people and the scientific community watches their recovery. This proposal addresses the problem in that I have already outlaid the results to be obtained.

This IDEA is unconventional in that the scientific community has rejected AMBUSH because I say it is GOD given. Secondly if I wrote it according to certain standards, then it might be peer reviewed. However, THE LORD GOD has also shown me that there are five enzyme systems associated with the virus, reverse transcriptase, protease, fusion and two more of which causes the virus to be AIRBOURNE. This means that without DIVINE intervention mankind and ALL warm- blooded mammals will be extinct in a number of years.

The PROOF of what I am saying is found in scientific papers wherein it is found that when the protease cuts the viral strands, it cuts it at DIFFERENT lengths EVERY time, to which it should always be a valine at the end but is a different amino acid every time. This is why it is IMPOSSIBLE to produce a VACCINE.

Since this is NOT a hypothesis but there are about 400 individuals who have taken AMBUSH, here lies a vast area in which to check, recheck and confirm that AMBUSH CURES AIDS. Let it be mentioned that during the HIV reproductive cycle, reverse transcriptase converts viral RNA into DNA compatible to human genetic materials. Thus the human DNA has been 'hijacked' and since each person has a DIFFERENT DNA, then the new viral copy is unique to that person which shows that each individual has a DIFFERENT STRAIN of the virus. Consider two HIV positive people swapping viral strains and increasing its complexity with multiple partners.
It can also be proposed that they be revisited as proof that the strain or strains that they had were 'killed' at the time of taking AMBUSH considering that a person can catch as many different strains as there are people who are infected by HIV.
I am also willing to work with the scientific community in identifying those individuals who took AMBUSH and wish to be identified with this process notwithstanding that some are stigmatized while others are jubilant,

Once AMBUSH is verified as being able to accomplish that which is aforementioned then the next stage might be the natural and artificial synthesis of the substance.

Finally, if this is accepted or not, believed or not, THE LORD GOD always wins and this is the heavenly truth to which AMBUSH was divinely given to mankind for the CURE of HIV/AIDS and it will be here forever. Apostle Shada Mishe.

apostleshadamishe@gmail.com

Here is a video taped presentation that I gave at t he Martin Luther King library in Washington

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=8V53D1w__Po
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=vPwuwlVBOV0
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ZejptOwMTzQ
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=CqcTgIAhrhc
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=f7HPKcT_iwY
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=W9iQfgiYAnw
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=i3RzRS6tJDM

By apostle Shada Mishe on   12/8/2008 11:40 PM

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