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No. 1Spring 2003

No. 1

Spring 2003

Editorial

The New Politics of Technology

Essays

Ageless Bodies, Happy Souls

Leon R. Kass on biotechnology and the pursuit of perfection

Military Technology and American Culture

Victor Davis Hanson on our character, our weapons, and our role in the world

Liberty, Privacy, and DNA Databases

Christine Rosen on the uses and dangers of genetic fingerprints

The Paradox of Conservative Bioethics

Yuval Levin on taboos, democracy, and the politics of biology

Bioethics and the Character of Human Life

Gilbert Meilaender on mortality, freedom, suffering, and the generations

The Future of Medical Technology

Scott Gottlieb on how the marriage of biology and silicon is transforming medicine

Artificial Intelligence and Human Nature

Charles T. Rubin on the project to make human beings extinct

The Rise and Fall of Sociobiology

Peter A. Lawler on the age’s three great illusions about human nature
Interview

Is Cyberspace Secure?

An interview with “cybersecurity czar” Howard A. Schmidt
State of the Art

Fertility Gone Mad

Pregnancy After Menopause, IVF Birth defects, & More

Bill Gates, the Prince

The Muddled Microsoft Case and Stone-Age Antitrust Laws

Mapping the Mind

Our New Techniques for Scanning the Psyche

HapMap—Revolution or Hype?

The Controversy Surrounding the Next Gene-Mapping Project

Satellites at Risk

The Next Homeland Security Challenge May Be in Space

Are We Ready for Terror?

The Latest Hart-Rudman Report and What It Missed

Oh, Behave!

Britain’s Nuffield Council Weighs in on Behavioral Genetics

Home is Where the Robot is

Vacuum Cleaners, Security Guards, and Old-Age Companions

Chinese Bioethics?

“Voluntary” Eugenics and the Prospects for Reform

The Dust Bites Another One

From Michael Crichton’s Prey to the Department of Nanotechnology

The Animal in Us

The Latest Advances in Xenotransplantation

‘Lift Your Eyes to the Heavens’

President Bush’s remarks on the loss of the space shuttle Columbia

Notes & Briefs

Nuclear Fusion, Censoring Science, Hyper-Healthcare, etc.
Looking Ahead

Biotechnology by the Numbers

Looking Back

The Double Helix at Fifty

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No. 2Summer 2003

No. 2

Summer 2003

Essays

Of Embryos and Empire

Eric Cohen on what the embryo debate can teach us about American civilization

The Nanotechnology Revolution

Adam Keiper on the science and politics of manipulating the very small

The New Face of War

David Skinner on whether new technologies make war more tolerable and more just

War and Techne

Gilbert Meilaender on the timeless truths of war

Why Conservatives Care About Biotechnology

Adam Wolfson on conservatives, biotechnology, and the American project

Human Nature is Here to Stay

Larry Arnhart on why biotechnology will not change our bodies, brains, and desires

Eugenics—Sacred and Profane

Christine Rosen on Orthodox matchmakers, IVF clinics, and genetic testing
State of the Art

Mercy and Drugs in Africa

Inside the Bush Administration’s New AIDS Policy

My Mother, the Embryo

IVF's Latest: She-Males, Fetal Eggs, and Children of the Unborn

Year of the Red Planet

An International Wave of Interplanetary Exploration

Clueless

Moral Silliness from Some Spokesmen of Science

Navel-Gazing

Bioethics and the Unbearable Whiteness of Being

Porn, Privacy, and Kids

Congressional Attempts to Make the Internet Child-Friendly

Carried Away with Convergence

The Merging of Nanotech, Biotech, Infotech, and Brain Sciences

Boys Will Be Boys

The Science of the Y Chromosome

Crackdown!

Stepping Up the Fight Against Music Piracy

Stopping Spam

As the Spam Problem Worsens, Congress Seeks a Remedy

Technology: The Great Enabler?

How Jayson Blair Conned the New York Times

‘Something History Will Not Forgive’

Excerpts from Tony Blair’s Speech to Congress, July 18, 2003

Notes & Briefs

Cloned Mules, Forgetful Mice, Camera Phones, etc.
Looking Ahead

Learning from Columbia

Looking Back

Reflections on the Tiniest Things

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No. 3Fall 2003

No. 3

Fall 2003

Essays

A New Vision for NASA

Adam Keiper on the trouble with NASA and the moral case for space exploration

Bioethics in Wartime

Eric Cohen on biology and the good life—in peace and in war

A Conversation with Nature

Steve Talbott on understanding our relationship with the natural world

From Biology to Biography

William Hurlbut on evolution and the ascent of the human person

Why Not Artificial Wombs?

Christine Rosen on the meaning of being born, not incubated

Does Digital Politics Still Matter?

Robert Atkinson and Shane Ham on the battles over information technology

The Politics of the WHO

Steven Menashi on the follies of the World Health Organization
State of the Art

‘Tis the Season?

Women off the Cycle, Men on the Pill

Caught in the Act

Tracking Cheating Hearts in the Cyber-Age

Bank on It

Britain Constructs a Universal Genetic Database

Out of Their Right Mind

Conservatism is Crazy, but Psychiatry is Here to Help

Edward Teller, RIP

The Controversial Life of the Father of the H-Bomb

Neil Postman, RIP

Culture, Technology, and the Modern Soul

The Science Journal Crisis

Disappearing Articles, Skyrocketing Costs, and Open Access

Paper and Pixel

The Web Takes Note of Books, Reference Books Discover the Web

Was Blind, But Now I See

Stem Cells, Genetics, and Bionics in the Quest for Sight

The Future of Satellites

New Problems and New Players in the Satellite Game

‘We’re the Dreamers’

Senators Hear Opposing Views on Piracy from Two Rappers

Notes & Briefs

Spammer Justice, Cloned Food, Solar Flares, etc.
Looking Ahead

China Takes Off

Looking Back

The Wright Stuff

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No. 4Winter 2004

No. 4

Winter 2004

Biotechnology and the Good Life

Science and Self-Government

Wilfred M. McClay on science and self-government

A More Child-Like Science

Steve Talbott on “better children” 

Man or Machine?

Charles T. Rubin on “superior performance” 

Methuselah and Us

Diana Schaub on “ageless bodies”

Restless Souls

Peter A. Lawler on “happy souls” 
Essays

Romance in the Information Age

Christine Rosen on how technology is changing courtship

Imagining the Future

Yuval Levin on innovations, generations, and the biotechnology debates

The Kyoto Protocol: A Post-Mortem

S. Fred Singer on the politics of global climate change

The Scientist and the Poet

Paul A. Cantor on the surprising wrinkles in an age-old rivalry
The Spirit of Discovery

The Right Plan

Adam Keiper on the plan and its critics

The Virtual Astronaut

Robert Park on the virtual astronaut

The Human Explorer

Robert Zubrin on the human explorer 
State of the Art

The Age of Cloning

Breakthrough in South Korea, Stalemate in the Senate

Do Embryos Vote?

Stem Cell Politics in an Election Year

The Nanotech Schism

High-Tech Pants or Molecular Revolution?

Online Democracy

Why the Era of E-Voting Will Have to Wait

Life is Just a Game

The Rise of Video Games in American Culture

The Ideological Environmentalist

Challenging the Orthodoxy of “Green” Science

Click Twice and Call Me in the Morning

The Growing Underground Market in Prescription Drugs

History Repeating?

The Peculiar Comeback of Eugenics

Gatekeepers of Science

Peer Review Controversies at Home and Abroad

Power-Hungry China

The International Consequences of China’s Quest for Energy

‘The Seams that Hold Us Back’

Bill Gates on Hardware, Software, and the Next Step in Computing

Notes & Briefs

Face Transplants, Text-Message Weddings, Aerogel, etc.
Looking Ahead

Reviewing American Intelligence

Looking Back

John Deere and America’s Character

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No. 5Spring 2004

No. 5

Spring 2004

Essays

Energy Dreams and Energy Realities

Stephanie Cohen on liberals, conservatives, and the energy debate

The Democratization of Beauty

Christine Rosen on cosmetic surgery and American culture

The Dilemmas of German Bioethics

Eric Brown on the taboos of the Nazi past and the future of human dignity

The Legacy of Nazi Medicine

Naomi Schaefer on a powerful new exhibit at the U.S. Holocaust Museum

Technology and the Constitution

O. Carter Snead on how new technologies affect judicial interpretation

Nuclear 1914: The Next Big Worry

Henry Sokolski on the problem of nuclear proliferation in the age of terrorism

Getting Serious About IVF

Adam Wolfson on the new report from the President’s Council on Bioethics

Memory and the Movies

James Bowman on remembering and forgetting through the eyes of Hollywood
State of the Art

Dot-Com Terrorism

How Radical Islam Uses the Internet to Fight the West

Campaigning for Stem Cells

Research Advocates Launch a New Offensive for Funding

Daniel J. Boorstin, RIP

Historian, Critic, and American Man of Books

Gaga Over Google

More than a Search Engine, Less than a Mind

Life from Scratch

Promise, Peril, and Pathogens: Breakthroughs in Synthetic Biology

Science Goes Hollywood

Selective Outrage over the Latest Movie Inaccuracies

Red Planet, Wet Planet

Developments in the Search for Life on Mars

Miles Still to Go

DARPA and the Great Robot Race

The Science of Human Potential

Public Dialogue about Behavioral Genetics

One of Us

The Anatomy of Acceptance

‘The Course We Must Maintain’

Vice President Cheney on Proliferation and Cooperation

Notes & Briefs

Stamping Out Spam, Euthanasia News, Books Online, etc.
Looking Ahead

The Return of the Space Debate

Looking Back

25 Years in the Sausage Factory

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No. 6Summer 2004

No. 6

Summer 2004

Essays

The Human Face of Alzheimer’s

Colleen Carroll Campbell on the medical, ethical, and personal aspects of dementia

Stem Cells and the Reagan Legacy

Gilbert Meilaender on hubris and limits in the embryo research debate

Our Cell Phones, Ourselves

Christine Rosen on the consequences of ignoring the world around us

The Path Not Taken

Rand Simberg on the myths of the old space age and what comes next

Our Asterisked Heroes

Douglas Kern on human excellence in the age of performance-enhancing drugs

Film and TV in Anxious Times

Thomas S. Hibbs on fantasy film, reality TV, and American life after 9/11
Internet Pornography: An Exchange

The End of Obscenity

Jeffrey Rosen

The Pornography Culture

David B. Hart
State of the Art

The Assassin’s Mace

China’s Growing Military Might

The Stem Cell Race

John Kerry and the Democrats Search for an Issue

America at 10 M.P.H.

The Slow But Steady Rise of Segway

The Big Change

The End of Menopause and Its Meaning

It’s Getting Easier Being Green

Permaculture Goes Mainstream

Francis Crick, RIP

The Man, the Mind, and the Molecule

Doping for Seconds

The Shadow of Drugs on American Athletics

‘Higher Standards’

Eliot Spitzer on the Pharmaceutical Industry

Notes & Briefs

Nano News, Robot Nurses, Racing Sperm, etc.
Looking Ahead

The Virtual Stump

Looking Back

King James for Surgeon General

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No. 7Fall 2004 - Winter 2005

No. 7

Fall 2004 - Winter 2005

Editorials

Science in the Public Square

The Bioethics Agenda and the Bush Second Term

Essays

Science and Congress

Adam Keiper on science advice and the legacy of the Office of Technology Assessment

The Age of Egocasting

Christine Rosen on TiVo, iPod, and technologies of fetish

Human Growth Hormone and the Measure of Man

Dov Fox on height enhancement and the new tyranny of the normal
The Embryo Question

Acorns and Embryos

Robert P. George and Patrick Lee on moral standing and bad metaphors

The Tragedy of Equality

Eric Cohen on the uses of reason, the absurdity of disease, and the quest for justice

Human Frailty and Human Dignity

Leon R. Kass responds to Eric Cohen’s essay

The Crisis of Everyday Life

Yuval Levin responds to Eric Cohen’s essay

In What Sense Equal?

Amy Laura Hall responds to Eric Cohen’s essay
State of the Art

I’ve Got You Under My Skin

Tracking Technology Gets Personal

Black Box Ballyhoo

Voting Technology in the 2004 Election

Gray Matter in the Courtroom

Neuroscience as Legal Evidence

Debunking the Digital Classroom

Rethinking the Virtues of “Tech Literacy”

The Cloning Logjam

Treaty Talks Break Down at the United Nations

The Encyclopedia in Cyberspace

Wikipedia Makes Every Man an Editor

‘A Second Kind of Frontier’

The X Prize Triumph and the Future of Space Travel
Looking Ahead

Science and Tech Policy: What Next?

