Month: August 2018
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Bell’s Theorem
When observed in space, subatomic particles move in irregular, unpredictable ways. For example, the 53pm distance between a hydrogen nucleus and its lone orbiting electron is a calculated average of where an electron will show up in the electron cloud during any observation. In the Copenhagen interpretation (a consensus of physicists in the 1920s about…
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Simpson’s Paradox
As a motivating example of Simpson’s Paradox, Ken Ross in his 2004 book A Mathematician at the Ballpark presents the interesting case of the batting averages of David Justice and Derek Jeter in the mid ’90s. In each year examined, Justice had the better batting average: 1995 .253 to .250 1996 .321 to .314 1997…
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Kinnearing
Kinnearing is taking (or attempting to take) a picture of someone on the sly, usually without looking at a viewfinder or projection of the camera viewport. The results rarely capture the subject well, if they capture the subject at all. The term was coined by Stephanie Pearl McPhee, a/k/a the Yarn Harlot, who saw Greg…
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McKean’s Inversion
Erin McKean is a lexicographer and the founder of the Wordnik online dictionary. She received her AB/AM in linguistics from the University of Chicago in 1993 and has been both the Editor-in-Chief and the Chief Consulting Editor of American dictionaries for the Oxford University press. McKean and a small team founded Wordnik in 2008 as…
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Wheaton’s Law
Richard William “Wil” Wheaton is the wunderkind of a particular branch of sci-fi and nerd culture. Though his first major acting role of note was Gordie in the movie Stand By Me, Wheaton remains best known for playing Wesley Crusher on Star Trek: the Next Generation. Wheaton left the cast as a regular in 1990…
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Campbell’s Law
Today’s edition of Eponymy in August is contextually relevant, as a few days ago I was commiserating with some family members over having had dentists and other medical practitioners who try to upsell services. It might not be expected that physicians and medical professionals in small private practices would need to upsell patients, but it’s…
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The Zeigarnik Effect
Today’s edition of Eponymy in August is hopefully a quick one, because I have to get to bed soon and prep for a long drive in the morning. But there are many things to do between now and when I depart. So let’s talk about the Zeigarnik Effect. Bluma Zeigarnik, née Gerstein, was a 20th…
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The Baader-Meinhof Phenomenon
Following on from the first Eponymy in August of the year, here’s another about weird quirks of psychology related to memory and observation.The Baader-Meinhof Phenomenon (yes, it has its own page; hat tip to the Pacific Standard for that) is also known as the frequency illusion. This phenomenon happens when you hear about something new…
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The Mandela Effect
You may have thought that Eponymy in August was over, but really it never went away. It just wasn’t August from 11 months ago until now. But it does lead to a nice segue into talking about today’s Eponymy in August, which is the Mandela Effect. Let’s start by listing some oddly controversial facts. These…
