by Brendan P. FohtThe CRISPR technique has reignited the decades-old debate over genetic modification. Brendan P. Foht argues that genetic therapy should be used to treat and prevent disease in actual patients, whether those patients are born or unborn, and that schemes for enhancing the human race through genetic modifications — or for protecting it from genetic modifications — should not interfere with our obligations to future generations. READ MORE McGovern Institute for Brain Research at M.I.T. |
We asked three scientists to discuss some of the latest research and scholarship regarding the place of life, including human life, in the universe:
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![]() Miss Marple and the Problem ofModern Identityby Alan JacobsAgatha Christie’s famous amateur sleuth uses her knowledge of human nature to discern if people really are who they say they are — one of the central problems of modernity. Alan Jacobs reflects on the differences between being known by one's neighbors and being known by the state. READ MORE Shutterstock |
by Lee LaneThe recent surge in oil and gas production might seem to give the United States increased leverage over authoritarian regimes that depend on oil exports. But, as Lee Lane argues, the geopolitical benefits of American oil production may have been overestimated, and the U.S. oil boom may end up bringing our chief geopolitical rivals — China and Russia — together. READ MORE Christopher Boswell (Shutterstock) |
![]() Love Conquers Allby Jenna Silber Storey and Benjamin StoreyA number of idealistic communities popped up in nineteenth-century America, each dedicated to its own vision of freeing human beings from society’s constraints. Nathaniel Hawthorne’s months spent at one of these communities became the basis of The Blithedale Romance, his novel about how ill-conceived schemes of liberation can do more to suppress the human soul than to free it. Jenna Silber Storey and Benjamin Storey revisit Hawthorne’s tale of dashed dreams. READ MORE Elliott Banfield |
From our archive...
- Love in the Age of Neuroscience
Mickey Craig and Jon Fennell on Tom Wolfe’s I Am Charlotte Simmons
- The Folly of Internet Freedom
The Mistake of Talking About the Internet as a Human Right
Eric R. Sterner
- Is Stupid Making Us Google?
James Bowman on the “Dumbest Generation”
- Are We Worthy of Our Kitchens?
Christine Rosen on expensive appliances and modern families
- Sick and Famous
Christy Hall Robinson on celebrity patients as advocates
Is OPEC Dead?
by Lee Lane
At its meeting in Doha earlier this month, OPEC once again failed to reach agreement on cutting oil production. With the fracture between Saudi Arabia and Iran growing, does the oil cartel still have any power to influence prices? How will the low prices affect U.S. oil producers? And does the U.S. presidential race have any bearing on the future world oil market?
READ MORE
Attention Deficit
by Diana Schaub
From advertising to Muzak to Facebook updates, we are bombarded by demands for our attention — a subject explored in Matthew B. Crawford’s new book The World Beyond Your Head. In this review, Diana Schaub suggests that an old approach to education can help us address the current crisis of attention.
SEE ALSO: “Virtual Reality as Moral Ideal,” an excerpt from Crawford’s book.

Pope Francis on the Environment
Essays on the moral, political, and economic implications of the encyclical Laudato Si'
- The Flawed Economics of Laudato Si'
W. David Montgomery
- Is Pope Francis Anti-Modern?
M. Anthony Mills
- Two Approaches to Climate Action
Brendan P. Foht
The X-Files and the Demon-Haunted World
by Ari N. Schulman
Why was The X-Files one of the most popular television shows of the 1990s? As Ari N. Schulman explains, the detective series lurched between science fiction and the paranormal, toying with the way modern science understands itself, inverting the relationship between skepticism and belief.
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by Gilbert Meilaender
The most thoughtful critiques of radical enhancement focus on the giftedness of human nature or on the dangers of hubris. Gilbert Meilaender turns to theology to offer another kind of critique — one grounded in the Christian understanding of redemption. READ MORE Shutterstock
A Reductionist History of Humankind
by John Sexton
The book Sapiens, which purports to give a “brief history of humankind,” has become an international bestseller. In this review, John Sexton points out the book’s many strange and silly claims and arguments, and asks what we lose sight of when we obsess over works of evolutionary “big history.”
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