Division by Zero

By Taylor Moffitt of Halydean

Some have said that division by zero is an infinite number, while your calculator probably says that it is “undefined”. The mathematical logic goes something like this: the smaller the divisor, the larger the quotient. So if we divide something by a very small number (such as 1-1,000,000 ) we will get a very large number. Division by zero only approaches infinity as long as the divisor approaches an infinitely small positive value, yet, it can never arrive at zero no matter how small it gets. The moment it arrives at zero, the pattern is fundamentally disrupted. To ask, “How do you cut a cake into zero pieces,” is not asking for a non-sequitur such as “infinity.” To answer “infinity” does not work, because you can only divide things into their smallest fundamental increments, subatomic particles, Planck lengths, et cetera, not into infinitely small pieces. If we were to divide it into energy, infinity is not possible there either because of the cake has a quantifiable energy component, as the law of general relativity shows us. Another approach is to visualize division by zero. If I were to ask my child how many cookies were eaten from the cookie jar, and the response was “zero,” that would mean nobody ate any cookies. It doesn’t mean that there was a person there going through the motions of eating a cookie with some infinitely small quantity of cookies. To divide by zero is to divide by nothing, and is therefore not to divide at all.

x / 0 = x

In statistics zero is treated as a story problem, such as n minus one choose zero is one. For example, “How many ways can you  order coffee at Starbucks when there are no customers there to choose?” The answer is one because you have one outcome, the way you do it when there is nobody there. Nobody says it is undefined, infinite, or zero. It has a simple, quantifiable value. This treatment of zero is the same reason why 0!=1 in factorials. This is also similar to the case of Bose who proposed that there were only 3 possible outcomes to flipping 2 coins, rather than 4. Bose was laughed at by everyone until a guy named Einstein took note and the Bose-Einstein construct was developed in physics using that principle. The underlying math in the Bose-Einstein construct again goes back to the story problem treatment of zero.

This story problem approach to division by zero also makes sense in algebra because of the following:

x (y) / y = x

A number not divided by anything is unchanged. So if what I’ve said is true, we have a question of semantics, not a mathematical question. If we were to answer purely in Newtonian-era math, then it is indeed an undefined answer, and our calculator’s error message was correct all along. Obviously in certain cases division by zero has to be mathematically undefined, but I purport that if researchers are struggling with a real-world problem involving division by zero, they might try a new approach to division by zero and perhaps my ramblings may prove to be of value in certain cases.

 

Is the Universe Balanced on the Edge of a Knife?

By Taylor Moffitt of Halydean

Dr. Gian Guidice, a theoretical physicist, discussed the confirmation of the existence of the Higgs-Boson particle at a talk he gave at a TED function a few years ago. In his discussion he elaborated on the Higgs field, and the how quantum tunneling resulted in super-dense formation and the creation of the universe. Dr. Guidice likened this balance as being so “fine tuned” as to be like a thing balanced on the edge of a knife. He referred to the chance of this happening to be so improbable that in order for our universe to have been formed, there had to have been a “multiverse” of other universes that formed by chance as well, due to quantum tunneling.

Dr. Guidice has excellent information, and is fascinating. His illustration of the anthropic principle and his mastery of science is amazing. However, speculating on things that can never be tested scientifically (id est, a multiverse) is not science. Its fine to speculate on such things, but lets not call it science. Whether it was a chance due to large numbers of big bangs or cosmic meddling to set the universe on the knife edge, “the theology department is down the hall.”

For any theoretical physicist to speculate on wild theories of the creation of the universe which could never be tested by science is no more scientific than to say the universe was created by a stork on the back of a turtle. Meanwhile, we find that matter, space, and time all had a beginning, just as the creation account in the Bible describes. I don’t really have enough faith to subscribe to the whole “multiverse” religion.

Sustainable Philanthropy: The Morrell-Stinson Model

By Taylor Moffitt of Halydean

Here is a description of a model of charitable giving developed by Erl Morrell-Stinson. Erl has promulgated the development of hospitals, churches, has helped to support orphanages, and numerous other projects. He helped promote racial equality in South Africa during apartheid, and is a modern philosopher who has influenced numerous organizations.

