- Special Issue -

The Stem Cell Debates

Lessons for Science and Politics

The debates over stem cell research during the last decade have been among the most heated controversies in the history of science — touching on fundamental questions concerning the governance of science and the moral status of embryonic human life.

We are pleased to devote the entirety of the Winter 2012 issue of The New Atlantis to a major report on the stem cell debates, a comprehensive and up-to-date account of the scientific facts and the moral, political, and legal stakes. This is the inaugural report of an important new body, the Witherspoon Council on Ethics and the Integrity of Science.

Table of ContentsMain ReportAbout the Witherspoon Council

What Do Organisms Mean?
by Stephen L. Talbott

Are mutations random and meaningless? In the ‘survival of the fittest,’ what counts as ‘fitness’? As Stephen L. Talbott explains, the scientific literature shows scant evidence for the randomness of mutations, and the notion of ‘fitness’ raises more questions than it answers.
READ MORE


Previously in this series:


by Nicholas Eberstadt

In many countries, the ratio of newborn boys to girls has skewed dramatically. Nicholas Eberstadt explains that the widespread availability of abortion and ultrasound, combined with cultural factors, has led to the extermination of tens of millions of girls in the womb. READ MORE

Photo: RightIndex (CC).

Nathaniel Hawthorne series

Literature and the Meaning of Progress

The New Atlantis has been publishing a series of essays devoted to stories about science, technology, and progress by the great American writer Nathaniel Hawthorne. With each essay, we have been publishing an annotated edition of the corresponding Hawthorne story.
 

Visit the series homepage here.

Digital Image © The Museum of Modern Art/Licensed by SCALA/Art Resource, N.Y.

Place and Placelessness in America

GPS and the End of the Road

by Ari N. Schulman

Since the days of Jack Kerouac, the image of personal freedom has been the driver on the open road. What, then, should we make of the navigation revolution found in GPS and “location-awareness”? Do they expand our freedom, as they seem to promise? Ari N. Schulman looks to On the Road and Huckleberry Finn, asking why we aspire to travel, and what we expect to get out of it today.


Symposium: What ‘Place’ Means to Us Today

Psychology’s Magician

by Algis Valiunas

In the era of neuroscience and brain scans, Carl Jung and the Jungian school of psychology have faded from the scene. But no modern thinker pushed further into the darkest depths of the mind than Jung did — he plunged into the very shadows where monsters lurk. Algis Valiunas sketches a portrait of the controversial Jung as scientist and seer. READ MORE

From our archive...

Abraham Maslow and the All-American Self

by Algis Valiunas

Some conservatives have criticized Abraham Maslow — the psychologist known for “self-actualization” and the “hierarchy of needs” — for promoting a cult of the self. This is much too simplistic, argues Algis Valiunas: Maslow, an idealist, had a nobler humanity in mind.


READ MORE
Photo courtesy Brandeis U.

Christianity and the Future of the Book

by Alan Jacobs

How has the format of the Christian Bible — as a bound book rather than a scroll — shaped Christianity and Western culture more broadly? New Atlantis contributing editor Alan Jacobs writes that we are all “heirs of the decisions that the early Christian Church made about the technology appropriate for bearing the Word of God.” How will the evolving technology of the book now transform Christian theology and practice?


READ MORE
Photo: Ryk Neethling (CC)

The World’s Most Popular Gun

Victor Davis Hanson on the long road to the AK-47 READ MORE

Photo: U.S. Army

Doctors Go Digital

Jeffrey C. Rowe on how information technology is changing American health care READ MORE

Unleashing the Nuclear Watchdog

Henry Sokolski on reforming the International Atomic Energy Agency’s safeguarding operations


READ MORE
Photo: Greg Dunlap (CC)

by Gilbert Meilaender

Human beings have always longed to transcend the suffering, finitude, and limits of embodied life. For some, this longing is spiritual — pointing, perhaps, to the eternity of the soul. Gilbert Meilaender explores the technological transcendence preferred by the transhumanist movement.


READ MORE

The Challenge of Regulating Objectively

by Jonathan H. Adler

Yale law professor Douglas A. Kysar argues in a recent book that cost-benefit analysis is inadequate for policymaking. But Kysar’s preferred “precautionary” approach would create a vastly more complex and cumbersome regulatory system. Jonathan H. Adler explains.


READ MORE
Image: FEMA

by Alan Jacobs

July marked the hundredth anniversary of the birth of Marshall McLuhan. Alan Jacobs examines whether the media critic and celebrity had anything worthwhile to say, and whether it's still today worth grappling with his often dizzying work.


READ MORE

Locke, Darwin, and America’s Future

by Peter Augustine Lawler

Are we individuals endowed with the right to pursue happiness? Or are we the products of blind and fickle nature, concerned only with survival? Peter Augustine Lawler explores the tensions between two of our intellectual guiding lights: Charles Darwin and John Locke.


READ MORE

What Consciousness Is Not

by Raymond Tallis

Philosophers of mind are in thrall of the idea that the mind is a computer, dismissing the role and even the existence of conscious experience. But one philosopher, David Chalmers, has been highly influential in pushing back. Raymond Tallis explores Chalmers’s work and his latest book, and shows why even Chalmers still gives too much credence to the myth of mind as matter.


READ MORE


Related by Raymond Tallis:


The Folly of Internet Freedom

Eric R. Sterner on the mistake of talking about the Internet as a human right READ MORE

 

Subject to Review

Tevi Troy on the Obama administration’s proposed new regulations for human subjects research READ MORE

 

Global Warming and Federalism

David A. Murray on state and local governments overreaching in regulating carbon READ MORE

 

Health Food and the Double Helix

Whitney K. Franz on the promise of nutrigenomics READ MORE


Photo: Ahmad Hammoud (CC)

Philosophy Is Here to Stay

by Benjamin Storey

The End of Philosophy — So declared David Brooks in a famous New York Times column: neuroscience and social science now can answer the vexing questions of what is good and right that thousands of years of philosophy have failed to resolve. Benjamin Storey reviews Brooks’s recent book The Social Animal, and asks whether we’re quite ready to put Socrates out to pasture.


READ MORE

The Unmanning of America

by Rita Koganzon

Men are out, man-children are in — or so commentators and social scientists have been proclaiming. Rita Koganzon considers (and challenges) the arguments about “emerging adults” that Kay Hymowitz makes in her new book Manning Up.


READ MORE
Image: Knocked Up (© Universal)
In Remembrance

In Remembrance of Jonathan B. Tucker

The New Atlantis notes with great sadness the passing of our contributor Jonathan B. Tucker. An esteemed and prolific expert in nonproliferation policy, he was described as a “humble giant” of his field by a close colleague.
 

His final essay for The New Atlantis was recently published:
 

Could Terrorists Exploit Synthetic Biology?


Read more about the life and work of Jonathan B. Tucker here.


READ MORE
Photo: Link Nicoll

E-mail Updates

Enter your e-mail address to receive occasional updates and previews from The New Atlantis.

You Can’t Handle the Truth

by Jeremy Kessler

After FinitudePhilosophers say there are limits to what human beings can know, while scientists tell us that material truths like those they discover are all that really exists. Jeremy Kessler reviews Quentin Meillasoux’s new book After Finitude, which claims to offer proof that the universe exists independently of human minds.  READ MORE