#100sciencepoems 35: Imagination and Knowledge

Mr Neil Degrasse Tyson is a gift to the world of science AND science communication, but he does have a bit of a reputation for being curmudgeonly about “bad” science in science fiction. Also there’s a shout out to my favourite Einstein quotation (and possible future tattoo).

    • Dear Neil,

      I know.

      The Kaiju in Pacific Rim

      The tech in Independence Day

      The asteroid in Armageddon

      None of them behaved the way

      You would have liked. Unscientific.

      But these flights of fancy pay!

      Box office takings were terrific.

      Still, that isn’t my defence

      For movies that don’t show the truth: bro,

      Why is it you get so tense

      About something there is no proof for?

      Just imagination. Neil!

      I’d like to ask you to relax

      How is it that you really feel

      About video phones? Jetpacks?

      These things are now being invented

      That existed, once, in fiction

      Is it not a bit demented

      To kick up a stink, cause friction

      When a sci-fi writer posits

      Something never learned in college,

      Cast it out as fake because it’s

      Fantasy, instead of knowledge?

      #100sciencepoems 34: Some Social Worth

      A poem about the darker side of science today, and in particular a scientist whose name makes me very uncomfortable

      https://www.theguardian.com/world/2018/apr/19/hans-asperger-aided-and-supported-nazi-programme-study-says

      So I’m sitting in this absence disciplinary

      (Sorry. Return to Work Support Meeting

      You have to use the right vocabulary…)

      Because my absence record is higher than the targets they set me

      (Sorry. Key Performance Indicators.

      “Targets” sound harsh and unreasonable

      When you start trying to apply them to sick people

      But KPIs, they’re somehow less evil.)

      And my employee file is thick with sick notes

      (Sorry. Fit notes.

      As in fit for work.

      A sick note is a letter to say that you’re shirking.)

      And that’s what this meeting’s about. The ever lurking

      Accusation. I’m faking. I’m lazy.

      And somewhere in there in that sheaf of notes is

      my official diagnosis.

      High Functioning Autism

      And everyone knows that first bit is bullshit.

      I’m barely functioning

      And they wish I’d hand in my notice

      And I wish I’d hand in my notice

      But what that distinction means is

      This person can probably hold down a job

      They’re fit for work.

      Maybe not too high paid. Nothing special,

      But they can earn a wage even though they are lesser.

      Let them do the spreadsheets.

      They’ll like that better.

      And although yes, they can say they’re disabled

      Demand reasonable adjustments like maybe a table

      In a quieter corner.

      If they say they can’t cope, they can’t work at all…

      Well.

      They’re “high functioning.”

      No metric on a DLA form will find them wanting

      Let alone needing help.

      So this job? I have to do it. It will have to do

      Even though I know and they know I’ll break down at my desk tomorrow

      The day after, and next week too.

      And I say to my boss as she looks at my notes

      “There’s some things in my workplace I struggle to cope with

      Because I’m autistic.”

      Her head jerks up like I’ve just accused her

      Of something horrific.

      “But you’re not!” She snaps

      Well that’s news to me.

      And my brain doesn’t like me to contradict people

      It sees as official. And this woman’s holding a clipboard

      But I’m pretty sure about this one so I try again.

      “I am. You’ve got the letter from my assessment.

      I have autism” At this point it’s just guesswork

      What magical phrase must I use to impress her?

      “No you haven’t. What you’ve got is Asperger’s Syndrome”.

      Now let me rewind.

      You’ll have to excuse me it’s something my mind likes to do

      No tangent unfollowed. But this information might well be new.

      Asperger was a Nazi. And that’s not hyperbole.

      I’m autistic, remember? I’m talking literally

      Austria. Third Reich. Master Race. Nazi.

      This is a man who sent disabled children

      To their deaths because think of the burden

      They must be to their parents.

      But he apparently made the groundbreaking discovery

      That some of us weren’t quite as bad as we seemed to be

      That we might have our uses. Some social worth

      And while the best thing for a drain on the state is euthanasia

      To euthanise us might actually be a waste of labour.

      And this man gave his name to a syndrome

      A euphemistic, neat semantic trick that meant

      “Yes, you’re autistic, but one of the good ones.”

      Or “No, you’re not autistic, that’s only the ones

      Who can’t work. The ones who are really disabled.”

      A measure of worth

      If your worth can be measured in wages.

      And I listen to her:

      The distinction she’s making

      The language she’s choosing

      The boxes she’s ticking

      And my throat is aching

      With the scream that I’m swallowing

      My shoulders are hunching

      Holding in the panic attack

      Because that’s what they mean by high functioning.

      That you can look without flinching

      Right in the eyes of someone

      Who’ll give you the name of a Nazi

      To make the linguistic distinction

      That you should be useful.

      And able to work

      Because really, how else are you supposed

      To prove your worth?

      #100sciencepoems 33: Schroedinger

      It was supposed to be a thought experiment.

      No animals were harmed. No fluffy kitten

      Lay in a box, waiting to be poisoned

      In the name of physics. Not really

      • But people can be cruel and stupid;

        The experiment is famous enough

        That someone, somewhere, might have tried

        To poison a cat in the name of physics.

        • A real schroedinger’s cat exists

          And also does not exist. Google could tell me

          But I do t want to open up that box;

          I prefer to remain uncertain.