The Morrell-Stinson model of philanthropy has several precepts:

  1. Preliminary test. The charitable foundation receives a grant application, and then provides an assignment to the applicant. The applicant must complete the assignment successfully to proceed. A representative example of an assignment could be “Gather a petition of 100 supporters,” or “Recruit your board of directors and organize.” The purpose of the preliminary assignment is to serve as a qualifier. It will help to weed-out applicants who do not take action.
  2. Equity. The initial grant provided is incomplete, and requires that the applicant must have “some skin in the game.” In commercial banking, lenders require that the applicant has personal commitment to their projects in the form of hard equity. Applicants must have adequate equity in their projects as well to help ensure success.
  3. Sustainability. The initial grant is only for items which are economically sustainable in nature. For example, 1,000 mango trees were given to Tom Stamman’s orphanage in Honduras. Today, the trees are producing healthy food for the children, as well as financial support for the orphanage. The orphanage already owned the land, and demonstrated equity in the project.
  4. Progressive growth. Grants are to be given in small amounts that grow, based upon the stewardship of the applicant.
  5. Non-fiduciary nature. The Morrell-Stinson model of philanthropy does not award cash. Instead, the foundation buys the assets directly, and the assets are given to the applicant. In this way, the applicant never has a fiduciary role or even the opportunity to misallocate grant funds.
  6. Safety of principal. Everyone has heard the old adage about the goose that laid golden eggs. A relief NGO acting in Haiti was trying to create economic benefit for locals and constructed a chicken barn, and supplied young chickens to lay eggs. This was a great idea, but the locals ate all of the chickens before any eggs could be laid. Safety of principal must be considered in every context.

Fictitious case study. An applicant wants $100,000 cash per year for economic development of an impoverished area. The applicant chose from a list of available projects, and requests 500 beehives to sell chemical-free locally grown honey at farmers’ markets. The applicant was given a preliminary test, and completed a course on beekeeping, and secured permission to place bee hives on 10 different parcels of land. The applicant contributed equity to the project, by raising $1000 to purchase beekeeping equipment. The foundation provided 2 beehives and 2 packages of bees the first year. The second year, if the colonies are successful, the foundation provides 8 more beehives, and six packages of bees. The applicant splits the previous colonies and now has 10 full beehives. The second year, this can be repeated to bring the colony up to 50, then up to 250 in the third year, and the project will be able to self-fund thereafter.

Other examples may include solar panels, perennial vegetables (such as rhubarb, asparagus, chives, horseradish, or rosemary), grape vines, fruit and nut trees, chickens (depending on the location), water desalinization, and any number of additional possibilities.

This model allows applicants to experience economic growth for themselves, and creates a “survival of the fittest” environment which fosters good decision-making. In a changing global economy, charitable NGOs are facing new challenges. New strategies are needed by charitable foundations to respond to these changes. The Morrell-Stinson model of philanthropy may have an important place in the future.

Taylor’s favorite song for 2018

I found this song this morning and it literally brought me to tears. I figured I would share it with anyone interested in reading my ramblings. Its especially profound if you are looking through a good telescope at the stripes of Jupiter and its moons, which are up in the South at the moment.

 

“So Will I” (“100 Billion X”) by Hillsong

God of Creation

There at the start before the beginning of time,

with no point of reference,

you spoke to the dark and fleshed out the wonder of light.

And as you speak,

a hundred billion galaxies are born.

In the vapor of your breath the planets form.

If the stars were made to worship so will I.

I can see your heart in everything you make.

Every burning star a signal fire of grace.

If creation sings your praises so will I.

God of your promise

You don’t speak in vain, no syllable empty or void.

For once you have spoken, all nature and science follow the sound of your voice.

And as you speak, a hundred billion creatures catch your breath,

Evolving in pursuit of what you said.

If it all reveals your nature so will I.

I can see your heart in everything you say.

Every painted sky a canvas of your grace.

If creation still obeys you so will I.

So will I

 

If the stars were made to worship so will I.

If the mountains bow in reverence so will I.

If the oceans roar your greatness so will I.

For if everything exists to lift you high, so will I.

If the wind goes where you send it so will I.

If the rocks cry out in silence so will I.

If the sum of all our praises still fall shy,

We’ll sing again a hundred billion times.

God of salvation

You chased down my heart through all of my failure and pride.

On a hill you created, light of the world abandoned in darkness to die.

And as you speak, a hundred billion failures disappear.

Where you lost your life so I can find it here.

If you left the grave behind you so will I.

I can see your heart in everything you’ve done.

Every part designed in a work of art called love.

If you gladly chose surrender so will I.

I can see your heart eight billion different ways.

Every precious one a child you died to save.

If you gave your life to love them so will I.

Like you would again a hundred billion times.

But what measure could amount to your desire?

You’re the one who never leaves the one behind.

 

Here is a link:

 

Carbon-neutral Dairy Farming: How to Respond to the Oncoming Tsunami of Demand

This paper is in-progress.

 

 

Carbon-neutral Dairy Farming:

How to Respond to the

Oncoming Tsunami of Demand

 

 

 

By T. M. Halydean

 

 

 

Special thanks to Rebecca Melton, PhD, who is a director at Halydean Corporation, for her edits and support. Special thanks to Halydean Corporation for their supportive efforts and environmental research in the dairy industry, and for their goals to help dairy farmers and to improve animal care everywhere. Even without considering their cow massaging stations, their cows receive better care, eat a healthier diet, and see more daylight than most researchers.

