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Wednesday, December 19, 2007

Edge 231 - Third Culture Holiday Reading

--- COMING SOON - MIDNIGHT, NEW YEAR'S EVE - THE EDGE ANNUAL QUESTION - 2008! ---

Edge 231 - December 19, 2007

http://www.edge.org

[2,300 words]

This online EDGE edition is available at:
http://www.edge.org/documents/archive/edge231.html

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THE THIRD CULTURE
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THIRD CULTURE HOLIDAY READING
Books By Edge Contributors (and others) - 2007

This is the season for year-end lists of books in which the mainstream review media steer literate culture away from deep questions about how our world works and who we are and toward celebrations of narcissism, celebrity gossip, and literary cliques. What I wrote in 1991 in "The Emerging Third Culture", still pertains today:

"A 1950s education in Freud, Marx, and modernism is not a sufficient qualification for a thinking person in the 1990s. Indeed, the traditional American intellectuals are, in a sense, increasingly reactionary, and quite often proudly (and perversely) ignorant of many of the truly significant intellectual accomplishments of our time. Their culture, which dismisses science, is often nonempirical. It uses its own jargon and washes its own laundry. It is chiefly characterized by comment on comments, the swelling spiral of commentary eventually reaching the point where the real world gets lost."

Given the well-documented challenges and issues we are facing as a nation, as a culture, how can it be that there are no science books (and hardly any books on ideas) on the New York Times 100 Notable Books of the Year list; no science category in the Economist Books of the Year 2007; only Oliver Sacks in the New Yorker's list of Books From Our Pages?

Instead of having science and technology at the center of the intellectual world-of having a unity in which scholarship includes science and technology along with literature and art-the official culture has kicked them out. Science and technology appear as some sort of technical special product. Elite universities have nudged science out of the liberal arts undergraduate curriculum-and out of the minds of many young people, who, arriving at their desks at the establishment media, have so marginalized themselves that they are no longer within shouting distance of the action. Clueless, they don't even know that they don't know.

But science today is changing our understanding of our universe and species, and scientific literacy is indispensable to dealing with some of the world's most pressing issues. Fortunately, we live in a time when third culture intellectuals-scientists, science journalists, and other science-minded writers-are among of our best nonfiction writers, and their many engaging books have brought scientific insight to a wide audience.

We are pleased to present a list of books published in 2007 by Edge contributors (and others in the science-minded community) for your holiday pleasures and challenges.

John Brockman
Publisher & Editor

[More]
http://www.edge.org/documents/archive/edge231.html#reading

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EDGE IN THE NEWS
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THE NEW YORK TIMES
December 18, 2006

LAWS OF NATURE, SOURCE UNKNOWN
By Dennis Overbye

Yes, it's a lawful universe. But what kind of laws are these, anyway, that might be inscribed on a T-shirt but apparently not on any stone tablet that we have ever been able to find?

Are they merely fancy bookkeeping, a way of organizing facts about the world? Do they govern nature or just describe it? And does it matter that we don't know and that most scientists don't seem to know or care where they come from?

[More]
http://www.edge.org/documents/archive/edge231.html#nyt

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BOOKS FROM EDGE
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WHAT ARE YOU OPTIMISTIC ABOUT?: Today's Leading Thinkers on Why Things Are
Good and Getting Better With an Introduction by Daniel C. Dennett, Edited
By John Brockman

US:
http://www.amazon.com/What-Are-You-Optimistic-About/dp/0061436933/ref=sr_1_1/103-5521188-8921443?ie=UTF8&s=books&qid=1191439004&sr=1-1

UK:
http://www.amazon.co.uk/What-Are-You-Optimistic-About/dp/1847371000/ref=sr_1_1/202-1936079-6366229?ie=UTF8&s=books&qid=1191439243&sr=8-1

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This online EDGE edition is available at:
http://www.edge.org/documents/archive/edge231.html

----------------------------------------------------
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EDGE

John Brockman, Editor and Publisher
Russell Weinberger, Associate Publisher
Karla Taylor, Editorial Assistant

Copyright (c) 2007 by EDGE Foundation, Inc.
All Rights Reserved.