Looking Back

Politicizing Science, Sixties-Style

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No. 8Spring 2005

No. 8

Spring 2005

Essays

The Caregiving Society

Peter Augustine Lawler on caring for the old in an age of individualism

Getting Space Exploration Right

Robert Zubrin on making the Moon-Mars initiative work

Science Education and Liberal Education

Matthew B. Crawford on the trouble with today’s textbooks

Logic, DNA, and Poetry

Steve Talbott on how bad metaphors make for bad science

Daedalus and Icarus Revisited

Charles T. Rubin on science, the future, and the Haldane-Russell debate

Bioethics at the Movies

James Bowman on abortion, euthanasia, and Hollywood
State of the Art

The Embryo Wars

The U.N., Mitt Romney, and California Corruption

DNA Dragnets

The Uses and Abuses of Genetic Information

Blogs Gone Bad

The Darker Side of the Blogging Boom

Crimson Recriminations

Larry Summers vs. The Harvard Feminists

‘A Profound Loss as a Culture’

Debating Copyright in the Digital Age

Notes & Briefs

Space Tourism, Tsunami Hucksters, Artificial Friends, etc.
Looking Ahead

Assessing the Nanotech Revolution

Looking Back

Is Nuclear Energy Coming Back?

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No. 9Summer 2005

No. 9

Summer 2005

Essays

Playgrounds of the Self

Christine Rosen on video games and modern identity

The Real Meaning of Genetics

Eric Cohen on the false fears and genuine dilemmas of modern genetics

The Computerized Academy

Matthew B. Crawford on information technology and the life of the mind

Technology and the Spirit of Ownership

Paul J. Cella III on private property as a cure for the ills of the technology age

Science, Technology, and The Public Interest

Excerpts from forty years of “a middle-aged magazine for middle-aged readers”
John Paul II and the Ethics of the Body

The Anti-Theology of the Body

David B. Hart

Reading the Body

Robert W. Jenson
State of the Art

How We Measure Up

Is American Math and Science Education in Decline?

Shooting Not to Kill

America’s Development and Use of Non-Lethal Weapons

The New NASA

Mike Griffin Takes the Helm and Transforms the Agency

To Boldly Go

The end of Star Trek and Star Wars

Checking Terrorists at the Door

Small Hopes for The Real ID Act

‘An Unknowable Atom of Human Flesh’

Henry Hyde and Joe Barton on the Ethics of Stem Cell Research

Notes & Briefs

Russia’s Blackout, Los Alamos Woes, Paris Hilton, etc.
Looking Ahead

Picking Judges Online

Looking Back

Hiroshima and Nagasaki at Sixty

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No. 10Fall 2005

No. 10

Fall 2005

Essays

Conservatives, Liberals, and Medical Progress

Daniel Callahan on politics, death, and the future of modern medicine

The Moral Education of Doctors

Philip Overby on shaping the souls of aspiring physicians

The Image Culture

Christine Rosen on Photoshop, PowerPoint, and our perception of reality

Buggy Software and Missile Defense

Mark Halpern on writing code and protecting the country

Love in the Age of Neuroscience

Mickey Craig and Jon Fennell on Tom Wolfe’s I Am Charlotte Simmons
Reconsideration

Francis Bacon’s God

Stephen A. McKnight reconsiders the religious foundations of the “New Atlantis”
Excerpt

The Aging Self

A selection from Taking Care, a report by the President’s Council on Bioethics
State of the Art

The Lessons of Katrina

Natural Horrors and Modern Technology

Relaunching NASA

Back to the Moon by 2018—Or Sooner

Bush-League Science

Are Republicans Conducting a “War on Science”?

Cicely Saunders, RIP

Remembering the Founder of the Hospice Movement

Hollywood’s Fertile Imagination

Baby-Making Goes Prime Time

Chief Justice at the Bedside

John Roberts and the End of Life
Looking Ahead

A New Approach on Climate Change?

Looking Back

Einstein’s Annus Mirabilis

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No. 11Winter 2006

No. 11

Winter 2006

Essays

The Age of Neuroelectronics

Adam Keiper on neural implants, brain-machine interfaces, and cyborg fantasies

The Trouble with the Turing Test

Mark Halpern on the fallacy of thinking computers

The Rhetoric of Extinction

Charles T. Rubin reviews four recent books on transhumanism

Are We Worthy of Our Kitchens?

Christine Rosen on expensive appliances and modern families

Who Owns the Genome?

Misha Angrist and Robert M. Cook-Deegan on intellectual property and genomics
Excerpt

The Rise of Guerrilla Media

Glenn Reynolds on blogs, Big Media, and the future of journalism
State of the Art

Human Cloning and Scientific Corruption

The South Korea Scandal and the Future of the Stem Cell Debate

The U.N.’s Net Gambit

Internationalizing Internet Governance

The $100 Laptop

A Flawed Plan to “Save the World”

Morals and the Mind

Michael Gazzaniga’s Ethical Brain

‘No Nation Can Afford to Ignore This Threat’

America Prepares for Avian Flu

Notes & Briefs

Science Education, Wikipedia’s Accuracy, Mozart’s Skull, etc.
Looking Ahead

TV is Dead, Long Live TV

Looking Back

Discovering Pluto

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No. 12Spring 2006

No. 12

Spring 2006

Correspondence

Visions of the Future; The Turing Test

Essays

Biotechnology and the Spirit of Capitalism

Eric Cohen on the new commerce of the body

The Promise and Perils of Synthetic Biology

Jonathan B. Tucker and Raymond A. Zilinskas on regulating designer microbes

The Mislabeled Child

Brock L. Eide and Fernette F. Eide on the failure of kindergarten neurochemistry

The Many Casualties of Cloning

Richard M. Doerflinger on the lessons of the South Korean fraud
Reviews and Reconsiderations

The God Meme

Charles T. Rubin on Daniel Dennett’s unconvincing theory

Jules Verne: Father of Science Fiction?

John Derbyshire on Verne’s lesser-known works

Polio Stories

Philip J. Overby on the meaning of a forgotten epidemic

The Age of Female Computers

David Skinner on the burdens of pre-machine mathematics

A Clone’s Lament

James Bowman on life as a useful pre-cadaver
State of the Art

Censoring Scientists?

Lessons of the James Hansen Affair

Stem Cell Spin

The Bush Policy and Its Unreasonable Critics

Stuck with the Old, In with the New

NASA’s Budgetary Balancing Act

Addicted to Bad Data

Getting the Facts Straight on Ethanol

Apocalypse Averted

The BlackBerry Settlement and Patent Reform

‘Predators Are Becoming More Sophisticated’

Pornographers and Pedophiles Online
Looking Ahead

Drowning Polar Bears

Looking Back

The Jungle at 100

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No. 13Summer 2006

No. 13

Summer 2006

Correspondence

Biocapitalism

Essays

Shop Class as Soulcraft

Matthew B. Crawford makes a case for the manual trades

Gifts of the Body

Gilbert Meilaender on organs, markets, and the ethics of transplantation

The Self-Portrait of a Scientist

Christine Rosen on wonder, mastery, and fame in scientific memoir

A Third Way on Network Neutrality

Robert D. Atkinson and Philip J. Weiser on the battle over broadband

The First Fourteen Days of Human Life

Patrick Lee and Robert P. George on the biology of the early embryo

The Myth of Thomas Szasz

Jeffrey Oliver on the legacy of psychiatry’s forgotten critic
Reviews and Reconsiderations

The Methanol Alternative

Robert Zubrin on how to alleviate our energy problems

Medicine Without Limits

Daniel P. Sulmasy on therapy, enhancement, and sophistry

Babies for Sale

Cheryl Miller on buying and selling our offspring

On the Shelf

Quick Takes on The Father of Surgery, Box Boats, Cloning and the Law, etc.
State of the Art

China’s Phony Science

Exposing Corruption, Plagiarism, and Fraud

Rethinking Peer Review

How the Internet is Changing Science Journals

Cyber-Insecurity

Computer Theft Puts Veterans’ Data at Risk

Sexist Science?

A “She Said, He Said” About Discrimination in the Lab

‘Stumbling into a Powerful Technology’

Baroness Greenfield on New Media and Young Minds

Notes & Briefs

Sex Selection, Chernobyl, Bottled Water, etc.
Looking Ahead

Stop the Pop

Looking Back

The Stem Cell President

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No. 14Fall 2006

No. 14

Fall 2006

Correspondence

The Beginning of Life; An Unbalanced Diagnosis; The Enhancement Wars; Three Cheers for Craftsmanship

Essays

The Paradox of Military Technology

Max Boot on American power and American vulnerability

The Moral Challenge of Modern Science

Yuval Levin on politics, ethics, and the scientific worldview
Commerce of the Body

The Case for Kidney Markets

Benjamin Hippen on how to solve the kidney shortage

Is the Body Property?

Peter Augustine Lawler on rights, dignity, and organ sales
Reviews and Reconsiderations

Beyond the Right to Life

Wilfred M. McClay on the “Party of Death”

The Agony of Atomic Genius

Algis Valiunas on the tragedy of J. Robert Oppenheimer

Cloning’s Apologist

Caitrin Nicol on Ian Wilmut’s defense of research cloning

C. S. Lewis Goes to the Laboratory

Thomas W. Merrill on the science and faith of Francis Collins
State of the Art

Too Speculative?

Henry Sokolski

The Dotcomrade

Brian Boyd

The Touchy-Feely Laboratory

Christine Rosen

Space Deals

Rand Simberg

Eco-Censorship

Iain Murray

Techno-Horror in Hollywood

Sonny Bunch

‘Oblivious’

Rush Holt on Science, Technology, and Congress

Notes & Briefs

Healthier People, Sicker Oceans, Electronic Books, etc.
Looking Ahead

400 Million Americans

Looking Back

The Last Breath of Thomas Edison

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No. 15Winter 2007

No. 15

Winter 2007

Correspondence

Principle, Prudence, and the “Party of Death”

Essays

The Hydrogen Hoax

Robert Zubrin on energy charlatans and the politicians who love them

In Whose Image Shall We Die?

Eric Cohen on living well and dying well

The Language of Nature

Steve Talbott on how science drains meaning from experience

The Scientific Mind of Ben Franklin

Jerry Weinberger on America’s first Baconian
Reviews and Reconsiderations

The Red Plague

Cheryl Miller on how China bungled SARS

Psychiatry’s Healer

Philip J. Overby on the medical humanism of Paul McHugh

Our Childless Dystopia

James Bowman on P. D. James’s The Children of Men, as novel and film

Immortality Lite

Ross Douthat on the sublime and the foolish in Darren Aronofsky’s The Fountain

Theory Wars, Again

Matthew B. Crawford on reason and relativism in the academy
State of the Art

Sucker-Me Elmo

Christine Rosen

The Electoral Politics of Stem Cells

Yuval Levin

Cloning Down Under

Michael Casey

Dead Body Porn

Thomas S. Hibbs

Back to the Moon, To Stay?

Jeff Foust

Bioethics and The Public Interest

A Journal’s Lasting Legacy
Looking Ahead

Windows Whimpers

Looking Back

Sterile Thinking

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No. 16Spring 2007

No. 16

Spring 2007

Correspondence

Rethinking the Hydrogen Economy

Essays

China’s Space Ambitions—and Ours

Jeff Kueter on the Chinese threat to American space assets and what to do about it

The Right to Life and Human Dignity

Leon R. Kass on Thomas Hobbes as a teacher of dignity

Brave New World at 75

Caitrin Nicol on reading Aldous Huxley’s novel as its first readers did

Nanoethics as a Discipline?

Adam Keiper on the proliferation of professional nanotechnology criticism
Reviews and Reconsiderations

What’s Ailing Health Care?