 

 

 

 

Abstract

This paper reviews demand forecasts for beef and dairy and deals with factors that will determine the outcome and consequences. The paper discusses some of the previous research and proposes new management strategies to result in new best practices for the dairy farming industry that are net carbon neutral. This includes reasons for demand, per-cow milk yields, farm size and scale, land management, emissions measurement methods, and economic pressures. Solutions should be both environmentally and economically responsible. The paper discusses future areas of research, and a summary is included in the conclusion.

 

 

 

Unavoidable Dairy Growth

Some might argue that because 70% of all carbon emissions come from cities (REFERENCE), the focus for improvement should be on cities. Should we not major on the majors and minor on the minors? Dairy cows are small in comparison to the much more massive American bison (REFERENCE). Are the 9.4 million dairy cows in America in 2018 (REFERENCE) even relevant in light of the 20 – 30 million bison that roamed America long before our arrival (REFERENCE)? How will the latest changes in global trends affect the future of the dairy industry?

Dairy farming has been with humanity since the dawn of civilization in Mesopotamia (Loftus, MacHugh, Bradley, Sharp, & Cunningham,1994). Since our creation, humans have even evolved lactose tolerance to be able to drink milk as adults (Holden & Mace, 2009). Milk makes children grow taller and stronger than their shorter and scrawny non-milk-drinking counterparts (Wiley, 2005).

Over the next 40 years, the global population forecast is that we will have over nine billion people. The demand for food will increase 60% (F. A. O., 2013). Of those nine billion people, eight billion will be in developing nations. Some of these, such as India and China, will have median household incomes similar to those in the rest of the world. They will demand more milk (Tilman, Balzer, Hill, & Befort, 2011). They want their children to be taller and stronger, like Japan has done, like Europe, and like other developed nations.

Worldwide meat production has increased almost 400% over the last 50 years. Global meat consumption is expected to grow by 70% from 2000 to 2030, and is expected to grow 120% from 2000 to 2050. An organization called the IAASTD says these numbers are because of the rapidly expanding urban and middle classes in emerging economies that are westernizing their diets to include pizza, hamburgers, and even tacos. The IAASTD predicts large scale, vertically integrated industrial livestock systems to continue developing over the coming decades (Van Vuuren, et al, 2017).

2018 numbers from the USDA spell out that U.S. dairy exports have increased by 18%, up from the usual 10% – 15% export growth (REFERENCE). As with oil consumption, the U.S. is no longer the primary determinate. Foreign consumption of meat and dairy products from the new emerging middle class is now the driving factor in global demand. To meet the oncoming flood of demand, dairy farms will consolidate, improve genetics and animal care techniques, improve efficiencies, and expand substantially. The bulk of this expansion is going to have to come from the United States, as no other nation has the infrastructure to meet the oncoming demand. It is highly likely that prices on all classes of milk should increase substantially. There is no way to avoid the growing demand for high-protein food delivery.

With inevitable change, the good news is that dairy farming is evolving for the better. Dairy farming has remained virtually unchanged for the last 10,000 years. Only in the last 50 years have significant shifts begun as the dairy industry slowly joins the industrial revolution that has already affected so many other industries. Now, with the corporate consolidation of dairy farms beginning, the dairy farming industry is in for a revolution. How can agriculture transition into the future of dairy farming? How can farmers be encouraged to make environmentally sustainable decisions independently? How can animal care be improved at the same time? How will this flood of demand affect greenhouse gasses? How should farmers respond? Innovation, consolidation, and efficiency are needed.

Discussion of Previous Research

Increasing the milk yield per cow has been often discussed as a solution to reduce greenhouse gasses (GHG) emissions from milk production. Research from Sweden demonstrates that a lower carbon footprint (CF) while increasing milk yield is possible if land use is managed sustainably. This same research demonstrates that large-scale dairy farming also has a lower CF than organic dairy farming where land use is managed sustainably. Increasing milk yield, by itself, does not necessarily decrease CF. Proper land use and farm expansion should be applied to dairy farms to achieve a lower CF. In other words, larger, more efficient farms are better than small, traditionally managed farms (Flysjö, Cederbert, Henriksson, & Ledgard, 2012).

The economics of dairy farming has shown that smaller farms struggle to compete with the larger, more efficient farms in most economic models, including technical efficiency, various profitability measures, and economies of scale. This does not include profitability that can come from strategic asset allocation, which is not traditional on small farms. The dairy industry in the U.S. is going through rapid change, evolving away from many small farmers to a more efficient model of very large farms (Nehring, Gillespie, Sandretto, & Hallahan, 2009). This economic pressure for farms to consolidate and grow can be used in a positive way for the good for the environment. A corporate model also allows small farmers to band together to achieve these benefits, while preserving their family heritage.