Published by EDGE Foundation, Inc.,
5 East 59th Street, New York, NY 10022

EDGE Foundation, Inc. is a nonprofit private operating foundation under Section 501(c)(3) of the Internal Revenue Code.

----------------------------------------------------
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Wednesday, November 21, 2007

Edge 228 - Scott Atran: Terrorism and Radicalization

Edge 228 - November 20, 2007

http://www.edge.org

[1,300 words]

This online EDGE edition is available at:
http://www.edge.org/documents/archive/edge228.html

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THE THIRD CULTURE
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THANKSGIVING EDITION
TERRORISM AND RADICALIZATION: WHAT TO DO, WHAT NOT TO DO
By Scott Atran

... Scott Atran, an American academic who has investigated the Hamburg cell connected to the September 11 2001 attacks in the US and numerous other terrorist attacks around the world, witnessed much of the trial and described it as "a complete farce".
--The Guardian, October 31, 2007

Presented at U.S. State Department/UK House of Lords
October/November 2007

[Slide Presentation]

SCOTT ATRAN is a research director in anthropology at the National Center for Scientific Research in Paris, France. He is also visiting professor of psychology and public policy at the University of Michigan and presidential scholar in sociology at the John Jay College of Criminal Justice, New York City.

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IN THE NEWS
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THE INDEPENDENT
November 20, 2007

Are the family clichés true?

The middle one's always difficult, the eldest is a bossy boots and the youngest is a tearaway. But are the family clichés true? Finally, scientists have the answer. Steve Connor (youngest of two) reports

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BUSINESS DAY (South Africa)
Tuesday, 20 November 2007

Street Dogs: A little more about black swans

ANALYSTS are historians who are predicting the past, said Intel CEO Craig Barrett. Nassim Taleb said " a black swan is a large-impact, hard-to-predict, and rare event beyond the realm of normal expectations".

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WIRED
November 17, 2007

23ANDME WILL DECODE YOUR DNA FOR $1,000. WELCOME TO THE AGE OF GENOMICS

By Thomas Goetz

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BOOKS FROM EDGE
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WHAT ARE YOU OPTIMISTIC ABOUT?: Today's Leading Thinkers on Why Things Are Good and Getting Better With an Introduction by Daniel C. Dennett, Edited
By John Brockman

US:
http://www.amazon.com/What-Are-You-Optimistic-About/dp/0061436933/ref=sr_1_1/103-5521188-8921443?ie=UTF8&s=books&qid=1191439004&sr=1-1

UK:
http://www.amazon.co.uk/What-Are-You-Optimistic-About/dp/1847371000/ref=sr_1_1/202-1936079-6366229?ie=UTF8&s=books&qid=1191439243&sr=8-1

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This online EDGE edition is available at:
http://www.edge.org/documents/archive/edge228.html

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EDGE

John Brockman, Editor and Publisher
Russell Weinberger, Associate Publisher
Karla Taylor, Editorial Assistant

Copyright (c) 2007 by EDGE Foundation, Inc.
All Rights Reserved.

Published by EDGE Foundation, Inc.,
5 East 59th Street, New York, NY 10022

EDGE Foundation, Inc. is a nonprofit private operating foundation under Section 501(c)(3) of the Internal Revenue Code.

[If at any time you want your name to be taken off this mail list, please let us know.]
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Friday, November 16, 2007

Edge 227 - Edge on the Road

Edge 227 - November 16, 2007

http://www.edge.org

[1,500 words]

This online EDGE edition is available at:
http://www.edge.org/documents/archive/edge227.html

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THE THIRD CULTURE
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EDGE/TED TALKS - Monterey, CA
Three Talks from TED 2007 presented in high quality video by the vibrant "TED Talks" website:

FLY ME TO THE MOONS OF SATURN
Carolyn Porco

Planetary scientist Carolyn Porco says, "I'm going to take you on a journey." And does she ever. Showing breathtaking images from the Cassini voyage to Saturn, she focuses on Saturn's intriguing largest moon, Titan,with deserts, mudflats and puzzling lakes, and on frozen Enceladus, which seems to shoot jets of ice.