James C. Capretta on markets, medicine, and the limits of government

The Half-Bound World

John Derbyshire reviews Neal Stephenson’s Baroque Cycle

The Greening of Capitalism

Nick Schulz on environmentalism as corporate exhibitionism

The Problem with Plagiarism

Jeremy Lott on the timeless drama of the copycat

Political Pseudoscience

Matthew B. Crawford on why political science is not physics
State of the Art

Reforming NIH

Yuval Levin

Energy Incrementalism

Stephanie Cohen

Seeing and Believing

Peter Suderman

What Lies Within

Christine Rosen

Digilante Justice

Ruth Martin

‘A Critical Part of the Solution’

Al Gore and the Nuclear Debate

Notes & Briefs

Sonofusion, Burnt Sponges, Smelling Technosexual, etc.
Looking Ahead

The HPV Vaccine Debate

Looking Back

The Human Checkmate

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No. 17Summer 2007

No. 17

Summer 2007

Correspondence

China’s Aims in Space; Debating Nanoethics

Essays

Virtual Friendship and the New Narcissism

Christine Rosen on MySpace, Facebook, and the costs of social networking

Human Dignity and Public Bioethics

Gilbert Meilaender on dignity as a useful concept

Melancholy’s Whole Physician

Algis Valiunas reads Robert Burton’s The Anatomy of Melancholy

Heroism, Modernism, and the Utopian Impulse

James Bowman on cowboys, communists, and dreams of perfection
Reviews and Reconsiderations

Drug Addiction and the Open Society

Lee Harris on freedom and self-mastery

Parenthood at Any Price

Cheryl Miller reviews Liza Mundy’s Everything Conceivable

Intimations of the Soul

Paul J. Cella III on idolatry in the Age of Machines

Devaluing Science

Jonathan H. Adler on scientists and politics
State of the Art

‘Less Morally Problematic Alternatives’

Yuval Levin

Soldiers for Rent

Habib Moody

The Man in the Moon

Stephen Bertman

Faces Disappearing

Richard W. Sams II

‘For Better or Worse’

Tony Blair on Politics and the Media

Notes & Briefs

Live Earth, Mr. Wizard, Solving Checkers, etc.
Looking Ahead

The Summer of Love

Looking Back

The Steamboat that Stayed

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No. 18Fall 2007

No. 18

Fall 2007

Essays

Achieving Energy Victory

Robert Zubrin on how to win the war on terror by breaking free of oil

Ghosts in the Evolutionary Machinery

Steve Talbott on digital organisms and disembodied science
A Half-Century in Space

The Conquest of Space and the Stature of Man

Hannah Arendt on scientists, common sense, and man’s limitations

Nature, Man, and Common Sense

Patrick J. Deneen

Science and Totalitarianism

Rita Koganzon

Thumos in Space

Charles T. Rubin

Chariots in the Sky

Stephen Bertman

Our Proud Human Future

Peter Augustine Lawler
Reviews and Reconsiderations

Launching the Space Age

James E. Oberg on the dramatic story of Sputnik

The New Pioneers

Rand Simberg on the burgeoning private space industry

The Evangelical Ecologist

S.M. Hutchens on E. O. Wilson’s Earth-piety

The Painless Peace of Twilight Sleep

Cheryl Miller on an overlooked Edith Wharton gem
State of the Art

Shot in the Dark

Caitrin Nicol

Science Warrior

Yuval Levin

Unclassifiable

Christine Rosen

Card’s Game

Peter Suderman

‘Americans Will Not Like It’

Michael Griffin on the Global Space Economy

Notes & Briefs

Blackwater Fallout, Caves on Mars, Missing Mass, etc.
Looking Ahead

First Ripples of the Silver Tsunami

Looking Back

The Heartbeat Heard Round the World

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No. 19Winter 2008

No. 19

Winter 2008

Editorial

John McCain and the Stem Cell Debate

Correspondence

The Logic of Science; Biodiversity and the Bible

Essays

Science and the Left

Yuval Levin on the past and future of the “party of science”

Neuroimaging and Capital Punishment

O. Carter Snead on brain scans and the conflicted aspirations of neuroscience

The Limits of Neuro-Talk

Matthew B. Crawford on the dangers of a mindless brain science

Blogging Infertility

Cheryl Miller on the lively and fractious community of “infertiles”
Reviews and Reconsiderations

Masters and Possessors of Nature

Thomas W. Merrill reads Descartes’ Discourse on Method

Shop Till You Drop?

Jeremy Lott on suburbs, bomb shelters, and bottled water

Sick and Famous

Christy Hall Robinson on celebrity patients as advocates
State of the Art

The Clipboard of the Future

James C. Capretta

Till Malfunction Do Us Part

Caitrin Nicol

The Moral Life of Cubicles

David Franz

‘The Steroids Era’

George Mitchell on Drugs in Baseball

Notes & Briefs

Green Collars, Plastic Bags, MySpace Gangsters, etc.
Looking Ahead

Adapting to Climate Change

Looking Back

Loose Nukes at Home

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No. 20Spring 2008

No. 20

Spring 2008

Essays

In Defense of Biofuels

Robert Zubrin on ethanol and its critics

Health Care 2008: A Political Primer

James C. Capretta on how and why McCain's health care plan might work

Public Opinion and the Embryo Debates

Yuval Levin analyzes a revealing new poll on bioethics

Technology and Authenticity

Bruno Macaes on enhancement, action, and truth

Biotech Enhancement and Natural Law

Ryan T. Anderson and Christopher Tollefsen on distinctions in an age of novelty

The Myth of Multitasking

Christine Rosen on doing too much at once

The Technology of Memory

James Poulos on forgetting how to remember
Montesquieu and the Motives for Science

The Motives That Ought to Encourage Us to the Sciences

A discourse by Montesquieu translated for the first time into English by Diana Schaub

Montesquieu’s Popular Science

Diana Schaub on the study of science and the life of the mind
Reviews and Reconsiderations

Einstein’s Quest for Truth

Algis Valiunas on the mind of the man behind relativity

At Home with Down Syndrome

Caitrin Nicol reads memoirs of gratitude
Looking Ahead

An Olympic Fiasco

Looking Back

A Debate Still Patently Alive

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No. 21Summer 2008

No. 21

Summer 2008

Essays

Nuclear Policy and the Presidential Election

Henry Sokolski on nuclear matters and why they matter

Conservatives, Climate Change, and the Carbon Tax

Jim Manzi on the cost of thinking impractically about potential risk

Donated Generation

Cheryl Miller on releasing the identities of egg and sperm donors

Rethinking Public Opinion

Thomas Fitzgerald on the problems of polling

Technology, Culture, and Virtue

Patrick J. Deneen on Wendell Berry’s unnatured man
Reviews and Reconsiderations

Is Stupid Making Us Google?

James Bowman on the “Dumbest Generation”

We Are the Change We’ve Been Waiting For

Sebastian Waisman on the “Millennial Generation”

The World Made New

Rita Koganzon on Second Life and real life

The Brat Pack of Quantum Mechanics

John Derbsyhire on a pivotal year for modern physics

The Prudence of Neuroscience

Ivan Kenneally reviews The Heart of Judgment
State of the Art

An Animal to Save the World

Jonathan H. Adler

Taking the Earth’s Temperature

Jordan R. Raney

Pipeline Diplomacy

Adam Blinick

‘Leadership from the Bottom’

Wendell Berry on Rural Revival

Notes & Briefs

Chocolate DNA, Prozac for Puppies, ELIZA, etc.
Looking Ahead

Counting Correctly

Looking Back

The First Stitch

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No. 22Fall 2008

No. 22

Fall 2008

Essays

Petrodollar Science

Waleed Al-Shobakky on research and education in the Arab world

People of the Screen

Christine Rosen tells a tale of two literacies

Ten Years of “Death with Dignity”

Courtney S. Campbell on Oregon’s experience with physician-assisted suicide

Fixing American Health Care

Joseph V. Kennedy on cost, quality, and competition

Health Care with a Conscience

James C. Capretta on protecting Catholic hospitals
Reviews and Reconsiderations

Beyond Mankind

Charles T. Rubin on John Harris’s “sanshumanist” project

The Confused Congresswoman

Yuval Levin on Diana DeGette’s assault on reason

Green Bridge to Nowhere

Jonathan H. Adler on Gus Speth’s unsustainable environmentalism
State of the Art

Capturing Carbon

Jordan R. Raney

Staying Afloat

Peter Suderman

‘Categories of Warfare Are Blurring’

Robert Gates on the Tactics and Tools of Tomorrow’s Battles

Notes & Briefs

Eco-Vandalism, Noise Laws, the Billion-Dollar Click, etc.
Looking Ahead

The Future of Cell Biology

Looking Back

The Model T and American Life

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No. 23Winter 2009

No. 23

Winter 2009

Correspondence

Debating “Death with Dignity”; Obsolete Librarians

Editorial

Science and the Obama Administration

Essays

The Ethics of Counterinsurgency

Keith Pavlischek on irregular warfare and international law

Military Robots and the Laws of War

P. W. Singer on how unmanned systems are transforming armed conflict

Why Minds Are Not Like Computers

Ari N. Schulman on fundamental confusion about artificial intelligence

Reality and the Postmodern Wink

James Bowman champions curmudgeonliness as an antidote to cynicism

Nations, Liberalism, and Science

Peter Augustine Lawler on civil theology and civil biology

Socialism and Cancer

David Gratzer on how government ruins medicine
Reviews and Reconsiderations

The Great Breath of Hell

Algis Valiunas on the modern way of madness

Making Men Modern

Wayne Ambler on reform and recalcitrance in Twain’s Connecticut Yankee
Looking Ahead

Dilly-Dallying on Iran

Looking Back

The Inventor President

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No. 24Spring 2009

No. 24

Spring 2009

Essays

AIDS Relief and Moral Myopia

Travis Kavulla on African culture and the public health community

Embryos in Limbo

Jacqueline Pfeffer Merrill on IVF and indecision about nascent life

What and When Is Death?

Alan Rubenstein on knowing human living to define human dying

Technocracy and Populism

Ivan Kenneally on President Obama and putting politics behind us
Reviews and Reconsiderations

Is Water a Human Right?

Kendra Okonski on market solutions to the world’s “water crisis”

In Search of Chinese Science

John Derbyshire on Joseph Needham, sinologist and scientist

The Virtual Public Square

Alan Jacobs reviews Richard John Neuhaus’s final book

The True Face of Digital Democracy

Sebastian Waisman on the Internet and civic engagement
State of the Art

The Road to Rationing

Paul Howard and David Gratzer

Keeping Books Safe

Elizabeth Mullaney Nicol

The Rise of Cyber-Schools

Liam Julian

Disability Politics

Ari Ne’eman

At the Gates of a Magical Garden

G. Anthony Gorry

Down in Flames

James E. Oberg
Looking Ahead

The Stakes in the Health Care Fight

Looking Back

Fifty Years of “Two Cultures”

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No. 25Summer 2009

No. 25

Summer 2009

Essays

A Space Program for the Rest of Us

Rand Simberg on the wrong lessons of Apollo and the right way to reach space

The Lost Prestige of Nuclear Physics

N. J. Slabbert on the American retreat from nuclear technology
Science and Medicine in Fiction

The Ambiguous Utopia of Iain M. Banks

Alan Jacobs on the “Culture” novels and the price of bliss

Plato in Space

Charles T. Rubin on science, politics, and faith in Neal Stephenson’s Anathem

Unchosen Lives

Caitrin Nicol on Jodi Picoult’s tales at the threshold

Creating Frankenstein

Jeremy Kessler on Victor’s monster and the Shelleys’ story
Reviews and Reconsiderations

The Fusion Illusion

Max Schulz on false starts, fraud, and the real promise of nuclear fusion

Too Hot to Handle

Jordan R. Raney throws cold water on climate extremists

Medicine and Moral Authority

Daniel P. Sulmasy reviews Jonathan Imber’s Trusting Doctors
State of the Art

Fighting Fake Drugs

Roger Bate

Test Ban Treaty, Take Two

Christopher A. Ford

Romancing the Atom

Robert R. Johnson

China’s Organ Market

S. Elizabeth Forsythe

Nutrition and Tradition

John Schwenkler
Looking Ahead

Get Moving on Yucca

Looking Back

Our Petroleum Prosperity

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No. 26Fall 2009 - Winter 2010

No. 26

Fall 2009 - Winter 2010

Essays

The Future of Chemical Weapons

Jonathan B. Tucker on a neglected threat and what to do about it

The Financial Crisis and the Scientific Mindset

Paul J. Cella III on shadow banking and the returns of rationalism

On Bioethics in Public

Gilbert Meilaender reflects on the method and legacy of the President’s Council on Bioethics
Science, the Humanities, and the University

Science and the Decline of the Liberal Arts

Patrick J. Deneen

The Technocratic American University

Ivan Kenneally

Human Dignity and Higher Education

Peter Augustine Lawler

The Soul of the Scientist of Man

Shilo Brooks

The Ivy League Lament

Rita Koganzon
Reviews and Reconsiderations

Darwin’s World of Pain and Wonder

Algis Valiunas on the great scientist’s spiritual torment

Cheap Thrills

Noemie Emery defends the American consumer

The Formation of Character

David Skinner on how we write and who we are

Why We Walk

Jennifer Graf Groneberg on the origins of man and the end of walking
Hawthorne Series

Nathaniel Hawthorne and the Spirit of Science

The Editors kick off a series on scientific progress and the American literary genius

Wasting the Water of Life

Kevin Laskowski on “Dr. Heidegger’s Experiment” and the allure of immortality

Dr. Heidegger’s Experiment

Online only: A new critical edition of Hawthorne’s story
Looking Ahead

Bioethics: Left, Right, and Wrong

Looking Back

The Bhopal Injustice

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No. 27Spring 2010

No. 27

Spring 2010

Essays

Why Not Nuclear Disarmament?