The way to measure carbon emissions is highly debated and there is no current consensus. Results can vary depending on the measurement style used (Flysjö, Cederbert, Henriksson, & Ledgard, 2012). This should be considered in calculating the net CF of a corporate farm that owns and maintains thousands of acres that are non-tillable. Wooded forest land, such as that owned by Halydean Corporation, is estimated to sequester 145 MgC02/ha (which is 358.3 MgC02/acre) in 50 years, or even up to 162 MgC02/ha (400 MgC02/acre) in 50 years if the land is maintained as a forest (Strohbach, Arnold, & Haase, 2012). This green space can act as a carbon sink. Carbon sinks absorb carbon from the atmosphere and sequester it in the ground. How the land is maintained can have a strong influence on the CF. This green space can also serve as a sanctuary for wildlife, for responsible wildlife management, and for private recreation purposes exclusive to the original farm owners who have joined the corporation.

The application of digested natural manure fertilizer increases the effectiveness of the fertilizer used, and increases crop growth compared to undigested natural manure fertilizer (Möller, Stinner, Deuker, & Leithold, 2008). This system is already in use at Halydean Corporation, and further reduces dependence on fossil fuels, which positively impacts reduced CF. Privately funded researchers are now exploring ways to further improve the effectiveness of digested natural fertilizer with decreased mass. This could decrease fuel consumption and hauling expenses, and provide further nutritional benefit to the soil with less runoff. This would mean less fuel consumption and lower hauling expenses to apply the fertilizer, and less need for petroleum-derived liquid NH3 fertilizer. Such research could improve the environment while providing more income and profitability for farmers.

Paul Hawken produced a plan of several solutions to reversing global warming. Eight out of the top twenty items were food-related. They include (in order of importance and influence): Reduced food waste, plant-rich diet, Silvopasture, regenerative agriculture, tropical staple tree crops, conservation agriculture, tree intercropping, and managed grazing (Hawken, 2017).

Recommendations

Small farms should consolidate into larger farms. A publicly traded corporation offers a means for farmers to partner together without having to sell. This results in greater efficiencies, improved mitigation of local and geographic financial risks, succession planning, liquidity, shared workload, profitability improvements, capital gain improvements, and benefits to the environment with lower GHG emissions. This can happen when all farm managers have corporate access to better management ideas, education, and innovative new technology. When farms consolidate, corporations can participate in research and development in ways that an individual farm may not afford or understand. Research and development needs to happen which places tougher constraints on the environmental problem solving of innovation and higher standards for industry best practices.

Non-tillable land should be allowed to grow into forest, with no thinning of natural trees or brush to increase carbon sequestering towards a target of 162 MgC02/ha (400 MgC02/acre) in 50 years. A corporation consisting of hundreds of farms that have banded together can manage thousands of acres of wooded land for a substantial amount of carbon sequestration, with no added expense.

Farms that are banding together can also apply new microbial digestive technology to reduce their hauling costs via reduced consumption of fossil fuels. This can be done with plug-flow methane digesters, fixed media thin film digesters, and innovative new technology using special probiotics and mineral supplementation. The result can be lower fossil fuel consumption, lower NH3 application on fields, lower runoff, and increased crop health.

Methane digesters can transform the more harmful CH4 GHG into CO2, while producing energy at the same time. On-site cogeneration can produce electricity from methane that can be used right on the farm. According to thrifty logic, the optimum amount of electricity to produce in most states is that equal to what is consumed on-site. This is because the return on investment is greatest while reducing actual electrical costs, when electricity is purchased at retail price. A diminishing return happens when extra power is sold back to the grid at a lower wholesale price. Thus, to produce as much power as possible without actually having to sell any to the grid is the optimized amount of power to produce. Because of the certainty of the need for electricity, investments into electrical production via cogeneration and investments into waste reduction measures can be highly leveraged with debt on a long amortization. Such debt, if used with a fixed interest rate, offers less risk than financing other activities. Because of such reliable demand, the energy industry is one of the most highly leveraged industries in the world, with numerous government debt incentives (Scannella, 2012).

Expansions can use LED lighting and translucent barn construction materials for natural lighting. Lower operational costs make sense for any business, and in this case, it’s the environment that is the real winner. As industrial grade lighting systems become more and more cost effective, the dairy industry (as other industries) will gradually make the switch. The upgrade of older equipment to newer equipment can be done in an energy efficient manner as well. Pumps and motors consume a lot of electrical current. They are an excellent item to upgrade for energy cost savings when equipment is being updated (Waide & Brunner, 2011).

