Critical Wit #16 – The Benefits Of Activity
Travis Saunders is a PhD student researching the relationship between sedentary time and chronic disease risk in children and youth. He is also a Certified Exercise Physiologist. In this episode,...
View ArticleCritical Wit #17 – Literature Reviews with MittenLit (Bill Castanier)
Bill Castanier is a literary journalist for the Lansing City Pulse, and blogger at MittenLit.com. In this episode, Bill reviews four excellent novels written by Michigan authors. The first is a...
View ArticleCritical Wit #18 – Clarifying The Consensus On Global Warming
Dan Moutal is a blogger and podcaster for the website, Irregular Climate. In this episode, I ask Dan to clarify what the scientific consensus is on global warming, as well as what are the concerns...
View ArticleCritical Wit #19 – From The Cutting Room Floor
In this special episode, I provide some audio clips from interviews that were not included in their respective episodes due to time constraints. But I saved them because I thought they were...
View ArticleCritical Wit #20 – Falsifiability in Science
Steve Matheson is an evolutionary cell biologist and blogger at Quintessence of Dust. We discuss what it’s meant by something to be falsifiable in science. We use the example of evolution by natural...
View ArticleCritical Wit #21 – (New) Advice to Car Buying
Phil Reed is a Senior Consumer Advice Editor for Edmunds.com, an organization that offers information on automobiles. Phil has written extensively on buying and selling cars, and so we discuss some...
View ArticleCritical Wit #22 – The Science of Genetic Engineering
Pamela Ronald is a plant geneticist at the University of California – Davis, and co-author of the book, Tomorrow’s Table: Organic Farming, Genetics, and the Future of Food. The book is about how...
View ArticleCritical Wit #23 – The Science of Water Desalination
Joseph Cotruvo is the president of Joseph Cotruvo & Associates and a co-editor of the book, Desalination Technology: Health and Environmental Impacts. In this episode, we talk about the science...
View ArticleCritical Wit #24 – The Revolution and Tragedy of Alfred Wegener
Roger McCoy is author of Ending In Ice: The Revolutionary Idea and Tragic Expedition of Alfred Wegener. In this episode we talk about the scientific triumph of Wegener’s bold, controversial theory of...
View ArticleCritical Wit #25 – The Voices Of The Death Penalty Debate
Russell Murphy is a Professor of Law at Suffolk University Law School in Boston, Massachusetts, and author of Voices Of The Death Penalty Debate: A Citizen’s Guide To Capital Punishment. “Voices” is a...
View ArticleCritical Wit #26 – The Science of Synesthesia with Try Nerdy
Kristin Rose is a graduate student at Harvard, and blogger at Try Nerdy, a website that discusses interesting and cool science, and unabashedly promotes nerdiness. In this episode we talk about...
View ArticleCritical Wit #27 – The Middle Class Themes & Middletown Dreams Of Rush
Chris McDonald is a professor of music studies, with a phD in ethnomusicology. He is also the author of Rush, Rock Music, and the Middle Class: Dreaming in Middletown, a book that explores the music...
View ArticleCritical Wit #28 – The Science Of Sustainable Fisheries
Holly Moeller is a graduate student of Ecology and Evolution at Stanford University and author of the Seeing Green blog. In this episode, we talk about sustainable fisheries. And we also talk about...
View ArticleCritical Wit #29 – From The Cutting Room Floor 2
In this special two-part episode, I provide some audio clips from interviews that were not included in their respective episodes due to time constraints. But I saved them because I thought they were...
View ArticleCritical Wit #30 – From The Cutting Room Floor 3
In the second of this special two-part episode, I provide some more audio clips of interviews from the previous ten episodes. Clips like whether “transgenic” is the same as “genetically engineered”,...
View ArticleCritical Wit #31 – Bears And People: A History Of Conflict
Emily Willingham is a biologist, science writer, and author of The Complete Idiot’s Guide to College Biology. She is also the blogger at ‘The Biology Files.’ In this episode we talk about a short...
View ArticleCritical Wit #32 – An Optimistic Outlook of the Future
Mark Stevenson is the author of An Optimist’s Tour of the Future: One Curious Man Sets Out to Answer “What’s Next?”, a funny, informative story about the technologies and innovations that’s driving...