Christopher A. Ford on the questions that disarmament advocates must answer

Proportionality in Warfare

Keith Pavlischek on the abuse of an important just war principle

The Tortured Logic of Obama’s Drone War

Hillel Ofek on the strategic, legal, and moral implications of targeted killing

The Most Useful Man Who Ever Lived

William Rosen on making heroes of inventors
Reviews and Reconsiderations

Scientists Fallen Among Poets

Algis Valiunas on what the Romantics learned from scientists, and vice versa

One Man’s Quantum Culture

Jeremy Axelrod reviews a memoir of strange science and swanky society

Avatar and the Flight from Reality

James Bowman on the sci-fi blockbuster and the mimetic tradition in art

From Cursive to Cursor

Alan Jacobs on whether it matters how we write

Bad Advice for Scientists

Ari N. Schulman reviews Unscientific America
Hawthorne Series

Artful by Nature

Charles T. Rubin reads “The New Adam and Eve”

The New Adam and Eve

Online only: A new critical edition of Hawthorne’s story
State of the Art

A Regrettable Reform

David Gratzer

Going Nowhere

Robert Zubrin

Claude Lévi-Strauss, RIP

Travis Kavulla

Missing the Big Picture

Jeff Robbins

The Case for Boredom

Adam J. Cox

Avatars in the Workplace

G. Anthony Gorry

‘The Unique Worth of an Individual Human Life’

On conversing with and learning from Paul Ramsey
Looking Ahead

The Future of Health Care

Looking Back

Part of Our Complete Breakfast

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No. 28Summer 2010

No. 28

Summer 2010

Essays

Getting Over the Code Delusion

Steve Talbott on epigenetics and the demise of DNA as destiny

How Can I Possibly Be Free?

Raymond Tallis on the neuroscientific case against free will, and why it’s wrong

Hiding Behind the Screen

Roger Scruton on the risks of friendship and the costs of shirking them

Environmentalism as Religion

Joel Garreau on energy sinners and carbon Calvinism

Churchill on Science and Civilization

Justin D. Lyons on politics and the humanities, war and peace, in the age of science
Reviews and Reconsiderations

The Science of Self-Help

Algis Valiunas on goofy advice, dubious wisdom, and neuro-gurus

Disenchanting Determinism

Caitrin Nicol reviews novels by Richard Powers and Rebecca Newberger Goldstein
Hawthorne Series

From Hearth-Fires to Hell-Fires

Diana Schaub reads three tales on the flames of progress

Ethan Brand

Online only: A new critical edition of Hawthorne’s story

Earth’s Holocaust

Online only: A new critical edition of Hawthorne’s story

Fire Worship

Online only: A new critical edition of Hawthorne’s story
Looking Ahead

Shoot First, Get Copyright Later

Looking Back

Lighter-than-Air Follies

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No. 29Fall 2010

No. 29

Fall 2010

Essays

What Neuroscience Cannot Tell Us About Ourselves

Raymond Tallis debunks the tropes of “neuromythology”

The Unbearable Wholeness of Beings

Steve Talbott confronts the language of organism-as-machine

The Trouble with Cyber Arms Control

Christopher A. Ford on why we should be wary of Russian and Chinese proposals

Humanism and Transhumanism

Fred Baumann on the utopian impulse and the ends of man
The New U.S. Space Policy

NASA’s Course Correction

Jeff Foust

Opening Space with a ‘Transorbital Railroad’

Robert Zubrin

In Search of a Conservative Space Policy

Rand Simberg
Reviews and Reconsiderations

The Climate of Climate Change

John Murdock examines four books on why we fight about global warming

Out of the Garden, Into the Laboratory

Jeremy Kessler on science as an answer to Original Sin

What Scientists Believe

Peter Lopatin on negotiating reason and revelation

History as Wall Art

Alan Jacobs reviews Cartographies of Time
State of the Art

Heading Off the Next Pandemic

Tevi Troy

The Untapped Potential of the NPT

Henry Sokolski

Slacking as Self-Discovery

Rita Koganzon

An American Education

Daniel Eugene Williams

The Digital Law Practice

Sam A. Mackie
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No. 30Winter 2011

No. 30

Winter 2011

Essays

Why the Arabic World Turned Away from Science

Hillel Ofek on the lost Golden Age and the rejection of reason

What Do Organisms Mean?

Steve Talbott on how life speaks at every level

Proposing a ‘Coast Guard’ for Space

James C. Bennett on what ails America’s space sector and how to fix it

The Near Miracle of Male Infertility Treatment

Jacqueline Pfeffer Merrill on creating infertile fathers

Locke, Darwin, and America’s Future

Peter Augustine Lawler on rights, nature, and progress
Reviews and Reconsiderations

Bridges and the Bottom Line

Adam J. White on why infrastructure must always be a matter of politics

You Can’t Handle the Truth

Jeremy Kessler reviews After Finitude by Quentin Meillasoux
Hawthorne Series

The Last Temptation of Science

Algis Valiunas on “Rappaccini’s Daughter” and the crooked path to Paradise

Rappaccini’s Daughter

Online only: A new critical edition of Hawthorne’s story
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No. 31Spring 2011

No. 31

Spring 2011

Place and Placelessness in America

GPS and the End of the Road

Ari Schulman on the transformation of travel and discovery

The Particularities of Place

Wilfred M. McClay

The New Meaning of Mobility

Christine Rosen

Place-Conscious Transportation Policy

Gary Toth

The Rise of Localist Politics

Brian Brown

Frog: A Tale of Home

Justin Race
Essays

Could Terrorists Exploit Synthetic Biology?

Jonathan B. Tucker on the potential risks of “de-skilling” bioengineering

Transitional Humanity

Gilbert Meilaender on the longing to defeat mortality and transcend embodiment

Psychology’s Magician

Algis Valiunas on the life and career of Carl Jung, mystic scientist of the mind
Reviews and Reconsiderations

Why Bother with Marshall McLuhan?

Alan Jacobs on the man, the medium, and his message

The Challenge of Regulating Objectively

Jonathan H. Adler on cost-benefit analysis and the precautionary principle

Philosophy Is Here to Stay

Benjamin Storey takes on David Brooks’s social scientism

The Unmanning of America

Rita Koganzon on the rise of women and the fall of men
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No. 32Summer 2011

No. 32

Summer 2011

Science, Virtue, and the Future of Humanity

Why We Need a ‘Stuck with Virtue’ Science

Peter A. Lawler and Marc D. Guerra on why in-between beings will always need virtue

The Case for Enhancing People

Ronald Bailey on why we should and will choose to make ourselves better

Liberation Biology, Lost in the Cosmos

Benjamin Storey responds to Ronald Bailey

Machine Morality and Human Responsibility

Charles T. Rubin on the paradoxes of the project to program virtue

The Problem with ‘Friendly’ Artificial Intelligence

Adam Keiper and Ari N. Schulman respond to Charles T. Rubin

The Science of Politics and the Conquest of Nature

Patrick J. Deneen on liberalism, Locke, and Darwin

Justice without Foundations

Robert P. Kraynak on morality in an age of scientific skepticism
State of the Art

Subject to Review

Tevi Troy

Doctors Go Digital

Jeffrey C. Rowe

Unleashing the Nuclear Watchdog

Henry Sokolski

The Folly of Internet Freedom

Eric R. Sterner

The World’s Most Popular Gun

Victor Davis Hanson

Global Warming and Federalism

David A. Murray

Health Food and the Double Helix

Whitney K. Franz

‘No Shortage of Gore’

Antonin Scalia and Samuel Alito on the Constitution, Free Speech, and Technology

Notes & Briefs

Panhandling Robots, Shifting Fat, Facebook Depression, Etc.
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No. 33Fall 2011

No. 33

Fall 2011

Essays

The Global War Against Baby Girls

Nicholas Eberstadt on the mounting casualties of sex-selective abortion

Christianity and the Future of the Book

Alan Jacobs on scrolls, screens, and how technologies of reading shape theology

Evolution and the Illusion of Randomness

Stephen L. Talbott on survival, fitness, and the purposiveness of organisms

What Consciousness Is Not

Raymond Tallis unwinds the work of David Chalmers, philosopher of mind

Abraham Maslow and the All-American Self

Algis Valiunas on why the prophet of self-actualization was more than just a New Age icon
Hawthorne Series

A Far Other Butterfly

Wilfred M. McClay on “The Artist of the Beautiful” and the meeting of the spiritual and material realms

The Artist of the Beautiful

Online only: A new critical edition of Hawthorne’s story
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No. 34Winter 2012

No. 34

Winter 2012

Special Report

The Stem Cell Debates

Lessons for Science and Politics
A Witherspoon Council Report

Preface

A Letter from the Chairmen of the Witherspoon Council on Ethics and the Integrity of Science

Members of the Witherspoon Council

The Stem Cell Debates

Lessons for Science and Politics
Appendices

The Science of Embryonic Stem Cell Research

Appendix A

The Promise of Stem Cell Therapies

Appendix B

Ethical Considerations Regarding Stem Cell Research

Appendix C

Stem Cell Research Funding: Policy and Law

Appendix D

Overview of International Human Embryonic Stem Cell Laws

Appendix E
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No. 35Spring 2012

No. 35

Spring 2012

Essays

Infrastructure Policy: Lessons from American History

Adam J. White on roads, rails, canals, and the politics of nation-building

The Population Control Holocaust

Robert Zubrin reveals the international campaign of coerced sterilization and abortion

Love, Yiddish, and the Problem of Bioethics

Darren J. Beattie on science and our erotic longing for knowledge

Psychotherapy and the Pursuit of Happiness

Ronald W. Dworkin on the fraught path from Freud to friendship

The Political Science of James Q. Wilson

Jeremy Rozansky and Josh Lerner on the scholar of order, culture, and character
Reviews and Reconsiderations

What Is the Body Worth?

Ari N. Schulman on patient exploitation and the bad case for human tissue markets

Paid Parenthood

Jacqueline Pfeffer Merrill on why people sell their eggs and sperm

Friendship Does Not Compute

Peter Lopatin on the pathologies that arise from digital relationships

Points of Light

Ian Marcus Corbin on grace and despair in the films The Tree of Life and Melancholia

The Truth About Human Nature

Lee Perlman on imagination, rationality, and honesty in Gulliver’s Travels
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No. 36Summer 2012

No. 36

Summer 2012

Essays

The Sources and Uses of U.S. Science Funding

Joseph V. Kennedy on how the public and private sectors pay for R&D

Putting Health in Perspective

Yuval Levin on how prioritizing health shapes our politics

How Not to Label Biotech Foods

Jonathan H. Adler on mandates, markets, and the “right to know”

The Architecture of Evil

Roger Forsgren on the lessons of Albert Speer, master architect of the Third Reich
Reviews and Reconsiderations

The Physicists at Fifty

Samuel Matlack reconsiders the classic play about science, civilization, and insanity

The Dark and Starry Eyes of Ray Bradbury

Lauren Weiner on the wonderful weirdness of the late author

The Blessing of Children

Gilbert Meilaender on the curious case for extinction in Why Have Children?

Mental Disorder or Neurodiversity?

Aaron Rothstein reviews books on embracing, not fixing, mental differences

Interventionist Conservation

Travis Kavulla on the myth of pristine wilderness and the need to manage nature
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No. 37Fall 2012

No. 37

Fall 2012

Essays

Yucca Mountain: A Post-Mortem

Adam J. White on how President Obama killed the planned nuclear-waste repository

Property Rights in Space

Rand Simberg on the legal framework needed to settle the final frontier

The Folly of Scientism

Austin L. Hughes on why scientists shouldn’t trespass on philosophy’s domain

The Marvelous Marie Curie

Algis Valiunas on the passions and struggles of radiation’s pioneer
Reviews and Reconsiderations

The Structure of Scientific Revolutions at Fifty

Matthew C. Rees looks back on the debates over the Thomas Kuhn classic that brought us the “paradigm shift”

Bioethics Without Ethics

Brendan Foht reviews Jonathan D. Moreno’s The Body Politic

Doctors Within Borders

Caitrin Nicol revisits Anne Fadiman’s tale of two cultures and the life of Lia Lee
Hawthorne Series

The Possibility of Progress

Jeremy Kessler reads “The Hall of Fantasy,” a too-cautionary tale

The Hall of Fantasy

Online Only: A new critical edition of Hawthorne’s story
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No. 38Winter/Spring 2013

No. 38

Winter/Spring 2013

Editorial

The Record of Our “Scientist-in-Chief”

Regarding Animals

Do Elephants Have Souls?