The cost of robotic automation has been falling and is now down to an hourly wage equivalent of $4 per hour. In the future, automation can eliminate the farmer’s need for huge implements. With the lower cost automation of the future, there will be no need to worry about the high cost of human time. More energy efficient row-cropping implements can be developed that can work the fields 24 hours per day. These self-driving machines will be able to get the same work done with smaller machines that work more hours. The fuel-hog 60 row planters will be a thing of the past when the farmer does not have to spend time operating the machinery.

Dairy farms should focus more on things such as diversifying their income via the encouragement of wind energy. If a wind turbine is placed on site, a contract for up to $100,000 per year can be brought in to the farm, with negligible effect on the operation of the farm itself. This can help to reduce the CF of the electricity being purchased, until the facility can ultimately become a net-zero electrical consumer. Halydean Corporation has partnered with a local power producer and is in the process of having a large wind turbine placed on its land with such a contract.

Environmentalists should seek out and reward farms that promote such stewardship. These businesses should be recognized for their efforts. Small steps today will lead to successively greater and greater improvements. How far can it go? These efforts are only beginning now. With continued innovation, dairy farming can someday in the future achieve a net-zero CF and more—Dairy farming can become a positive and stable force of sequestering carbon to help offset the real problem, society’s dependence upon fossil fuels and the cytotoxic and mutagenic pollution that they put into the biosphere (Bünger, Krahl, Baum, Schröder, Müller, Westphal, & Hallier, 2000; Bünger, Krahl, Franke, Munack, & Hallier, 1998; Perera, 2008).

Land management techniques such as leaving plants intact on the soil surface after harvest instead of plowing them into the soil or removing them in the fall can help reduce N2O emissions. Limiting nitrogen inputs to to the exact level of plant consumption can reduce emissions. Low-input agriculture with reduced product application such as fertilizer reduces GHG. A varied diet with diversified food for livestock can alter CH4 emissions. Greater fat intake as well as nitrate supplementation can do this, but these have their limits. There can be side effects with too much fat, and too much nitrate is toxic. Probiotics can be applied to the soil to reduce N2O emissions. Certain denitrifying bacteria cut N2O emissions in a recent study (Bent, 2015).

Of Hawken’s top 20 steps to reverse global warming (Reduced food waste, plant-rich diet, Silvopasture, regenerative agriculture, tropical staple tree crops, conservation agriculture, tree intercropping, and managed grazing), most of them do not directly involve dairy farming (Hawken 2017). There are, however, some helpful items that can be applied in dairy farming. Managed grazing can apply to dairy farming. Cows should not be free-ranged, but should utilize carefully managed “mob grazing” or harvested haylage and silage to maximize plant growth. Overgrazing depletes plant growth and reduces all positive productivity. Conservation agriculture principles mentioned above can be implemented. Silvopasture with livestock, orange, olive, and other production trees can benefit from the natural fertilizer produced by dry cows that are put to pasture and allowed to graze between the trees in an integrated, intensively-managed system where climate allows. In the United States, this may be more effective in the Southeast because of the precipitation and climate conducive to a wider variety of arboreal food crops.

Carbon Cycle versus Burning Sequestered Carbon

While everyone should do his or her part to improve the environment, a balanced perspective is also helpful. Researchers and activists should major on the majors, and minor on the minors. Animals (and dairy farming) are part of the carbon cycle, where carbon is pulled from the air via crops, fed to the animals, and then a portion of that carbon is eventually returned to the atmosphere after humans and animals consume it. The carbon cycle, in its pure form, is carbon neutral. Conversely, fossil fuels are sequestered carbon that is being harvested from the ground and re-introduced to the atmosphere. Fossil fuels are very different and are substantially worse than any emissions from humans and animals. 82% of all GHG produced by humans was from the burning of fossil fuels, solid waste, trees, and other chemical reactions (U.S. Department of Energy, 2015). With that in mind, much more effort in reducing GHG should be focused on reducing the worst offenders: fossil fuels. Farming researchers, however, will continue to do their small part.

Future Research

Biofuels are part of the carbon cycle, and are not fossil fuels. As such, they are carbons are taken from the atmosphere, not taken from sequestered carbon stock. Additionally, biofuels are better because they do not have the cytotoxic and mutagentic effects of fossil fuels (Bünger, et al, 2000 & 1998; Perera, 2008). Farms should continue to use biofuels, especially on-site cogeneration to produce electricity. Future research should explore how biofuels can be produced via land management techniques that result in less GHG emissions and without the use of artificial fertilizers made from natural gas.

