With kids consuming half their sugar quota first thing, it’s no wonder they’re getting diabetes and liver disease. We have to fight corporate interests
From The Guardian: http://bit.ly/2iUwwVr
With kids consuming half their sugar quota first thing, it’s no wonder they’re getting diabetes and liver disease. We have to fight corporate interests
From The Guardian: http://bit.ly/2iUwwVr
Here’s our exciting new project, which will keep us busy until 2025 🙂
Hopefully, good things will come out of it, to help emerging countries to reduce the burden of acute kidney injury.
Most of us don’t have the deep understanding of science that is needed to discriminate between good and bad science. This applies to journalists too, which are also too frequently biased by the need to “sensationalise”, which boosts sales. So, it’s a deadly combination of uneducated readers that always look for the big and exceptional, and journalists that are often incompetent or under pressure to meet their audience’s interests.
The figure below gives an easy guide to help us distinguish what should just be junked from interesting reports of gound-breaking advances.
“La tesi principale, sempre camminando sul suo filo teso, è moderata e quasi banale: per certi aspetti, le società moderne offrono vantaggi importanti rispetto a quelle tradizionali (in particolare in fatto di gestione della violenza individuale); per altri aspetti, abbiamo al contrario tanto da imparare dai nativi (dal senso delle relazioni comunitarie, al rispetto per l’ambiente, al multilinguismo). Ne consegue che è sbagliato sia affidarsi a ingenue visioni del progresso umano sia idealizzare nostalgicamente le popolazioni tribali.”
http://doppiozero.com/materiali/recensioni/diamond-cammina-sul-filo