View ArticleCritical Wit #33 – On Stage with Jill Twiss
Jill Twiss is a theater actress and stand-up comedian who according to her website is “creating world peace through stand-up comedy.” In this episode we talk a bit about her work as both a performer...
View ArticleCritical Wit #34 – Science News with Jill Adams II
Jill Adams returns to Critical Wit to talk about her experience attending the National Science Writers Convention, and it’s complementary sessions with the Council for the Advancement of Science...
View ArticleCritical Wit #35 – Literature Reviews with MittenLit (Bill Castanier) II
Bill Castanier from MittenLit.com returns to Critical Wit to give us some suggestions on books to pick up as either gift ideas or to read during the holidays. We start with three books about Ernest...
View ArticleCritical Wit #36 – How Did Earth Get Its Water?
Dr. Edwin (Ted) Bergin is professor of Astronomy at the University of Michigan, who researches the “molecular trail of our origins.” In this episode we talk about what science has theorized regarding...
View ArticleCritical Wit #37 – Rambunctious (not Ragamuffin) Gardens: Ecosystem Innovations
Emma Marris is a freelance science writer and author of Rambunctious Garden: Saving Nature in a Post-Wild World. In this episode, Emma talks about her book, describing how the perspective in which...
View ArticleCritical Wit #38 – What Can Sherlock Holmes Teach Us About Thinking?
Maria Konnikova is a writer, doctoral candidate, and blogger at Scientific American. She has recently finished a series called “Lessons of Sherlock Holmes” – a chronicle that explores how examples...
View ArticleCritical Wit #39 – Exploring Aaron’s World
Aaron is the young host of Aaron’s World, a popular podcast about ancient animals from an ancient time. Aaron plays himself as a time-traveling explorer who visits eras in which dinosaurs, pterosaurs,...
View ArticleCritical Wit #40 – Evil Genes: What Science Can Tell Us About Pernicious...
Dr. Barbara Oakley is an associate professor of Engineering at Oakland University. She’s the author of “Evil Genes: Why Rome Fell, Hitler Rose, Enron Failed and My Sister Stole My Mother’s Boyfriend.”...
View ArticleCritical Wit #41 – From The Cutting Room Floor 4
In this episode, I give you more interview excerpts from off of the cutting room floor, such as when I asked Mark Stevenson about nanotechnology, as well as how it felt interviewing the great minds in...
View ArticleCritical Wit #42 – Rosie Redfield on ‘Arsenic Bacteria’: One Year Later
Dr. Rosie Redfield is a microbiologist at the University of British Columbia and science writer for the Field of Science blog network. In this episode, guest host Sophie Bushwick talks with Dr....
View ArticleCritical Wit #43 – Molecular Biological Evidence For Evolution
Zachary Moore is a molecular biologist and host of the Evolution 101 podcast. The 38-episode podcast consists of short episodes that are designed to provide a simple explanation of the independent...
View ArticleCritical Wit #44 – Ernest Shackleton’s Antarctic Adventure…Told On Twitter
Peggy Nelson is a new media artist who’s currently using Twitter to tell the incredible survival story of Antarctic explorer Ernest Shackleton. In the first of this two-episode interview, Sophie...
View ArticleCritical Wit #45 – Using New Media to Create Art
In the second of this two-episode interview, Sophie Bushwick talks with Peggy Nelson, a new media artist who’s currently using Twitter to tell the amazing survival story of Antarctic explorer Ernest...
View ArticleCritical Wit #46 – On Charles Darwin: A Conversation with Sean B Carroll
Dr. Sean B Carroll is an award-winning scientist, author, and educator. He is currently Professor of Molecular Biology and Genetics and an Investigator with the Howard Hughes Medical Institute at the...
View ArticleCritical Wit #47 – Once Upon A River (Bonnie Jo Campbell)
Bonnie Jo Campbell is the author of critically-acclaimed books, such as her short story collections “Women And Other Animals,” and the 2009 National Book Award finalist, “American Salvage.” In this...
View ArticleCritical Wit #48 – Meet Beatrice the Biologist!
Katie McKissick is a “former high school biology teacher who simply loves to talk, write, and read about science.” She’s also the author and illustrator of “Beatrice the Biologist,” a fun, informative...
View ArticleCritical Wit #49 – From The Cutting Room Floor 5
In this episode, I give you more interview excerpts from off of the cutting room floor, such as Zachary Moore gives his favorite evidence of evolution that’s not relevant to molecular genetics (episode...
