• 30. From the Lab to the Layperson: A Pioneering Initiative to Improve the Translation of Science

  • Mar 27 2024
  • Length: 11 mins
  • Podcast

30. From the Lab to the Layperson: A Pioneering Initiative to Improve the Translation of Science

  • Summary

  • “If you don’t tell your own story, someone else will tell it for you, and you probably won’t like how they do it.” —Shirley Malcolm, American Association for the Advancement of Science.


    We know that complex life likely evolved from single-celled organisms. As soon as microbes emerged from the primordial soup, they were shaped by natural selection, ensuring survival of the fittest. Eventually, though not inevitably, evolution would lead to great complexity. After microbes came the Cambrian explosion—a rapid diversification of complex life. The seas became populated with soft-bodied fish, and after a few billion years, the vertebrates emerged. Bony fish eventually found the sand from the sea. Through intermediate forms, fins produced limbs. Hominids eventually came to rule the Earth with color vision, grasping hands, and brains able to fashion tools such as typewriters and laptops we could use to oversimplify complex scientific phenomena.


    The Skeptic's Guide to Sports Science BOOK: https://www.nbtiller.com

    Skeptical Inquirer magazine: https://www.skepticalinquirer.org

    Original article & references: https://skepticalinquirer.org/exclusive/from-the-lab-to-the-layperson-a-pioneering-initiative-to-improve-the-translation-of-science/


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