Because it has been shown that the direct and indirect effects of CH4 are worse than those of CO2 (U.S. Department of Energy, 2015), probiotics that alter the digestive process to include less CH4 are easily within reach using today’s technology. Probiotics are inexpensive to produce, and may even be able to help boost milk production via improved bioavailability of nutrients and overall animal health while reducing CH4 emissions at farms. While this is not an option for the farm that has already invested in a CH4 cogeneration system, it could be a quick and easy fix. Small amounts of newly developed probiotic could be applied to haylage and sileage and allowed to propagate naturally during the feed fermentation process. Microbiologist researchers could identify and improve strains of bacteria that are beneficial in this regard. Farm researchers could test these bacteria to identify effects on milk quantity and quality, which may even result in higher profits. If a probiotic designed to reduce CH4 can be shown to increase net profits, it will be much easier to convince farmers to use it.

Innovation needs to be applicable with farmers and landowners, so that they can naturally be drawn to environmental stewardship via innovation that makes economic sense, to raise the bar for the whole industry. Financial research is needed. Among entrepreneurial circles, practitioners sometimes have a disdain for researchers in “the ivory tower.” It did not help when researchers were publicized as “trying to collect cow farts to save the planet”. They deservedly became the laughing stalk of not only the dairy industry but also the public in general. Economically irresponsible environmental suggestions do more harm than good, as they turn segments of society against environmental progress. Likewise, it is ethically wrong for environmental researchers to ignore the financial consequences of their suggestions. Better and more valuable research can arise within greater constraints. Many people believe that environmental innovation and responsibility costs more. This stereotype is wrong, because actions that are good for the environment can be profitable as well. There should be more study of environmental-financial benefits by researchers who are formally trained in the areas of finance and business administration. In this way, new best practices will be readily adopted.

Because it is difficult to quantify carbon emissions with any consensus from scholars, priority should be placed on efforts towards progress. Emissions measurements may yield very negative or very positive results, depending on the method of measurement used. To encourage farms to make improvements, measurements of GHG emissions should be made as a percentage of improvement, based upon accuracy from the consistent testing method on one site. Despite difficulty in measuring progress, best practices should be encouraged wherever they are a logical step in the right direction. Environmental researchers should encourage any step in the right direction until farm-specific measurement techniques are developed to gauge emissions in vertically integrated farms with greater accuracy and acceptance among a consensus of scholars.

 

Conclusion

Dairy farming began at the dawn of civilization and milk helps children to grow taller and stronger. Demand for meat has grown by 400% in the last 50 years and it is forecasted to grow even more in the future due to the emerging middle class of developing nations. Large-scale farming offers environmental improvements through efficiency and better access to helpful information for best practices in management. These strategies make economic sense. If done correctly, large-scale dairy farms reduce net carbon emissions per unit of milk produced. Land management techniques can greatly impact carbon emissions. Current measurement techniques of carbon emissions yield varied and controversial results. Wooded land owned by dairy farms can be managed to sequester more carbon. Non-tillable land can be afforested. Better land management practices can reduce costs and GHG. Fossil fuel emissions can be displaced with cogeneration of on-site electrical production. Microbial digested manure requires less fuel to haul, and replaces more petroleum-based fertilizer. Small farms should consolidate for increased efficiencies for the environmental benefits as well as economics and the ability to corporately fund research. Non-tillable acres should be turned into forestland to serve as powerful sinks for sequestering carbon. New microbial digestion technology can help improve the quality of fertilizer with environmental benefits and collateral reductions in fuel consumption. Cogeneration via methane digestion and on-site electrical power production converts CH4 to less harmful CO2 and reduces the consumption of fossil fuels in the process. By upgrading facilities and equipment, more efficient LED lighting and pumps can save money by reducing the consumption of fossil fuels. Farms can partner with energy producers and facilitate grid power production by placing wind turbines on their land. Environmentalists should seek ways to encourage farms that are doing the right thing. Animals are part of the carbon cycle, which in its pure form is carbon neutral and much better than burning fossil fuels that actually injects carbon and worse mutagenic wastes into the atmosphere. While top priority should be placed on fossil fuels, dairy industry researchers can do their small part. Future research can include developing probiotics to reduce CH4 and increase milk production. Financial and business administration researchers should contribute. Environmental innovation that is economically beneficial is worth more to the environment because it is more readily implemented, and is the ethical obligation of researchers to seek. Better measurement methods need to be developed to recognize the progress of individual farms.

 


 

 

References

Bent, E. (2015). Reducing agriculture’s greenhouse gas emissions. The Conversation, (06)15. Retrieved from ­­­­­https://phys.org/news/2015-06-agriculture-greenhouse-gas-emissions.html#jCp on March 17, 2018.

