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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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