A JOURNEY TO THE CENTER OF YOUR MIND
Vilayanur Ramachandran

In a wide-ranging talk, Vilayanur Ramachandran explores how brain damage can reveal the connection between the internal structures of the brain and the corresponding functions of the mind. He talks about phantom limb pain, synesthesia (when people hear color or smell sounds), and the Capgras delusion, when brain-damaged people believe their closest friends and family have been replaced with imposters.

A BRIEF HISTORY OF VIOLENCE
Steven Pinker

In this TED Talk, Steven Pinker takes on violence. We live in violent times, an era of heightened warfare, genocide and senseless crime. Or so we've come to believe. Pinker charts a history of violence from Biblical times through the present, and says modern society has a little less to feel guilty about.

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THE EDGE DINNER 2007
Monterey, California (during the TED Conference) - March 7, 2007

"The dinner party was a microcosm of a newly dominant sector of American business." - Wired

PHOTO ALBUM

"This goes beyond all known schmoozing. This is like some kind of virtual-intellectual conspiracy-in-restraint-of-trade." - Bruce Sterling

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SERPENTINE GALLERY EXPERIMENT MARATHON
Saturday 13 October 12 noon - Sunday 14 October 3 pm, London

On Sunday morning, October 14, Edge participated in a morning of "table-top experiments" as part of the Serpentine Gallery Experiment Marathon in London. This live event was featured along with the Edge/Serpentine collaboration: "What Is Your Formula? Your Equation? Your Algorithm? Formulae For the 21st Century."
Photos and commentary from the Serpentine Gallery blog of the event.

Seirian Sumner: A cooperative foraging experiment - lessons from ants

Timothy Taylor: The Tradescant's Ark Experiment

Simon Baron-Cohen: Do women have better empathy than men?

Armand Leroi: The Song of Songs

Steve Jones: Some Like it Hot

Neil Turok: What Banged?

Lewis Wolpert: How Our Limbs are Patterned Like the French Flag

John Baldessari

Steven Pinker in conversation with Marcy Kahan

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IN THE NEWS
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DISSIDENT VOICE
October 24, 2007

Neuroscience and Moral Politics: Chomsky's Intellectual Progeny

Are humans "wired for empathy"? How does this affect what Chomsky calls the "manufacturing of consent"?

By Gary Olson

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BOOKS FROM EDGE
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WHAT ARE YOU OPTIMISTIC ABOUT?: Today's Leading Thinkers on Why Things Are Good and Getting Better With an Introduction by Daniel C. Dennett, Edited
By John Brockman

US:
http://www.amazon.com/What-Are-You-Optimistic-About/dp/0061436933/ref=sr_1_1/103-5521188-8921443?ie=UTF8&s=books&qid=1191439004&sr=1-1

UK:
http://www.amazon.co.uk/What-Are-You-Optimistic-About/dp/1847371000/ref=sr_1_1/202-1936079-6366229?ie=UTF8&s=books&qid=1191439243&sr=8-1

---------------------------------------------------

This online EDGE edition is available at:
http://www.edge.org/documents/archive/edge227.html

----------------------------------------------------
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EDGE

John Brockman, Editor and Publisher
Russell Weinberger, Associate Publisher
Karla Taylor, Editorial Assistant

Copyright (c) 2007 by EDGE Foundation, Inc.
All Rights Reserved.