Bünger, J., Krahl, J., Baum, K., Schröder, O., Müller, M., Westphal, G., & Hallier, E. (2000). Cytotoxic and mutagenic effects, particle size and concentration analysis of diesel engine emissions using biodiesel and petrol diesel as fuel. Archives of toxicology, 74(8), 490-498.

Bünger, J., Krahl, J., Franke, H. U., Munack, A., & Hallier, E. (1998). Mutagenic and cytotoxic effects of exhaust particulate matter of biodiesel compared to fossil diesel fuel. Mutation Research/Genetic Toxicology and Environmental Mutagenesis, 415(1), 13-23.

F. A. O. (2013). World Agriculture Towards 2030/2050: The 2012 Revision. United Nations Food and Agriculture Organisation, Rome, Italy.

Flysjö, A., Cederbert, C., Henriksson, M., Ledgard, S. (2012). The interaction between milk and beef production and emissions from land use change: Critical considerations in life cycle assessment and carbon footprint studies of milk. Journal of Cleaner Production, 28(12) 134-142.

Hawken, P. (2017). Drawdown: The Most Comprehensive Plan Ever Proposed to Roll Back Global Warming. Penguin.

Holden, C., & Mace, R. (2009). Phylogenetic analysis of the evolution of lactose digestion in adults. Human biology81(5/6), 597-619.

Loftus, R. T., MacHugh, D. E., Bradley, D. G., Sharp, P. M., & Cunningham, P. (1994). Evidence for two independent domestications of cattle. Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences91(7), 2757-2761.

Möller, K., Stinner, W., Deuker, A., & Leithold, G. (2008). Effects of different manuring systems with and without biogas digestion on nitrogen cycle and crop yield in mixed organic dairy farming systems. Nutrient cycling in agroecosystems82(3), 209-232.

Nehring, R., Gillespie, J., Sandretto, C., & Hallahan, C. (2009). Small US dairy farms: can they compete?. Agricultural Economics40(s1), 817-825.

Perera, F. P. (2008). Children are likely to suffer most from our fossil fuel addiction. Environmental Health Perspectives, 116(8), 987.

Strohbach, M. W., Arnold, E., & Haase, D. (2012). The carbon footprint of urban green space: A life cycle approach. Landscape and Urban Planning104(2), 220-229.

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The Religion of Quantum Mechanics

By Taylor Moffitt of Halydean

Some quantum physicists like to offer comments about who or what did or did not create the universe. In some books about quantum physics, which are intended for the general public, this is all presented as if it were scientific. That can be misleading. Here are some specifics on how to differentiate between the physics, the philosophy, and the religion of quantum mechanics.

The physics of quantum mechanics is pure science, and it is good. Its concepts are testable in repeatable experiments. It shows up inviolable principles that govern the sub-atomic world of the quantum. A great example of this is how an electron can move from one energy level of an atom to another.

The philosophy of quantum mechanics is a logical effort to describe the cause and effect relationships in the world of the quantum. This philosophy especially tries to describe the role of human observers in these interactions.

Quantum physics becomes religion when academics stray from the repeatably testable and attempt to guess who or what is or is not behind cause and effect in quantum events. Such conjectures are religious. Unbiased researchers should call a spade a spade. When astrophysicists and quantum physicists venture into religion it should be acknowledged as such.

Anti-theistic bias was responsible for the dogmatic adherence to silly and absurd theories of academic gymnastics, where academics clung to anti-creation theories and went out on limbs, fighting to the academic death to defend absurdities such as the static universe theory, the infinitely oscillating universe model, the plasma model, attacks against Einstein’s theory of relativity, and other embarrassments to good science and academics. Today, the general consensus of the scientific community has come to terms that these anti-creation theories were silly. Modern efforts to remove God from the moment of creation will someday look just as absurd.

Einstein was invited to look through Hubble’s telescope to see for himself the expansion of the universe. If the universe is expanding, it couldn’t be eternal. That means it had a beginning, and a moment of creation, just like the Bible says. Einstein honestly concluded that there must be an intelligent creator. This is a religious conclusion, and a very logical one, for we will never be able to apply the principles of science to the moments before time and space existed without venturing in to religion.

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Figure 1. Einstein and Hubble

 

I Don’t Believe in Atheists

By Taylor Moffitt of Halydean

A long time friend of mine was a self-professed atheist for all of his adult life. He went through chemotherapy, and while enjoying a few beers, killed his liver, and was given only a few weeks to live. He had for many years mocked believers. A friend of mine said to me that it was terrible that Roger was dying, and especially so because he was an atheist. How terrible– how meaningless for someone who has no hope for their eternal future! He was waiting to die. (Like some of us?). Roger had a good attitude about it, he was friendly and jovial with those of us who came to visit him.

