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NNadir

(37,767 posts)
Sun Mar 1, 2026, 08:03 AM 17 hrs ago

Questions asked by 13 and 14 year old kids at a science lecture yesterday.

I went to this lecture yesterday:

Science On Saturday: How Diet and Obesity Shape Our Immune System’s Ability to Kill Cancer

There were 13 and 14 year old kids asking questions that blew my mind, for instance, asking to explain the differences in lysozymes and granulocytes in NK killer cells and how their distribution in cytoplasm was affected by obesity.

I can't remember all the questions kids asked, but I was impressed.

It is a terrible thing, with these fine young minds, we are destroying science in this country.

The lecture should be available as a recording on line in a few weeks.

It was rather amazing, I have to say. Dr. Lynch when asked what teacher inspired her, said her teacher was a nun in Catholic High School who taught evolution, albeit claiming it was inspired by God.

This got a hearty laugh from the audience.

Dr. Lynch is an immigrant, from Ireland.

In former times, the world sent their best and brightest to the United States. No more....

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Questions asked by 13 and 14 year old kids at a science lecture yesterday. (Original Post) NNadir 17 hrs ago OP
Now, under EptRumpstein, WE are sending OUR best..... lastlib 17 hrs ago #1
Wow! Delphinus 16 hrs ago #2
I see this every year at the science fair RainCaster 16 hrs ago #3
When I was 13, I asked Sister Johnette Submariner 15 hrs ago #4
I'm an atheist, and in general, I have no use for religious doctrine, however it is notable that the discoverer... NNadir 15 hrs ago #5
I believe science will survive, although perhaps less well-funded, in spite of Trump. What drives science is, as you Martin68 14 hrs ago #6

lastlib

(27,987 posts)
1. Now, under EptRumpstein, WE are sending OUR best.....
Sun Mar 1, 2026, 08:32 AM
17 hrs ago

to the trash heap. We are becoming a society where mediocrity is excellence.

RainCaster

(13,581 posts)
3. I see this every year at the science fair
Sun Mar 1, 2026, 09:27 AM
16 hrs ago

I've been a judge at the state science fair for 15+ years now and I am privileged to observe such interactions each time. I still have faith in our future based on what I see among the youth.

Submariner

(13,323 posts)
4. When I was 13, I asked Sister Johnette
Sun Mar 1, 2026, 09:37 AM
15 hrs ago

how the National Geographic glossy color photo of the dinosaur fossil could be described as over 200 million years old, when you have been teaching us the world is only 6 thousand years old?

She cleared up my misunderstanding. I erred in thinking the dinosaur fossil was real, when it was explained to me that it was actually fake. God put the fossil there to test my 'faith'.

When I came back with a followup question and said ..."but"..I was quickly reminded of the sin of blasphemy that I was currently skirting and should think hard about pursuing.

I can't see a nun teaching evolution. There is no such thing in the Catholic Church I grew up in. That line of thought is not compatible with the whole Adam & Eve kicking off this crap show.

I'm glad to see were in a day and age where you can take their questions without having to threaten and attack them with catholic doctrine.

NNadir

(37,767 posts)
5. I'm an atheist, and in general, I have no use for religious doctrine, however it is notable that the discoverer...
Sun Mar 1, 2026, 09:57 AM
15 hrs ago

...of genetics and the author of the heliocentric view of the solar system were both monks, Mendel and Copernicus respectively.

I worked with a post doc, an excellent chemist, once who was a catholic priest, and another excellent chemist who was a fundamentalist. The latter was great at organic synthesis, very creative. (He didn't "believe" in evolution, even though the reality of evolution is not subject to "belief." It exists and is easily explained on a molecular level. One either accepts science or one doesn't. The universe operates independently of any book, particularly one written thousands of years ago by sheep herders.) The former, the priest, was an excellent interpreter of bioinorganic chemistry, protein metallomics.

People can, and do, compartmentalize.

We are lucky, given the important work of Dr. Lynch, that she had a science teacher, a nun, who taught her in such a way as to be cognizant of reality.

I fully concede that religion is a problem, but as I noted over in the atheist forum here, the atheist Nobel Laureate Roald Hoffman expressed a certain toleration for religious faith, more, perhaps, than I do, but his commentary was quite rational:

Roald Hoffmann, basically an Ann Frank who lived, on his atheism, and some ruminations on the question of ethics.

From the text from the part of the interview that turned toward philosophy and Hoffmann's atheism, again, with a twist:

A final and more personal question: You defined yourself as “an atheist who is moved by religion” (6). Looking at the tenor of your life and the many goals you have achieved, one wonders where your inner force comes from.

The atheism and the respect for religion come form the same source. I observe that in every culture on Earth, absolutely every one, human beings have constructed religious systems. There is a need in us to try to understand, to see that there is something that unites us spiritually. So scientists who do not respect religion fail in their most basic task—observation. Human beings need the spiritual. The same observation reveals to me a multitude of religious constructions—gods of nature, spirits, the great monotheistic religions. It seems to me there can’t be a God or gods; there are just manifestations of a human-constructed spirituality.


I added the bold in this case.

Martin68

(27,468 posts)
6. I believe science will survive, although perhaps less well-funded, in spite of Trump. What drives science is, as you
Sun Mar 1, 2026, 10:58 AM
14 hrs ago

so nicely illustrated, is curiosity and the drive to answer questions. When the Democrats regain control on of their first priorities will be to restore funding for research.

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