Published by EDGE Foundation, Inc.,
5 East 59th Street, New York, NY 10022

EDGE Foundation, Inc. is a nonprofit private operating foundation under Section 501(c)(3) of the Internal Revenue Code.
----------------------------------------------------
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Thursday, October 18, 2007

Edge 226: "What's Your Formula?" An Edge Question Special

Edge 226
October 18, 2007

http://www.edge.org

[8,700 words]

This online EDGE edition is available at:
http://www.edge.org/documents/archive/edge226.html

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THE WORLD QUESTION CENTER
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"WHAT IS YOUR FORMULA? YOUR EQUATION? YOUR ALGORITHM?"
FORMULAE FOR THE 21ST CENTURY
An EDGE Special Question

Alun Anderson, Scott Atran, Mahzarin R. Banaji, Simon Baron-Cohen, Samuel Barondes, Gregory Benford, Susan Blackmore, Paul Bloom, Stewart Brand, John Brockman, Rodney A. Brooks, Sean Carroll, George Church, M.Csikszentmihalyi, Leda Cosmides, Paul Davies, Richard Dawkins, David Deutsch, Keith Devlin, Chris DiBona, Freeman Dyson, George Dyson, Drew Endy, Brian Eno, Dan Everett, J. Doyne Farmer, Richard Foreman, Howard Gardner, David Gelernter, Neil Gershenfeld, Steve Giddings, Daniel Gilbert, Marcelo Gleiser, Alison Gopnik, Joshua Greene, John Gottman, Jonathan Haidt, Judith Rich Harris, Marc D. Hauser, Donald D. Hoffman, John Horgan, Nicholas Humphrey, Marcy Kahan, Danny Kahneman, Dean Kamen, Kevin Kelly, Rem Koolhaas, Bart Kosko, Kai Krause, Ray Kurzweil, Lawrence M. Krauss, Janna Levin, Seth Lloyd, Benoit Mandelbrot, Geoffrey Miller, Marvin Minsky, Oliver Morton, David Myers, PZ Myers, Tor Nørretranders, Mark Pagel, Irene Pepperberg, Steven Pinker, Jordan Pollack, Ernst Pöppel, William Poundstone, Eduardo Punset, Martin Rees, Lisa Randall, Matt Ridley, Carlo Rovelli, Rudy Rucker, Doug Rushkoff, Dimitar D. Sasselov, Gino Segre, Michael Shermer, Neil Shubin, George Smoot, Dan Sperber, Maria Spiropulu, Linda Stone, Leonard Susskind, Nassim Taleb, Timothy Taylor, John Tooby, Max Tegmark, Craig Venter, Alexander Vilenkin, Shing-Tung Yau, Anton Zeilinger

AN EDGE-SERPENTINE GALLERY COLLABORATION

Introduction

I recently paid a visit to the Serpentine Gallery in Kensington Gardens, London to see Swiss curator Hans Ulrich Obrist, a long-time friend with whom I have a mutual connection: we both worked closely with the late James Lee Byars, the conceptual artist who, in 1971, implemented "The World Question Center" as a work of conceptual art.

The walls of Obrist's office were covered with single pages of size A4 paper on which artists, writers, scientists had responded to his question: "What Is Your Formula?" Among the pieces were formulas by quantum physicist David Deutsch, artist and musician Brian Eno, architect Rem Koolhaas, and fractal mathematician Benoit Mandelbrot.

Within minutes we had hatched an Edge-Serpentine collaboration for a "World Question Center" project, to debut on Edge during the annual Serpentine Gallery Experiment Marathon, the weekend of October 13-14. The plan was to further the reach of Obrist's question by asking for responses from the science-minded Edge community, thus complementing the rich array of formulas already assembled by the Serpentine from distinguished artists such as Marina Abramovic, Matthew Barney, Louise Bourgeois, Gilbert & George, and Rosemarie Trockel.

-JB

Permalink:
http://www.edge.org/3rd_culture/serpentine07/serpentine07_index.html

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FORMULAE FOR THE 21ST CENTURY - NEWS
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THE TELEGRAPH
October 13, 2007

Science and art meet in 'Experiment Marathon'
By Roger Highfield, Science Editor

[More]

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SUEDDEUTSCHE ZEITUNG
September 3, 2007
FEUILLITON - Front Page

SHORT ANSWERS TO BIG QUESTIONS
Andrian Kreye, Editor, The Feuilleton

[More]

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E-FLUX
October 13, 2007

SERPENTINE GALLERY

Steven Pinker and other leading scientists join artists at the Serpentine Gallery for a 24-hour Experiment Marathon featuring robots, three-way kissing booths and out-of-body experiences