Caitrin Nicol on the evidence for non-human intelligence, awareness, and emotion

Born to Run

Noemie Emery considers the good, the bad, and the ugly of horseracing

Dog’s Best Friend

Diana Schaub on disciplining pets and mastering ourselves
Essays

St. Francis, Christian Love, and the Biotechnological Future

William B. Hurlbut reflects on hubris and humility, suffering and redemption

Character Formation and the Origins of AA

Lewis M. Andrews on the forgotten legacy of early American college presidents
The Evolution of Human Nature

Swords into Syllogisms

Randal R. Hendrickson on Steven Pinker and reason’s progress against violence

Portrait of the Artist as a Caveman

Micah Mattix on just-so storytelling and the “art instinct”

The Evolutionary Ethics of E. O. Wilson

Whitley Kaufman on the moral paradoxes of sociobiology

Moderately Socially Conservative Darwinians

Peter Augustine Lawler on the surprisingly traditional values of evolutionary psychologists
Reviews and Reconsiderations

Criminal Elements

James Bowman on Breaking Bad and breaking with the Enlightenment

The Imperfectionist

Christine Rosen on Evgeny Morozov’s case against digital salvation

Experiments in Democracy

Jeremy Rozansky reviews Jim Manzi’s new book on data-driven public policy

Jurassic Generation

Ari N. Schulman on the unintended consequences of the twenty-year-old dinosaur movie
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No. 39Summer 2013

No. 39

Summer 2013

Essays

Philanthropy’s Original Sin

William A. Schambra on U.S. foundations’ legacy of support for eugenics, and the charitable alternative to scientific progressivism

Science and Non-Science in Liberal Education

Harvey C. Mansfield on the confidence of scientists and the need for philosophy

The Secular Religions of Progress

Robert H. Nelson on economic philosophies, environmentalism, and growth

The Good Doctor

Daniel P. Sulmasy remembers the late Dr. Edmund Pellegrino
Symposium on Science, Technology, and Religion

The Golem and the Limits of Artifice

Charles T. Rubin on what the Jewish legend can (and cannot) teach us about bioethics

Disenchantment and Its Discontents

Joseph Bottum on why Catholics need not choose between science and wonder

Redeeming Technologies

Timothy Dalrymple on how Evangelicals embrace technological innovation

The Trouble with the New “Islamic Science”

Imad-ad-Dean Ahmad on trying to read the Koran like a science textbook

Implicit Science in Hindu Thought

Varadaraja V. Raman on the foreshadowing of modern science in ancient Hinduism

Science through Buddhist Eyes

Martin J. Verhoeven on the imperfect harmonizing of Buddhism with science

Science and the Search for Meaning

Peter Morales on Unitarian Universalism and what science and religion share
Reviews and Reconsiderations

Bringing Mind to Matter

Raymond Tallis on Thomas Nagel’s defiance of the materialist mainstream

The Conservative Record on Environmental Policy

Jonathan H. Adler disputes the notion that anti-regulation means anti-environment
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No. 40Fall 2013

No. 40

Fall 2013

Essays

Me, My Genome, and 23andMe

Austin L. Hughes on the oversold and underwhelming science of personal genomics

Why and How We Should Break OPEC Now

Robert Zubrin explains what the U.S. energy boom means for the oil cartel, and argues that we should kick them while we’re up

Scientism in the Arts and Humanities

Roger Scruton on why art is more than matter and meme

Tocqueville on Technology

Benjamin Storey responds to critics who say the student of democracy ignores technology

Brave New World, Plato’s Republic, and Our Scientific Regime

Matthew J. Franck compares the utopian visions of Huxley and Plato 
Reviews and Reconsiderations

The Hollowness of Radical Bioethics

John Sexton on why leftist bioethics needs philosophical anthropology

When Finance Met Physics

R. McKay Stangler on why stock trading isn’t rocket science
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No. 41Winter 2014

No. 41

Winter 2014

Essays

Fantasy and the Buffered Self

Alan Jacobs on how the genre offers re-enchantment without risk

Toward a Conservative Policy on Climate Change

Lee Lane on clashing worldviews, green politics, and a path forward

Gambling with Global Warming

Lowell Pritchard on risk and uncertainty in environmental economics

The Sacred Power of the World

Stephen D. Blackmer on his improbable journey from eco-activism to the priesthood

Understanding Heidegger on Technology

Mark Blitz on what we can learn from the controversial German philosopher

The Genius and Faith of Faraday and Maxwell

Ian H. Hutchinson on how religion influenced the work of the two great nineteenth-century electricians

Who Needs a Liberal Education?

Gilbert Meilaender on specialization, job training, and the humanities

Machine Grading and Moral Learning

Joshua Schulz on the misguided appeal of automated grading and the rise of factory education

When Technology Ceases to Amaze

Robert Herritt on the banality of high-tech magic
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No. 42Spring 2014

No. 42

Spring 2014

The Great War at 100

The Invention of the War Machine

M. Anthony Mills and Mark P. Mills on how the war shaped science, technology, and military-industrial research

The Forgotten Honor of World War I

James Bowman responds to progressive historians who consider the war a mistake that could have been avoided
Essays

My Brain and I

Roger Scruton offers an alternative to the grand ambition of the neurophilosophers

The Optimistic Science of Leibniz

Marc E. Bobro on the Enlightenment thinker’s encyclopedic project of physics and faith

A Feeling for Pain

Ronald W. Dworkin on the trouble with scientific explanations in anesthesiology

Evolution and Ethics, Revisited

Gertrude Himmelfarb considers T. H. Huxley’s rebuttal of an early form of scientism

Liberty and the Environment

Ronald Bailey on whether modern societies and free economies are antithetical to the flourishing of the natural world

Remembering Thomas P. Hughes

G. Pascal Zachary on the influential historian of technology and society
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No. 43Summer/Fall 2014

No. 43

Summer/Fall 2014

Correspondence

Elephants, Horses, Dogs, and Us; The Question Concerning Heidegger

Essays

Losing Liberty in an Age of Access

James Poulos on the implications of the cultural shift away from ownership

Correlation, Causation, and Confusion

Nick Barrowman on some misconceptions about statistics in science and everyday life

Confronting the Technological Society

Samuel Matlack revisits Jacques Ellul’s classic analysis of technique

Modernity and Our American Heresies

Peter Augustine Lawler explains how our Puritan and Lockean founders built better than they knew

The Neuroscience of Despair

Michael W. Begun on the trouble with seeing depression solely as a brain malfunction
Reviews and Reconsiderations

Regarding Life at the Beginning

Gilbert Meilaender on a perceptive new book about abortion and our encounter with the unborn

The Tools of Their Tools

Evan Selinger and Jathan Sadowski review Nicholas Carr’s book on automation

In Defense of Prejudice, Sort of

Ari N. Schulman on Enlightenment overreach and today’s new rationalists
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No. 44Winter 2015

No. 44

Winter 2015

Essays

Vaccines and Their Critics, Then and Now

Aaron Rothstein on the history and errors of the anti-vaccination movement

Virtual Reality as Moral Ideal

Matthew B. Crawford on learning how to live in a world that resists our will

Philanthropy in Science, Technology, and Medicine

Selections from The Almanac of American Philanthropy
The Unknown Newton

Church, Heresy, and Pure Religion

Rob Iliffe on Newton's unorthodox theology and his project to restore Christianity

The Problem of Alchemy

William R. Newman asks whether Newton truly was “the last of the magicians”

Cosmos and Apocalypse

Stephen D. Snobelen on physics, prophecy, and the myth of Newton's clockwork universe

The Book of Nature, the Book of Scripture

Andrew Janiak on reconciling natural philosophy with biblical literalism

The Strange Tale of Newton’s Papers

Sarah Dry on the unpublished manuscripts and their author's changing image
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No. 45Spring 2015

No. 45

Spring 2015

Essays

The Ebola Gamble

Ari N. Schulman on how public health authorities put reassurance before protection

Biotech Enhancement and the History of Redemption

Gilbert Meilaender on visions of perfection, theological and technological

The Man Who Thought of Everything

Algis Valiunas on the grand scientific vision and the moral myopia of Linus Pauling
Reviews and Reconsiderations

Competing to Conform

James Poulos reviews Peter Thiel’s Zero to One

Faith, Fact, and False Dichotomies

Austin L. Hughes on the lazy atheism in Jerry Coyne’s new book

The Politics of Digital Shaming

Rita Koganzon on Internet mobs and their outrage at everyday speech

Socially Just Science

Brendan P. Foht on politically correcting science and scientifically correcting politics
Hawthorne Series

Love Conquers All

Jenna Silber Storey and Benjamin Storey read The Blithedale Romance, a novel of utopian hopes and human passions
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No. 46Summer 2015

No. 46

Summer 2015

Special Report

The Threat of Human Cloning

Ethics, Recent Developments, and the Case for Action
A Witherspoon Council Report

Executive Summary

Members of the Witherspoon Council

Preface: Cloning Then and Now

Part One: Scientific and Historical Background

Part Two: The Case Against Cloning-to-Produce-Children

Part Three: The Case Against Cloning-for-Biomedical-Research

Part Four: Cloning Policy in the United States

Part Five: Recommendations

Appendix: State Laws on Human Cloning

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No. 47Fall 2015

No. 47

Fall 2015

Essays

Oil and World Power

Lee Lane on what the oil and gas boom means for America’s geopolitical standing

Miss Marple and the Problem of Modern Identity

Alan Jacobs on being known by one’s neighbors versus being known by the state
Symposium: Pope Francis on the Environment

The Flawed Economics of Laudato Si’

W. David Montgomery on why the encyclical’s moral teaching requires better policy

Is Pope Francis Anti-Modern?

M. Anthony Mills on the encyclical’s critique of “the technocratic paradigm”

Two Approaches to Climate Action

Brendan P. Foht contrasts the encyclical with the recent Ecomodernist Manifesto
Special Section: Human Uniqueness in the Cosmos

Searching for Other Earths

Sara Seager on how — and why — we look for exoplanets

Meaning in a Silent Universe

Marcelo Gleiser on overcoming our sense of cosmic angst

The Fine-Tuning of Nature’s Laws

Luke A. Barnes on what physics tells us about the improbability of life
Remembrance

The Humble Scientist

Chase W. Nelson on the character and career of his late teacher, Austin L. Hughes
Reviews and Reconsiderations

Attention Deficit

Diana Schaub reviews Matthew B. Crawford’s book about an increasingly limited resource

A Reductionist History of Humankind

John Sexton reviews Yuval Noah Harari’s Sapiens

Einstein’s Masterpiece

Michael W. Begun retraces the path to general relativity on the theory’s 100th anniversary

The X-Files and the Demon-Haunted World

Ari N. Schulman on why we want to believe
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No. 48Winter 2016

No. 48

Winter 2016

Essays

Gene Editing: New Technology, Old Moral Questions

Brendan Foht on using CRISPR to help patients and design our descendants

Attending to Technology

Alan Jacobs offers an aphoristic critique of social media, commentary, and our credulity before algorithms

The Myth of the Placebo Effect

Nick Barrowman on the shaky science underlying a popular idea

Biomedicine and Its Cultural Authority

Joseph E. Davis on the origins of our “health society” and why holistic medicine doesn’t catch on

Hard to Believe

Robert Herritt on how we know what we know, and what to do when experts disagree 

The Enduring Legacy of The Twilight Zone

Brian Murray on Rod Serling’s struggle to turn TV into an art form

Missing the Night Sky

Jacob Hoerger on light pollution, enlightenment, and our sense of finitude
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No. 49Spring/Summer 2016

No. 49

Spring/Summer 2016

Special Section: The Integrity of Science

Saving Science

Daniel Sarewitz on why scientists must come out of the lab and into the real world

Two Cheers for the Retraction Boom

Ivan Oransky and Adam Marcus praise the growing scrutiny of scientific publications

A Different Kind of Scientific Revolution

Barbara A. Spellman on the role of technological and demographic changes
Essays

Getting Over ‘Apolloism’

Rand Simberg on why the 1960s missions to the Moon are a bad template for today’s space program

Is There an ‘Unmet Need’ for Family Planning?