It was then that the Holy Spirit spoke to me, and I suddenly knew that Roger was not an atheist. With no explanation, I suddenly knew that Roger did very much believe in God and that he was absolutely terrified to peer over the precipice into a fate of eternal separation from God. He knew what that meant. I told my friend this, and said, “lets go talk with Roger about this, he is ready to accept Christ right now.” So we went in, and I said, “Roger, Ken and I want to pray with you. May we pray with you?” I will never forget the look that came over his face as he said nodded yes. He could no longer speak… but his yes was emphatic, thankful, fearful, and very intense.

“Father, thank you for Roger as our friend. Thank you for loving us. Thank you for wanting to be with us like a mother hen longs to be with her chicks. Thank you that we don’t have to be good enough to earn our way into heaven. When you were dying on the cross, you had become a man to die in our place, and the thief on the cross next to you said, “please remember me when you get to your kingdom,” you told him that today he would be with you in paradise. That thief had done nothing to deserve an eternity in heaven, he waited to the very last minute and all he did was believe, and you accepted him lovingly. Thank you God that you love Roger and Ken and me the same way. So God, we admit that we are rotten, and that we have done all kinds of bad things. We reject all that now, and we commit the rest of our lives to you– to live for you. Wash away our filth with your blood which was poured out for us, from the tops of our heads to the bottom of our toes. Make us new! Breathe your Holy Spirit into us, and fill us with your presence, from this day forward. Give Roger a peace that surpasses all logic, in Jesus’ name!” Even though he could not speak, he squeezed our hands as we prayed, and the earnestness showed on his face. He had been transformed, made new, and made whole. The God-shaped void in his life had suddenly in an instant been filled.

2013 was a tough year for me, but looking back, I am glad to have been in Iowa available to talk with my atheist friend. Just remember, if you are going through tough times, ask God to make it worthwhile and use you for His purposes!

A scientifically accurate account of the formation of the universe and the earth

By Taylor Moffitt of Halydean

Of all the world religions, and their sacred books, all of these books but one are mystical and full of inconsistencies.

If a book was produced by humans, it will contain errors and vague explanations of things, like a fortune teller. If a book is from God, it will be distinct. Only one book gives a concise scientific explanation of the origin of the universe. The Bible is simple, direct, and specific. It is full of historical and scientific references, and with detail. Instead of another bizarre creation myth, or an idea that the universe had always existed, the Bible is journal-like as a record of the earth’s initial conditions– correctly described from the standpoint of astrophysics and geophysics– followed by a summary of the sequence of changes where Earth came to be inhabited by life and ultimately by humans. The account is simple, elegant, and scientifically accurate. From the stated viewpoint of an observer on the Earth, both the order and the description of creation events perfectly match the established record of nature. It is amazing.

Does science support creationism?

 

By T. M. Halydean

We see God in the universe not because of things we do not yet understand, but rather the things which we now understand. Science shows that the universe had a moment of creation and it was ordered with laws of science. The precarious and fragile balance of all life on Earth, and all order in the cosmos, is held together by this order.

Less than 50 years ago, the overwhelming opinion of the scientific community was that the universe was eternal, and never had a beginning. Today, we know that the universe had a beginning, as was originally stated in the very first sentence of the Bible. Arno Penzias and Robert Woodrow Wilson won a joint Nobel prize because they found the “echo” of the moment of creation when the universe exploded into being, and since that moment, the scientific community has had to come along to admitting that the universe had a beginning.

 

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Figure 1. The timeline of the universe

 

If you search on Google for “WMAP” you can see a chart of all known scientific knowledge of the timeline of the universe, condensed into one image (see figure 1, or see NASA’s version at https://map.gsfc.nasa.gov/media/060915/index.html). It starts with a burst of energy, and an arrow pointing to it which says, “Quantum fluctuations.” That idea was first proposed in the journal Nature almost 40 years ago.  This allows the creation of something from nothing as long as you have the laws of nature– these are called quantum fluctuations. Time started to exist only after the universe did, and there were quantum fluctuations (laws of quantum physics and laws of relativity) which existed prior to the universe, and prior to time. The universe can be created from absolute nothing, but only with the laws of nature, or quantum fluctuations, existing ahead of time. They create the universe, therefore they predate the universe, and therefore they predate our understanding of time.

These quantum fluctuations, or set of forces, are not physical. They act on the physical world. They created the physical world from absolute nothing. They predate the universe. This is the biblical definition of God– who first identifies himself as the Creator. He pre-dates time, is outside of time, is not physical, is a force, and creates the universe. Dr. Schroder, a former physics professor at MIT, had this to comment regarding the quantum fluctuations responsible for causing the universe: “Science has indeed discovered the Biblical God.”