Everyone has heard of the Blogosphere. It appears that a new -sphere, the Steve-o-sphere, is being born.
The Improbable Blog, the blog of the journal Annals of Improbable Research (AIR), has blogged the recent AIR paper “The Morphology of Steve.” Here is a link to the online PDF with lower-res graphics; go buy the issue for the full resolution version, plus other ground-breaking research, such as “The Importance of the Hyphen to Naked Astronomers”. The Steves post has gotten a half-dozen trackbacks already, and this post adds another one for good measure. See also the previous PT post on the paper, and the post previous to that on Project Steve. More evidence of the beginnings of a Steve-o-sphere is found in the fact that “The Morphology of Steve” has been added with pride to the online CVs and blogs of Steves such as Stephen J. Taylor (CV, full ref), Stephen Thorsett (blog), and Steve Renals (homepage).
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Speaking of Project Steve, the Steve-o-meter now stands at #457. To celebrate the AIR paper, a new Steves T-shirt was made at the otherwise arbitrary number of 440 Steves (“Over 440 Steves agree…”), which is now for sale at NCSE although I hear there has been a bit of a run on them. Perhaps people hope that if they buy T-shirts, they will get to participate in the next major Steve study, tentatively titled “On the Origin of Steves.” One non-Project-Steve Steve, Stephen C. Meyer, Program Director at the Discovery Institute, has claimed that evolution cannot produce morphological novelty. However, early results from the new Steve study indicate that, at least when it comes to morphological novelty in the form of Steves (see Figure 1), it is intelligent design, not evolution, that has a problem. The Discovery Institute recently put up a “Key resources for parents and school board members” webpage, which touts “Over 300 Scientists Skeptical of Neo-Darwinism” (further touted in many articles linked therein). However, an analysis of the DI 300 list reveals a mere 5 Steves, and that’s counting one guy who only has the last name “Stephan,” which is really being generous in my view. Either way, it appears that evolution is about 100 times better at producing Steves than ID.
P.S.: Does anyone know the Serbian equivalent of “Steve”? Apparently they’ve just banned evolution from the schools over there…



14 Comments
386sx · 8 September 2004
Jack Krebs · 8 September 2004
Great White Wonder · 8 September 2004
Glenn Branch · 8 September 2004
W. Stephen Wilson (CV), Stefan Rahmstorf (publication list), Steven Jayne (publication list), Steve Huskey (home page), and R. Stephen Howard (home page) are also in the Steve-o-sphere.
Mark Perakh · 9 September 2004
Re comment 7487: You wrote that the quoted piece was on Landover Baptist Church's site "for awhile." I take it as a statement that it is not any longer there. If this is so, good that the quote appears on this blog. It is such a fine example of the impotent fury of those mad anti-evolution fanatics who have learned such words as Orwellian but in fact just display their blinding hatred of reason, for all to see.
Mark Perakh · 9 September 2004
I was told that Landover Baptist site is a parody. If so, it is a very realistic parody - I have heard similar diatribes delivered in earnest.
Reed A. Cartwright · 9 September 2004
At the atheist march on washington last year (or was it two years ago), the pastor of Landover Baptist was given "equal-oppurtunity" time to speak. He gave an amazing fire and brimstone sermon, which for whatever reason caused the christian protestors to get angry. He then chewed them out for being sign holding wusses.
Dave W. · 9 September 2004
Nick · 23 September 2004
Nick (Matzke) · 26 September 2004
Glenn Branch · 26 September 2004
New denizens of the Steve-o-sphere include Stephen Mackessy (home page) and Stephen Abedon (CV in PDF form; see p. 3).
Reed A. Cartwright · 26 September 2004
I will have access to CHE in the comming weeks.
Nick · 29 September 2004
The Morphology of Steve makes another blog.
nickolas · 7 April 2005
bad