Rebecca Oas dismantles the concept behind efforts to increase global contraceptive use

European and American Views on Genetically Modified Foods

Orsolya Ujj on the cultural and philosophical differences that explain contrasting beliefs and policies on GMOs

Fiction in the Age of Screens

Erik P. Hoel on how today’s novelists cope with their HBO anxiety

Scientist, Scholar, Soul

Marc D. Guerra on Margaret Edson’s play Wit and the temptation to hide from matters of ultimate meaning
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No. 50Fall 2016

No. 50

Fall 2016

Special Report

Sexuality and Gender

Findings from the Biological, Psychological, and Social Sciences

Preface

Executive Summary

Introduction

Part One: Sexual Orientation

Part Two: Sexuality, Mental Health Outcomes, and Social Stress

Part Three: Gender Identity

Conclusion

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No. 51Winter 2017

No. 51

Winter 2017

Special Issue

Information, Matter, and Life

Why Information Matters

Luciano Floridi on what philosophy and computer science can contribute to each other

The Limits of Information

Daniel N. Robinson on the gaps between scientific explanation and human experience

The Time of Our Lives

Raymond Tallis on physics, consciousness, and the arrow of information

What Is It Like to Know?

Ari N. Schulman on why we talk in circles about experience

Evolution and the Purposes of Life

Stephen L. Talbott on biology's unasked questions about the goal-directed activities of organisms

The Use and Abuse of ‘Information’ in Biology

Murillo Pagnotta on why there is more to biological development than genes

Mind Games

Charles T. Rubin on the film Ex Machina and breathing life into matter
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No. 52Spring 2017

No. 52

Spring 2017

Essays

Growing Pains

Paul W. Hruz, Lawrence S. Mayer, and Paul R. McHugh on problems with puberty suppression in treating gender dysphoria

Making Technological Miracles

Mark P. Mills defends the value of curiosity-driven science and proposes a new way to think about R&D
The Decent of Man

Darwin Made Me Do It

Michael Ruse on how the process of evolution gave us moral instincts but the theory of evolution undermines moral reasoning

On the Origin of Cooperation

Kevin N. Laland on how culture and nature worked together so we can work together
Reviews and Reconsiderations

Pop Goes the Physics

David Kordahl on what’s left out of Sean Carroll’s The Big Picture

ADD for All

Joseph E. Davis on Big Pharma, overdiagnosis, and the questions unasked about medicalization

Whose Motivation? Which Good?

James K. A. Smith on Christian Smith’s strawman of social science

Toward a More Human Medicine

Aaron Rothstein on doctors, parts, and persons

Grit, Gus, and Glory

George Weigel on restoring the reputation of a test pilot, astronaut, and unsung American hero

On the Shelf

Short reviews of books on the opioid epidemic, the crisis of authority, Silicon Valley, the “new eugenics,” and more
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No. 53Summer/Fall 2017

No. 53

Summer/Fall 2017

Correspondence

Must Science Be Useful?

Scientists and policy experts respond to Daniel Sarewitz’s “Saving Science”
Essays

The Undeath of Cinema

Alexi Sargeant on digital acting from beyond the grave

Wokeness and Myth on Campus

Alan Jacobs on why “free exchange of ideas” fails as a response to campus protest

Quantum Poetics

Samuel Matlack on why physics can’t get rid of metaphor

The Evangelist of Molecular Biology

Algis Valiunas on James D. Watson and his unfinished quest to master genetic destiny
Reviews and Reconsiderations

The Illusionist

David Bentley Hart on Daniel Dennett’s mindless materialism

Till Tomorrow

Adam Roberts on why farmers are the original time travelers

The Moral Case for High-Tech Weapons

Merav Ceren asks whether Israeli military innovation has made war more just
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No. 54Winter 2018

No. 54

Winter 2018

Essays

Algorithmic Injustice

Tafari Mbadiwe on how to keep criminal sentencing algorithms from entrenching racial inequality

Shakespeare’s Worlds of Science

Natalie Elliot on cosmic and atomic upheaval in Hamlet, King Lear, and Romeo and Juliet

The University the King Built

Waleed Al-Shobakky reports on a Saudi experiment to solve the West’s science malaise — and become a global research powerhouse
The Bicentennial of Frankenstein

The Idea Incarnate

Kirsten A. Hall on when our thoughts run away from us

Responsible Frankensteins?

Brendan P. Foht on the conceit that embryo researchers can play God, but ethically
Reviews and Reconsiderations

Disenchantment, Actually

Doug Sikkema on how myths, true or false, shape the conditions of our experience

The Political Path to GPS

Anthony Paletta describes how war and peace forged the universal map

Lives of the Immortalists

Olga Rachello on the human stories of people who don’t want to be human
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No. 55Spring 2018

No. 55

Spring 2018

Essays

Google.gov

Adam J. White on whether growing calls to break up Google distract from a quiet alignment between “smart” government and the universal information engine

The Tech Backlash We Really Need

L. M. Sacasas on why Silicon Valley will only be strengthened by its present scandals unless we ask deeper questions

For the Love of Mars

James Poulos on why settling the Red Planet would lift us from our antihuman malaise

Richard Feynman and the Pleasure Principle

Algis Valiunas on how a cerebral hedonist became a scientific hero
Stories of Faith & Science

Faith and the Fear of Death

Jonathan Jong on confronting our mortality from the lab and the altar

Encounter in the Vale

Jonathan Mosedale recounts a story of hiking, frailty, and glimpsing the divine
Reviews and Reconsiderations

Did Thomas Kuhn Kill Truth?

David Kordahl reviews filmmaker Errol Morris’s new book on whether the philosopher of science threw an ashtray at his head

The Joy of Cryptozoology

Clare Coffey on the Jersey Devil and the psychology of conspiracy theories
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No. 56Summer/Fall 2018

No. 56

Summer/Fall 2018

Correspondence

Why Do We Think We Are Disenchanted?

Debating The Myth of Disenchantment by Jason Ā. Josephson-Storm
The Space Renaissance

Moon Direct

Robert Zubrin offers a purpose-driven plan to open the lunar frontier

The Return of the Space Visionaries

Rand Simberg on how space tycoons are bringing back the dream of truly settling the “high frontier” — and how policy can catch up

Lost on Mars

Micah Meadowcroft on why space colonization will disappoint you
Essays

How Facebook Deforms Us

L. M. Sacasas on the too-savvy idea that strengthening our social fabric can fix the platform that’s destroying it

What Happened to Bioethics?

Yuval Levin on why biomedical research doesn’t roil national politics anymore — and the thin hope offered by the last time it did

Jonas Salk, the People’s Scientist

Algis Valiunas on how the man who vanquished polio won the public’s love but never the respect of his peers

Why Data Is Never Raw

Nick Barrowman on the seductive myth of information free of human judgment

Time to Log Off

Ian Marcus Corbin on being online and recognizing inhumane arrangements for what they are
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No. 57Winter 2019

No. 57

Winter 2019

Essays

How Tech Utopia Fostered Tyranny

Jon Askonas argues that authoritarians’ love for digital technology is no fluke — it’s a product of Silicon Valley’s “smart” paternalism

Will Climate Change the Courts?

David A. Murray on the “children’s climate crusade” and the coming global campaign to transform the courts

While Bioethics Fiddles

Brendan P. Foht on the frivolous games academic ethicists play while baby manufacturing draws near

The Most Dangerous Possible German

Algis Valiunas on the ambiguous legacy of Werner Heisenberg, quantum genius and would-be inventor of the Nazi A-bomb

Robotic Souls

Charles T. Rubin asks what debates over machine consciousness mean for how we regard ourselves

Jihadi Digital Natives

P. W. Singer and Emerson T. Brooking on how ISIS liked and posted its way to power
Reviews and Reconsiderations

Netflix and Nil

James Poulos on why being online turns us into nihilists

Make Physics Real Again

David Guaspari on why so many physicists have shrugged off the paradoxes of quantum mechanics

Modernity’s Spell

Clare Coffey on why debunking mesmerism only made it stronger

Steven Weinberg Glimpses the Promised Land

David Kordahl on how the sage of physics quarrels with politics and philosophy — and dreams of science’s last day
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No. 58Spring 2019

No. 58

Spring 2019

Essays

After Technopoly

Alan Jacobs on why getting beyond rationalism requires the return of myth

Our Uneasy Tranquility

Heather Zeiger asks whether the rising use of anti-anxiety pills should have us worried

Why Science Can’t Break the GMO Stalemate

Tess Doezema argues that studies won’t settle a debate about technocracy itself

Can Chess Survive Artificial Intelligence?

Yoni Wilkenfeld on how computers take the error out of human chess — and the adventure
The Ruin of the Digital Town Square

The Inescapable Town Square

L. M. Sacasas on how social media combines the worst parts of past eras of communication

Preserving Real-Life Childhood

Naomi Schaefer Riley on why decency online requires raising kids who know life offline

How Not to Regulate Social Media

Shoshana Weissmann on proposed privacy and bot laws that would do more harm than good

The Four Facebooks

Nolen Gertz on misinformation, manipulation, dependency, and distraction

Do You Know Who Your ‘Friends’ Are?

Ashley May on why treating others well online requires defining our relationships

The Distance Between Us

Micah Meadowcroft on why we act badly when we don’t speak face-to-face

The Emergent Order of Twitter

Andy Smarick on why the platform should be fixed from the bottom up, not the top down

Imagine All the People

James Poulos on how the fantasies of the TV era created the disaster of social media

Making Friends of Trolls

Caitrin Keiper on finding familiar faces behind the black mirror
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No. 59Summer 2019

No. 59

Summer 2019

Essays

The New Kinship Engineering

Brendan P. Foht on why three-parent babies are being created not to prevent disease but to manufacture genetic relationships

In Search of Lost Time on YouTube

Laurence Scott on how the platform takes us to places where we ache to go again

First, Take No Stand

Aaron Kheriaty shows how on assisted suicide, the medical profession ducks behind “neutrality”

Crusoe at the Crossroads

Kirsten A. Hall on Robinson Crusoe, Lost, and why we keep returning to mysterious islands where science blurs with the supernatural

Analog Anchors for the Online Adrift

Ian Marcus Corbin on how Moleskine sells durability to ephemeral selves

NASA’s Next 50 Years

Robert Zubrin argues that a half-century after Apollo, it’s time for a real, and different, mission for our space agency
Reviews and Reconsiderations

Tell Him Something Pretty

Robert Herritt on Deadwood's lowly view of reason

Einstein in Athens

Benjamin Liebeskind on how modern physics is unwittingly echoing Aristotle, and still has much to learn from him

All Activities Monitored

Jon Askonas on how military drone surveillance is quietly creeping into policing, business, and everyday life
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No. 60Fall 2019

No. 60

Fall 2019

Essays

After Climate Despair

Matt Frost argues for energy abundance in a warming world

Reviving Expertise in a Populist Age

Zach Graves and M. Anthony Mills on why a Congress wary of technocracy defers to bureaucrats

Custodians of the Body

Alan Rubenstein on how our organ donation regime strikes the right balance between generosity to the living and respect for the dead

The Mars Decision

Robert Zubrin on how to show that American democracy can still do great things
Reviews and Reconsiderations

On the Monster Beat

Clare Coffey on why the civic needs the weird

Enlightenment Later

Kent Anhari on whether reason will survive rationalism

The Ancients’ Tech Anxiety

Charles T. Rubin on the shallowness of reading mythology as sci-fi

We All Wear Tinfoil Hats Now

Geoff Shullenberger on how fears of mind control went from paranoid delusion to conventional wisdom

Trouble for Hedgehogs

Michael M. Rosen asks whether generalists are due for a comeback
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No. 61Winter 2020

No. 61

Winter 2020

Essays

The Analog City and the Digital City

L. M. Sacasas on how online life breaks the old political order

The Science Before the War

M. Anthony Mills and Mark P. Mills on how the technological feats of World War II grew out of curiosity-driven research

Eat Me, Drink Me, Like Me

Tara Isabella Burton asks whether love in the attention economy is unreal

Turing and the Uncomputable

Algis Valiunas on logic come to life
Reviews and Reconsiderations

Must Growth Doom the Planet?

Ted Nordhaus argues that in an age of stagnation, calls to limit growth miss the real problems we face.

Do We Want Dystopia?