          #100sciencepoems 32: ____________

          You know, but you know longer know the names

          Of things, of people that you love. You know

          You used to know them. But no longer. You

          Know these people love you, but their names

          Escape you. Suddenly you’re lost for words

          Although sometimes you find that you can speak

          With confidence and ease, the way you used

          To. Then one word escapes your mind

          And everything unravels. You can’t speak

          Your lips twitching in vain, and it’s no use

          And everyone’s pretending not to mind

          But you mind. And you want to scream aloud

          “I used to know so many words! I still

          Know so much more than anyone believes

          It’s just the names I cannot speak aloud

          You bow your head. Your twitching lips grow still.

          The (woman? Daughter?) pats your hand, and leaves.

          #100sciencepoems 31: Stoney

          Stonefish are well hard. But also, apparently, tasty.

          Don’t start with me.

          I’ll take you down

          I’ll fuck you up

          I rule this town.

          Don’t look this way

          Don’t even try

          My gangland threads

          Should tell you why.

          Get in my face,

          My fins will change

          To warn you to

          Stay out of range.

          You want to fight?

          I’ll make you sob

          I’ve got a switchblade

          In my gob.

          And don’t you put me

          On your plate

          This isn’t blood

          It’s poison, mate.

          The fact that humans

          Can digest

          My venom without harm?

          It’s best

          We just ignore

          That little fact

          Come on! There’s such

          A thing as tact!

          I am the scariest

          Of fishes

          But also, sadly,

          I’m delicious.

          #100sciencepoems 30: Superfluidity

          For Frank. Who needs to peer review this if it’s wrong. Superfluids are weird.

          • Liquid has rules: swirl, dribble and slosh

            Poured into a vessel, it’s swiftly at rest

            If it’s agitated, well then maybe a splosh

            Is acceptable, but it is all for the best

            If liquid has rules. For the way it behaves.

            Predictable, sensible ripples and waves.

            And then there’s superfluid.

            How, does it, why does it do it?

            Liquid helium, poured out and stirred

            Will start climbing the wall of the glass it’s unheard of.

            Breaks all of the rules. It’s counterintuitive,

            Confusing. Superfluous. Absurd.

            Liquid has rules.

            It will stay if a cup unless tipped.

            A superfluid takes us for fools

            Dripping in ways that no liquid should ever have dripped.

            #100sciencepoems 29: Recipe For Slime

            Apparently the cool thing Among primary school age kids is making homemade slime to play with. Herewith, a recipe, cribbed from BBC Good Food.

            • Take just 100ml of PVA

              And ½ a teaspoon of bicarbonate

              Food dye: a little goes a long long way

              A spoon of contact lens solution’s great

              • Put in the glue and saline stuff as well

                Then add the soda and begin to stir

                In food dye, of the kind that comes as gel

                Add glitter, if that’s something you prefer.

                • First stir, then knead. At first you’ll find it sticks

                  But soon it’s smooth and pliant, every time

                  Provided everything is in the mix

                  You’ve got yourself a lovely lump of slime!

                  • I don’t know if you’d call it scientific

                    But all your kids will think that it’s terrific!

                    #100sciencepoems 27: Stale

                    Accidentally missed a number! So, for Charlotte, a Haiku.

                    • You asked me to write

                      About dino coprolites…

                      But that shit gets old.

                      #100sciencepoems 28: Aristotle Considers The Hectocotylus

                      Thanks to Ian for this splendid little corner of Wikipedia!

                      • It simply seems implausible:

                        This can’t be how they reproduce:

                        It’s “tentacle”, not “testicle”

                        And maybe I am being obtuse

                        • This can’t be how they reproduce!

                          A suckered arm that shoots out sperm?

                          And maybe I am being obtuse

                          But are we sure it’s not a worm?

                          • A suckered arm that shoots out sperm:

                            To me it sounds distinctly odd

                            But are we sure it’s not a worm

                            That’s stuck in a cephalopod?

                            • To me it sounds distinctly odd

                              It’s tentacle, not testicle!

                              Embedded in a cephalopod?

                              It simply seems implausible!

                              #100sciencepoems 26: Mr Taylor

                              Mr Taylor made things explode.

                              He knew it would get our attention if,

                              In assembly, he pulled on his goggles

                              And (suspiciously singed) lab coat

                              And titted about with some magnesium.

                              • He did it every year:

                                The firstyears would crane forward, hoping

                                For a glimpse of a brief spark, a muted pop

                                While everyone else was shuffling back

                                On the shiny wooden floor, trying to get

                                Out of the blast zone.

                                • I must admit, it worked.

                                  We all looked forward to Science days.

                                  The faint but ever present possibility

                                  That something would catch fire

                                  Was like a drug to us,

                                  *

                                  The most likely inflammable

                                  Was Mr Taylor’s magnificent beard.

                                  Bright auburn, halfway down his chest

                                  Like curls of copper wire.

                                  We marvelled at the fact it went unscathed

                                  Always splendid: a russet profusion…

                                • But then one day,

                                  I saw Mr Taylor on the telly

                                  Talking about primroses on some science programme.

                                  Turns out, he was a horticulturist at heart;

                                  The flashes and bangs were just for us.

                                  Mr Taylor preferred to grow things.