![]() Vaccines and Their Critics, Then and Nowby Aaron RothsteinRecent outbreaks of vaccine-preventable diseases have brought renewed attention to the critics of vaccination. Aaron Rothstein explains why vaccination is a valuable tool for individual and public health, and reveals the surprisingly long history of opposition to vaccines, so that we might better educate and persuade the critics. READ MORE Flickr Sanofi Pasteur (CC) |
The Neuroscience of Despair
by Michael W. Begun
We often think of depression as a disorder caused by chemical imbalances in the brain. Not only is this idea empirically flawed, but it has drawn our attention away from the important social and psychological aspects of mental illness. Michael W. Begun shows how we got here and explains why a neurobiological understanding of depression can never be complete.Abstract composition by Victor Hugo
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![]() Losing Liberty in an Age of Accessby James Poulos
Americans increasingly rely on subscription services like Netflix and sharing services like Airbnb, Uber, and Zipcar, renting access to goods instead of buying them. While some pundits have heralded the so-called “sharing economy,” James Poulos asks whether freedom can flourish when access no longer involves ownership. READ MORE Flickr Ted Eytan (CC) |
![]() Confronting the Technological Societyby Samuel Matlack
In 1954, a Frenchman named Jacques Ellul penned one of the most bracing twentieth-century critiques of technology. Translated into English in 1964, The Technological Society was commended by the likes of Aldous Huxley and Robert K. Merton but written off by others as little more than a lamentation of modernity. Samuel Matlack revisits Ellul’s perplexing book and explains why it is still relevant today. READ MORE Flickr galeriestudio18 (CC) |
The Optimistic Science of Leibniz
by Marc E. Bobro
When Leibniz is remembered at all today, it is usually for inventing the calculus or for calling this “the best of all possible worlds” — a phrase that Voltaire famously scorned. Marc E. Bobro argues that Leibniz’s optimism is best understood in the context of his grand project to unify science, religion, and pretty much everything else.READ MORE Wikimedia
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
The Unknown Newton
Leading scholars on his religion, alchemy, cosmology, and more
- Introduction by the editors
- Rob Iliffe on Newton's unorthodox theology and his project to restore Christianity
- William R. Newman asks whether Newton truly was “the last of the magicians”
- Stephen D. Snobelen on physics, prophecy, and the myth of Newton's clockwork universe
- Andrew Janiak on reconciling natural philosophy with biblical literalism
- Sarah Dry on the unpublished manuscripts and their author's changing image
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Virtual Reality as Moral Ideal
by Matthew B. Crawford
The physical world resists our will. Matthew B. Crawford considers how we try to insulate ourselves from the limitations and frustrations of physicality — but thereby make ourselves more fragile and, ironically, more pliable to the wills of others.
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First Thoughts on Germline Engineering
For the first time in history, scientists have genetically modified human embryos. New Atlantis assistant editor Brendan P. Foht explains why this technique is morally troubling, and puts it in the context of other bioethical issues.
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Correlation, Causation, and Confusion
by Nick Barrowman
“Correlation,” as the saying goes, “does not imply causation.” But if you want to understand the statistics that appear everywhere in our daily lives — in sports reporting, in weather forecasts, and of course in politics and medicine — it helps to know just what correlation does imply. Nick Barrowman explains why some disciples of “big data” think causation is passé, and why they’re wrong.READ MORE
In Defense of Prejudice, Sort of
by Ari N. Schulman
Prejudice is the Enlightenment’s most detested foe, the vampire that withers in the light of Reason. But an ambitious new book argues that prejudice, properly understood, is a prerequisite for lucid thinking. In this review, Ari N. Schulman explains why our modern ideal of perfect rationality is irrational.
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Regarding Life at the Beginning
by Gilbert Meilaender
Unborn children are hidden from our view and totally dependent on us. Yet the debate over abortion usually treats the human community as made up only of free subjects that can enter into mutual dialogue or contractual relations. Gilbert Meilaender reviews a new book that offers a phenomenological critique of the abortion debate.READ MORE
Philanthropy in Science, Technology, and Medicine
Over its long history, American philanthropy has proven indispensable to science, technology, and medicine. Here, excerpted from the new Almanac of American Philanthropy, are ten tales of strategic philanthropy contributing to human welfare and knowledge.
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Modernity and Our American Heresies
by Peter Augustine Lawler
Critics of America have often argued that the country is too individualistic and materialistic, doomed to a kind of techno-obsessive liberal nihilism. But, as Peter Lawler explains, the American story is really a tale of constant compromise between our Lockean and Puritan tendencies, accommodating the need for both freedom and community.
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Image: The Apostle (Butcher's Run Films, 1997)
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A Feeling for Pain
by Ronald W. Dworkin
Modern medicine has mastered the elimination of pain to an impressive degree. But as Ronald W. Dworkin, a practicing anesthesiologist, shows, when science tries to explain pain, it often muddles what we know from experience.READ MORE
Detail of Venus, Cupid, Folly, and Time (ca. 1546), by Agnolo Bronzino (via Wikimedia)