Stefan Beck on nightmare tech as the fulfillment of warped desire

The Mathematician and the Mystic

David Guaspari on Simone Weil, her brother André, and truths that do not converge

Why We Choose Surveillance Capitalism

Michael M. Rosen argues that Americans don’t care about privacy as much as they say

Inventing the Universe

David Kordahl asks whether quantum physicists are making things up as they go along
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No. 62Fall 2020

No. 62

Fall 2020

Editor’s Note

Correspondence

In What Sense Abundant?

Patrick J. Deneen, Jeffrey Bilbro, and Rich Powell respond to Matt Frost
Essays

Democracy and the Nuclear Stalemate

Taylor Dotson and Michael Bouchey on moving beyond political scientism

The New Net Delusion

Geoff Shullenberger on how 2010’s utopians became 2020’s prophets of doom

Science as Scorekeeping

Brendan Foht on why American political leaders should be players, not spectators

Gratuitous Display

Laurence Scott on the American diner and the viral tip

How We Reason About Covid Tradeoffs

Ben Peterson on why we need to talk more about human dignity

Mending the Healers

Brewer Eberly on whether med school can still offer moral formation
Reviews & Reconsiderations

Saving Ourselves

Tara Isabella Burton on real love as rebellion in TV’s Brave New World

The End of History and the Fast Man

Adam J. White on bidding farewell to America’s car culture — and its democratic virtues

Taking Carbon to Court

Jonathan H. Adler on why a legal victory was not a clear victory for the climate

Promoting the Useful Arts

Michael M. Rosen on why innovators need protection, not planning

Go West, Old Man

John Sexton asks whether we want decline
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No. 63Winter 2021

No. 63

Winter 2021

Editor’s Note

Introducing “Projects for Renewal”

How to rebuild our culture’s relationship with science and technology
Essays

From Tech Critique to Ways of Living

Alan Jacobs asks: If Neil Postman was right, so what?

Put Not Thy Trust in Nate Silver

Geoff Shullenberger on how simulation replaced reality

Recovering Old Age

Joseph E. Davis and Paul Scherz on retrieving our sense of what aging is for

The Case Against “STEM”

M. Anthony Mills on how blurring the line between science and tech puts both at risk

The Egghead Gap

Caleb Watney on China and why the U.S. needs to recruit international talent

A Scientist’s Mind, a Poet’s Soul

Algis Valiunas on the cosmic vision of Humboldt, the great naturalist-adventurer

Of Forests and Empire

Rebecca Burgess on the view from your Christmas tree
The Coronavirus Pandemic

Disarming Frontline Doctors

Devorah Goldman on how the quest to meet medicine’s “gold standard” puts patients at risk

Little Data, Big Headlines

Aaron Rothstein on overinterpreting Covid studies for clicks
Reviews & Reconsiderations

A Bioethics of the Strong

James Mumford on how liberal bioethics forgot its mandate

Why We Need a Technological Environmentalism

Robert Zubrin argues that saving the planet means going high-tech, not back to nature
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No. 64Spring 2021

No. 64

Spring 2021

Essays

Welcoming Our New Robot Overlords

Adam Elkus on how warnings of AI doom gave way to primal fear of primates posting

The Cop-Out of “Follow the Science”

Joseph M. Keegin on how feckless Covid leadership turned us against each other

Chasing the Sun

Nathan Beacom tells the extraordinary story of two Pacific voyages of discovery a thousand years apart

Math and Modernity

David Guaspari on how Descartes’s geometry quietly launched a revolution

Is Climate Change a Foreign Policy Issue?

Seaver Wang argues that opportunity now, not prophecies of doom, should spur America to become a global leader

The Danger of Fact-ist Politics

Taylor Dotson on building a politics of connection where fanatical certainty fails

Patents and the Common Good

Charles Duan on how a delicate balance between innovation and the public interest is at risk
Reviews & Reconsiderations

You Are Not Galileo

Tess Doezema on why it’s time to retire an exhausted trope

The Case Against the Case Against Space

Charles T. Rubin argues that if we had to solve the human condition before we tried anything new, we’d never try anything new

Why We Can’t Leave Nature Alone

Ted Nordhaus argues that we shouldn’t be so bashful about tinkering with the environment to save it
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No. 65Summer 2021

No. 65

Summer 2021

Essays

Redpilling and the Regime

Geoff Shullenberger on how claiming to be a daring outsider who speaks forbidden truths became a standard trope

The Demon of Bureaucratic Chaos

Tristan Abbey on how the Department of Energy does a lot without getting much done

Just Say No to Human–Monkey Chimeras

Brendan Foht on why we can’t trust the biotech industry to set its own rules on a disturbing new practice

Is It Time for a U.S. Department of Science?

M. Anthony Mills on why messy pluralism is what makes American research great

Dying, But Not Alone

Joshua Briscoe on why we can’t escape the social dimension of choosing how we die

Libidinal Liberalism

Oliver Traldi on whether banning bad behavior just makes it worse

Anthropology as Atonement

Algis Valiunas on why Claude Lévi-Strauss celebrated every culture but his own

Dance Till We Die

Ari Schulman on why Covid security theater failed

Bot Anxiety

Kent Anhari asks what happens to discourse when everyone fails the Turing Test
Reviews & Reconsiderations

Enough About “We”

Phil Christman on when sci-fi needs a little less sci and a little more fi

Can Machines Have Common Sense?

William Hasselberger on how “deep learning” hype misses a basic feature of human intelligence

Losing Ourselves

William Lombardo on why the prospect of loving machines is so sad
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No. 66Fall 2021

No. 66

Fall 2021

Essays

How to Fix Social Media

Nicholas Carr looks to the radio era for a way to solve our Big Tech crisis

Closer to Home

Addison Del Mastro on getting beyond the transportation debate of city versus suburb

Manufacturing Consensus

M. Anthony Mills on why science needs conformity, but not the kind it has now

Walmart, But for Space

Rand Simberg on why cheap rockets will change the design of everything we send up

All Pathology, All the Time

Joseph E. Davis asks what ails a culture that sees illness everywhere

What Is the CDC?

Ari Schulman has eleven ways of looking at the troubled agency

The Invention of Slavery

Diana Schaub reads Lincoln’s lectures on whether technology makes us free
Interview

Nuclear Dread as Memento Mori

Michael Shellenberger on “coming to peace with this radical technology”
Testimony

Defying the Data Priests

Matthew B. Crawford on the threat of rule by algorithmic fiat
Reviews & Reconsiderations

Statistics as Storytelling

Brad East on why America’s defining cultural artifact is the economics white paper

Modernity and the Fall

Caitrin Keiper shows one weird trick to re-enchant the world
Correspondence

Protagonist Earth

David E. Storey and Phil Christman ask how a good novel can be written about climate change
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No. 67Winter 2022

No. 67

Winter 2022

Beyond the State of Exception

Build, Don’t Ban

Philip Wallach on how conservatives can end the Covid wars

Covid and the Brittle West

Bruno Maçães on why nimbleness, not collectivism, explains Asian democracies’ success

Bad Air

Leah Libresco Sargeant on why we should restore miasma theory

We Had a Plan

Tevi Troy on why Covid was a failure of execution, not strategy

Invaluable Servants, Impossible Masters

Joseph E. Davis on what we really need experts to be in a health crisis

End the State Monopoly on Facts

Adam J. White on why the CDC needs more competition

A Common-Good Agenda for Pandemic Policy

Tim Wainwright on why we need new public investment in our medical infrastructure

The Crisis of the Crisis

Geoff Shullenberger on whether Covid politics is the real emergency
Essays

How Tech Despair Can Set You Free

Samuel Matlack reads Jacques Ellul on the totalizing grip of “technique”

Why Aren’t We Talking About Nuclear Waste?

Dennis W. O’Leary on kicking the can when it’s full of spent uranium

StarCraft as Statecraft

Tristan Abbey on why defense strategy should update its favorite gaming metaphors
Interview

Science as Craftwork with Integrity

M. Anthony Mills asks Harry Collins how to strengthen science against populist critiques
Responses to Nicholas Carr’s “How to Fix Social Media”

Big Tech Should Answer to the Public, Not to Speech Regulators

Josh Hawley

Rule Social Media, or Be Ruled by It

Rachel Bovard

Destroy Social Media, or Be Destroyed by It

Antón Barba-Kay

How the “Public Interest” Serves the Interest of the Powerful

Paul Matzko

We Still Don’t Know How to Fix Social Media

Martha Bayles

Don’t Wait for Silver Bullets for Social Media Reform

Nicholas Carr
Reviews & Reconsiderations

How Tech Reform Diminishes Us

Jeffrey Bilbro on social media critics who repeat the mistakes that got us here

The Twitter Surveillance State

Taylor Dotson asks why we became a nation of hall monitors
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No. 68Spring 2022

No. 68

Spring 2022

Reality: A Post-Mortem

What Happened to Consensus Reality?

Introducing a new series by Jon Askonas

Reality Is Just a Game Now

And we’re all losing.
Saving the Real

Therapy Beyond Good and Evil

James Mumford on why a nonjudgmental psychology is failing patients

Reality Minus

David Bentley Hart on the depressing fantasy of minds in simulated worlds

Reformation in the Church of Science

Andrea Saltelli and Daniel Sarewitz on how the truth monopoly was broken up

Hell Is Ourselves

Laurence Scott on the creepiness of an Internet that caters to who it thinks we are

Reading Ourselves to Death

Kit Wilson on text as unreality

Something Happened By Us: A Demonology

Alan Jacobs has a theory about why we’re going nuts online
Essays and Reviews

Danger: Caution Ahead

Gabrielle Bauer on how we let the precautionary principle run wild

Do Americans Care About Space?

John Konicki and James Pethokoukis read public polling on the final frontier

Surveillance Humanism

Paul Dicken warns that an unholy union of AI and HR is nigh

Sad Trek

Alan Rome on how an exhausted liberalism killed sci‑fi’s sunniest franchise
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No. 69Summer 2022

No. 69

Summer 2022

Reality: A Post-Mortem, Essay 3

How Stewart Made Tucker

A world of authentic, post-spin journalism: The dream Jon Stewart spent a decade making real is now America’s waking nightmare. What did he get so wrong? — By Jon Askonas
Essays

The Case for a Pandemic Moonshot

Tom Ridge and Asha M. George on why next time we shouldn’t accept the same bad options

Unsustainable Alarmism

Taylor Dotson on why we can’t stay in crisis mode forever

Power Metals

Tristan Abbey asks exactly how bad China’s dominance of rare-earth elements is for America

The Technocrat’s Dilemma

Alexander Stern on how expert rule is destroying itself

Was Fusionism a Fluke?

Howe Whitman III reads Hayek and Lewis on what once unified the Right
Reviews & Reconsiderations

Stuck Between Climate Doom and Denial

Roger Pielke, Jr. on the failure of Unsettled, a popular critique of climate science

Can We Be Human in Meatspace?

Brad East asks if revolution against tech starts at home

The Supergenius at the End of the World

David Polansky on democracy as an obstacle to Muskian great men in Neal Stephenson’s sci-fi
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No. 70Fall 2022

No. 70

Fall 2022

Essays

A Nuclear Renaissance?

Thomas Hochman and Nate Hochman on whether U.S. atomic power is really due for a comeback

The Secret Life of Leftovers

Nat Watkins on how our ancestors gave us cheese and beer, but we’re leaving our children garbage

Bacon Bacon Shakespeare Spy

Sam Kahn on one brilliant madwoman’s quest to show that the Bard’s works were secretly penned by the father of science, at war with his own creation

How to Search for Life on Mars

Robert Zubrin, Steven Benner, and Jan Špaček on why we won’t find anything unless we stop refusing to look

Kitty Eats the Internet

Antón Barba-Kay on why cat memes fill a gaping void in our online lives

Middle Seat to the Moon

Charles T. Rubin on how to keep the thrill alive once billionaires make space travel routine

The Big Whimper

David Kordahl on why cosmology may not end with a bang
Correspondence

Is Morality Therapeutic?

Steven C. Hayes asks whether patients need to hear hard truths or make hard choices
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No. 71Winter 2023

No. 71

Winter 2023

Investigation

No Other Options

Alexander Raikin reveals a Canadian euthanasia regime that efficiently ushers the vulnerable to a “beautiful” death
Essays

Arcs of Life

Matthew Loftus on why a just society does not kill suffering people

Who’s Afraid of Cowardice?

Adam Roberts on what we can learn from heroes who run away

Can There Be a Conservative Futurism?