View ArticleCritical Wit #50 – In Studio With Sheridan Tongue
Sheridan Tongue is a film music and television programmer in England. In this episode, we discuss the process of writing compositions for film and television, his work on the popular science series...
View ArticleCritical Wit #51 – Lab Lit: Literature About Science and Scientists in the...
Dr. Jennifer Rohn is a cell biologist, novelist, and founder of LabLit.com. In this episode, Jennifer and I talk about why there are not many stories that involve scientists as main characters. And...
View ArticleCritical Wit #52 – Graphene: Its Role In Future Technology Innovation
Sophie Bushwick is a freelance science writer who contributes to Scientific American’s Sixty Seconds Podcast, and is a writer for the io9 blogging network. In this episode, we discuss the topic of...
View ArticleCritical Wit #53 – Cataclysm Baby (Matt Bell)
Author Matt Bell, returns to discuss his new book “Cataclysm Baby” – a novella consisting of distinct stories set in a world devastated by an environmental disaster that cause children to be born with...
View ArticleCritical Wit #54 – The Revisionaries (Scott Thurman)
In this episode, I talk with documentary film-maker, Scott Thurman. We discuss his current documentary film, “The Revisionaries.” It centers on the story from 2011 about the Texas State Board of...
View ArticleCritical Wit #55 – The Heroine’s Bookshelf (Erin Blakemore)
Erin Blakemore is the author of “The Heroine’s Bookshelf“, a non-fiction story about twelve classic, literary heroines and the authors who created them. In this episode, guest host Julia Jenkins talks...
View ArticleCritical Wit #56 – The Price of Gold: The Toll and Triumph of One Man’s...
Ian Dille is a freelance journalist and co-author of “The Price of Gold: The Toll and Triumph of One Man’s Olympic Dream.” In this episode, guest host Julia Jenkins chats with Dille about the subject...
View ArticleCritical Wit #57 – Ballparking: Practical Math for Impractical Sports...
Aaron Santos is a physicist and author of “Ballparking: Practical Math for Impractical Sports Questions.” In this episode, Aaron talks about some of the hypothetical estimations involving sports that...
View ArticleCritical Wit #58 – The Science Fund Challenge: How the Public Can Finance...
Zen Faulkes is an Associate Professor of Biology at the University of Texas-Pan American and science communicator at the blog, Neurodojo. In this episode, guest host Sophie Bushwick talks with Zen...
View ArticleCritical Wit #59 – The Song of Achilles (Madeline Miller)
Madeline Miller is the author of “The Songs of Achilles“, released in March of 2012, which retells the events leading up, to and throughout the Trojan War through the eyes of Patroclus, a minor...
View ArticleCritical Wit #60 – Railroaded: The Transcontinentals and the Making of Modern...
Dr. Richard White is the Margaret Byrne Professor of American History at Standford University and author of “Railroaded: The Transcontinentals and the Making of Modern America.” In this episode we...
View ArticleCritical Wit #61 – Science Fiction Literary Reviews with Amy Sisson
Amy Sisson is a librarian, book reviewer, writer, and science fiction fan. She is also a personal friend of guest host Julia Jenkins. In this episode, Amy and Julia talk about several sci fi and...
View ArticleCritical Wit #62 – Review: Penguin Evolution and Bat Conservation
Due to technical problems with my recording system, there won’t be a new episode of Critical Wit for a couple of weeks. However, I have stitched together two excerpts of earlier, popular episodes that...
View ArticleCritical Wit #63 – The Science of Beekeeping and Concerns with Bee Colony...
Richard Mendel is a beekeeper, Vice President of the Southeast Michigan Beekeepers Association, and contributor to the Ann Arbor Backyard Beekeepers. In this episode, we discuss the science of...
View ArticleCritical Wit #64 – Glowing Genes: A Revolution in Biotechnology (Marc Zimmer)
Marc Zimmer is a professor of physical sciences with a specialization in computational chemistry at Connecticut College. He is also the author of “Glowing Genes: A Revolution in Biotechnology.” In...
View ArticleContingency Episode 2 (re-title if ever used)
Due to technical problems with my recording system, I can not provide a new episode of Critical Wit this week. However, I have stitched together two excerpts of earlier episodes that either you may...
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