John Ehrett on why the retreat from time is not a winning answer to our tech malaise

The Long Delay Is Nearly Over

Alex Dubin on the return of human travel beyond Earth
Triptych

The Joy of Losing Your Phone

Clare Coffey on why we still need the kindness of strangers

Driven Apart

Clare Coffey on the myth of the open road

How to Make Friends

Clare Coffey on going to a bar when fighting the system gets tough
Exchanges

Is Nuclear Returning Too Fast or Too Slow?

Thomas Hochman and Taylor Dotson discuss whether the industry can overcome its obstacles

Overthinking Heroism

Adam Roberts and Alan Jacobs discuss “Who’s Afraid of Cowardice?”
Reviews & Reconsiderations

A Humanism of the Abyss

Alan Jacobs on Oliver Sacks’s Awakenings and how identity keeps us apart

Still Truckin’

Nicholas Clairmont on the anti-car zeitgeist

When the Machine Opts In to You

Joel Cuthbertson on why the self-help response to oppressive tech makes the problem worse
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No. 72Spring 2023

No. 72

Spring 2023

Feature

Rational Magic

Tara Isabella Burton on why a tech culture obsessed with reason is going woo
Reality: A Post-Mortem, Essay 4

What Was the Fact?

Here lies a beloved friend of social harmony (ca. 1500–2000). It was nice while it lasted. — By Jon Askonas
Essays

Out of the Wild

Samuel Matlack on why we can’t rid nature of us

What Does “Scientific Progress” Mean, Anyway?

M. Anthony Mills on the three rival visions of how to fix science

The Demise of the Garage Inventor

Joseph Joyce on how Hollywood forgot the tinkering dad

Selling the Drama

Katherine Dee eulogizes “humdog,” who led a tech backlash in the days of dial-up

Shallowfakes

James R. Ostrowski warns against exaggerating the AI disinfo threat

Why Were They Dropped?

Algis Valiunas on revisionist accounts of the fateful decision of 1945

Fusion and the Holy Grail

Tristan Abbey suggests choosing wisely
Reviews & Reconsiderations

Nature, Toothless and Declawed

Clare Coffey on Martha Nussbaum’s dubious case for animals as liberal subjects

Digital Appeasement

Bonnie Kristian on “meganets,” a TED-brain excuse for surrender without a fight

Human Resources

David Polansky on why Soylent Green was more prophetic than it seems
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No. 73Summer 2023

No. 73

Summer 2023

They’re Here

Why This AI Moment May Be the Real Deal

Ari Schulman on why this time, we should believe the hype

B.S. Jobs and the Coming Crisis of Meaning

Brian J. A. Boyd asks whether destroying pointless jobs is really worth celebrating

AI Can’t Beat Stupid

Adam Elkus on why predictions of AI apocalypse overrate the power of raw intelligence

The Dead Internet to Come

Robert Mariani on why our chatbot future is a lonely place right out of a paranoid delusion

Why I Fired My AI Agent

Clayton O’Dell opts out of assimilation

How the State Built This AI Moment

Tess Doezema and Nina Frahm on why the law isn’t lagging behind AI, it’s leading it

The Speech of the Dead

Daniel Walden writes against AI necromancy

Sam Altman Doesn’t Want To Be Your AI King

Louise Liebeskind on why he might be anyway
Reality: A Post-Mortem, Essay 5

An America of Secrets

Jon Askonas on why democracy dies in darkness
Editorial

Take No for an Answer on Genetic Engineering

Good news: The agonizing moral quandary of “designer babies” has been resolved. But will scientists accept democracy’s verdict?
Essays

Culture War as Imitation Game

Luke Burgis on the timeliness of René Girard’s case against idolizing politics

How Congress Was Saved

A Lover of Good Government reports from the year 2039 on how the spirit of efficiency reformed a once-maligned institution

The Masking Debate We Didn’t Have

M. Anthony Mills on why critics are repeating their opponents’ mistake

Resistance in the Arts

Alan Jacobs on why Substack won’t save us
Reviews & Reconsiderations

Clicks of Desire

Tara Isabella Burton on how the Internet obeys you

Humanity Does Not Strike Back

Charles T. Rubin on why the end of the human species would be bad, actually
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No. 74Fall 2023

No. 74

Fall 2023

Essays

Oiling the Chicken Machine

Garth Brown on how you’re already eating lab-made meat

The Downer About Uppers

Charles Fain Lehman on whether Adderall is feeding America’s drug crisis

The Fantasy of Energy Independence

Peter Z. Grossman on how U.S. energy policy got stuck at the gas station in 1973

In Your Face

John Fechtel on Vision Pro and Apple’s friction eliminators

The Open Sky

Lars Erik Schönander: cheap satellites + AI chatbots = “queryable Earth”
The New Atlantis at 20

Who Is The New Atlantis For?

Ari Schulman on why throwing cold water on utopianism found an audience

If Scientists Were Angels

Louise Liebeskind on how we’re misreading the original New Atlantis

Missing the Manhattan Project

Ari Schulman on a moment when we still knew that science could conquer — and sin
Reviews & Reconsiderations

Warm Planet, Cool Heads

Nicholas Clairmont on a new book that warns against making the climate bucket too big

Wounded Healers

Algis Valiunas on why it often takes one “unquiet mind” to treat another
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No. 75Winter 2024

No. 75

Winter 2024

Did Exxon Make It Rain Today?

Ted Nordhaus on how the story of climate change and extreme weather is being oversold — and why building, not fear, is the answer
Space and the Wild

Bears in the Villa

John Last on whether Italians are ready for the return of wilderness

What Is Space For?

William Boyce on why we gaze and why we should go
We Used to Build Things

Tech Strikes Back

Nadia Asparouhova on why “accelerationism” is an overdue corrective to years of doom and gloom in Silicon Valley

Accelerating to Where?

Robert Bellafiore on the anti-politics of the new jet pack lament

Things Used to Work in This Country

Clare Coffey on how your kitchen radio became a bureaucracy
Essays

Surveilling Alone

Christine Rosen on home security cameras in an era of rising crime and declining trust

A President’s Council on Artificial Intelligence

M. Anthony Mills on why the White House’s bland solution doesn’t match the problem

Barbie vs. Botox

Rachel Altman: transhumanism is so over, wrinkles are so back
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No. 76Spring 2024

No. 76

Spring 2024

Feature

If You Build It, Will They Come?

Joseph Lawler on Austin’s interstate expansion as a test case for “induced demand” and the culture war over faster traffic vs. denser cities
IVF and the Alabama Ruling

Embryos as Schrödinger’s Persons

Leah Libresco Sargeant on peculiar entities that are neither people nor property until we need them to be

Laboring in the Dark

Charlotte Collingwood on how IVF might sound like an act of taking control, but felt like an act of surrender

Golden Eggs

Abigail Anthony on shopping for good stock at the Ivy Leagues

Taming IVF’s Wild West

Emma Waters on why consumer protection is not enough
Essays

AI Is a Hall of Mirrors

Meghan Houser on how LLMs are giving us a billion ripoffs of what we already are at a moment when we yearn for something new

Narcissistic Depressive Technoscience

Thomas Fuchs on why modern man longs to be replaced, fantasizes about being the one to do it, and how we can stay human instead
Reviews & Reconsiderations

Turn on, Tune in, Write Code

Geoff Shullenberger on how psychedelics went from counterculture to grind culture

There Is a Planet B

Rand Simberg on how to live on Mars
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No. 77Summer 2024

No. 77

Summer 2024

Feature

Why We Need Amistics for AI

Brian J. A. Boyd on why today’s tech ethics isn’t up to the task of deciding what world we want to build with the breakthrough technology
Essays

The Era of Predictive AI Is Almost Over

Dean W. Ball on the new paradigm that’s proving “it’s just autocomplete” critics wrong

Who Wants to Believe in UFOs?

Clare Coffey on strange things in the skies of a clockwork universe

The Refs Are Working Us

M. Anthony Mills on what went wrong with fact-checking

Open Wallets, Empty Hearts

Ari Schulman on how effective altruism preached selflessness but offered self-help
Cities and Cars

Downtowns Don’t Matter Anymore

Joel Kotkin on why exurbanism is the new urbanism

Keep Austin Houston?

A Q&A with Joseph Lawler about “induced demand” and the future of the Texas capital city
Reviews & Reconsiderations

How Sad Do You Feel Right Now?

Leah Libresco Sargeant on how the boom in amateur therapists is hurting our children

Virtual Reality Reboots History

Charles T. Rubin on taking the idea of the “American dream” and really going for it
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No. 78Fall 2024

No. 78

Fall 2024

The Builder Issue

The Editors
Why We Don’t Build

Mass. Exodus

Joseph Lawler on why the state stopped building enough to house its own middle class

Will Anyone Vote for Abundance?

Thomas Hochman on why liberals and conservatives each want only half of the “time to build” agenda

If We Can Do It In Baltimore…

Aidan Mackenzie on why it takes a disaster to build fast

We Don’t Need This Much Permitting

Michael Catanzaro on why the permitting process must be rebuilt from scratch

What Permitting Reform Can’t Fix

Tristan Abbey on why it’s not enough to remove roadblocks
What Calls to Build Miss

For Whom Shall We Build?

Yuval Levin on why new tech is no good without new people

Dinner with Dinosaurs

Lauren Spohn on why the right’s new love of technological progress is a bad answer to the left’s progressive ideology

Ethics Won’t Save Us From AI

R. J. Snell on why rationalists can’t answer the doomers or the boomers

Why the Progress Debate Goes Nowhere

Samuel Matlack on why neither a jetpack future nor a cabin in the woods is the way forward
What We Should Build

Giant nets to clean garbage from the ocean

Santi Ruiz

Homes where old people and disabled people can help each other out

Sara Hendren

Chains of geothermal power stations to keep the Yellowstone supervolcano from destroying modern civilization (and get a lot of clean power too)

Brian Potter

A landscape we have to navigate together

Leah Libresco Sargeant

Nuclear reactors that won’t melt down

Kirk Sorensen

Houses, a chip factory, anything really in place of Portland’s Hillsboro Airport

Andrew T. Barker

A whole-of-patient approach to medicine

Jade Toth

Towns, cities, architecture, transit, and street plans the way we used to build

Addison Del Mastro

Schools for building portfolios, not credentials

Dan Hopkins

A tech stack for “deep work”

Brian J. A. Boyd
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No. 79Winter 2025

No. 79

Winter 2025

How the System Works

We Live Like Royalty and Don’t Know It

Charles C. Mann introduces a series on the hidden mechanisms that support modern life

Breakfast for Eight Billion

Charles C. Mann on the three practices that let us feed the whole world for the first time in history
Reality: A Post-Mortem, Essay 6

The New Control Society

Jon Askonas on why everything feels so mid
Investigation

A Pattern of Noncompliance

Alexander Raikin on how Ontario’s euthanasia regulators have tracked 400+ cases of possible criminal violations — and not referred any to law enforcement
Essays

Can You Solve a Lifestyle Epidemic Without Lifestyle Gurus?

Garth Brown on the weirdos you need when you have a “diseases of civilization” crisis

The Tyranny of Now

Nicholas Carr on the timely warning of forgotten media theorist Harold Innis

Make Suburbia Weird

Clare Coffey on why suburbs feel so dead
Reviews & Reconsiderations

One to Zero

Charles Carman reviews David Bentley Hart on how to destroy the future

So You’ve Decided To Carry Your Brain Around

Nicholas Clairmont reviews Christine Rosen on how we forgot that we have bodies
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No. 80Spring 2025

No. 80

Spring 2025

Policy sea changes under Trump 2

How Virologists Lost the Gain-of-Function Debate

M. Anthony Mills on why the expert community must face up to its own failures

Stop Hacking Humans

Brad Littlejohn, Clare Morell, and Emma Waters on a new agenda for turning technology away from hacking humans and toward healing them

The Deeper Question Raised by the NIH Grant Overhaul

Yuval Levin asks whether the Trump administration’s goal is to run the government or oppose it

The Mars Dream Is Back — Here’s How to Make It Actually Happen

Robert Zubrin on a science-driven program that could get astronauts on the Red Planet by 2031
How the System Works

A Spring in Every Kitchen

Charles C. Mann on the miracle of running water and what it will take for us to stay hydrated
Essays

Will AI Be Alive?

Brian J. A. Boyd on what lies ahead and how to face it well

If the Reagan Airport crash was “waiting to happen,” why didn’t anyone stop it?

Ari Schulman on the rot beyond the air safety system

Are We Under-Bubbled?

Leah Libresco Sargeant on why the future needs more people willing to be duped

You Are Not an Ape-Brained Meat Sack

Spencer A. Klavan on quantum mechanics, a physics that cares
News from The New Atlantis

Messages in a Bottle

News from The New Atlantis
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