13 - 14 October 2007

[More]

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BOOKS FROM EDGE
---------------------------------------------------

NOW AVAILABLE FOR PRE-ORDER:

WHAT ARE YOU OPTIMISTIC ABOUT?: Today's Leading Thinkers on Why Things Are
Good and Getting Better With an Introduction by Daniel C. Dennett, Edited
By John Brockman

US:
http://www.amazon.com/What-Are-You-Optimistic-About/dp/0061436933/ref=sr_1_1/103-5521188-8921443?ie=UTF8&s=books&qid=1191439004&sr=1-1

UK:
http://www.amazon.co.uk/What-Are-You-Optimistic-About/dp/1847371000/ref=sr_1_1/202-1936079-6366229?ie=UTF8&s=books&qid=1191439243&sr=8-1


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THIRD CULTURE NEWS
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NATURE
October 18, 2007

A life worth writing about
Jan Witkowski

Craig Venter's autobiography recounts the conflict and controversy that have contributed to his celebrity.

[More]

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THE TIMES

October 17, 2007
Life on all fours

Five quadrupedal siblings in Turkey were thought to be unique. But now more adults who walk on all fours have been found in Iraq

[More]

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THE TIMES
October 17, 2007

We're all made with quadrupedal walking ability
By Anjana Ahuja

Professor Nicholas Humphrey, an evolutionary psychologist at the London School of Economics who has been studying hand-walking among humans, is aware of five families around the world with children who walk on all fours. The first to come to scientific attention was the Ulas family, from southern Turkey, who were the subject of a television documentary last year. Of 16 siblings, five were hand-walkers.

[More]

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THE NEW YORK TIMES
October 16, 2007

OBSERVATORY
Two, Deux, Dos: Heavily Used Words Evolve More Slowly

By Henry Fountain

[More]

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THE TELEGRAPH
October 16, 2007

Craig Venter: Creating life in a lab using DNA Geneticist Craig Venter explains how, by artificially producing DNA, his team could design 'green' microbes that digest toxic waste

By Craig Venter

[More]
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THE WALL STREET JOURNAL
October 16, 2007

COMMENTARY

Academic Inquisitors
By Christina Hoff Sommers

...Simon Baron-Cohen, a professor at Cambridge University and one of the world's leading experts on autism, had an intriguing hypothesis. Autism is far more common in males than females.


[More]

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THE BOSTON GLOBE
October 15, 2007

Mathematician-Biologist Martin Nowak | Meeting the Minds
Cooperation counts for math professor

By Heather Wax, Globe Correspondent

[More]

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SALON
October 15, 2007

Proud atheists
Steven Pinker and Rebecca Goldstein, America's brainiest couple, confess that belonging to one of America's most reviled subcultures doesn't mean they believe scientists can explain everything.

By Steve Paulson

[More]

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THE SUNDAY TIMES
October 14, 2007

Steven Pinker knows what's going on inside your head

Steven Pinker's jeans and wild hair have made him academia's rock star but it is his incendiary ideas that get the crowds going. The evolutionary psychologist believes everything from road rage to adultery may be explained by our genes

By Bryan Appleyard

[More]

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DISCOVER
October 15, 2007

JARON'S WORLD

Are We Trapped in God's Video Game?
Probably not. And no, he's not looking at your underwear.

By Jaron Lanier

[More]

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SCIENCE
October 12, 2007

ON CAMPUS

Among them is Harvard psychologist Howard Gardner, who says, "I don't know anyone at Harvard who favors what happened at UC Davis. "The regents and faculty who opposed [Summers's] appearance look like ignorant fools."

[More]

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NATURE
October 11, 2007

An incomparable life
Jared Diamond

Exceptional intellect and creativity made Ernst Mayr the last century's greatest evolutionary biologist.

[More]

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NATURE
October 11, 2007

An invisible hand
W. Tecumseh Fitch

Quantitative relationships between how frequently a word is used and how rapidly it changes over time raise intriguing questions about the way individual behaviours determine large-scale linguistic and cultural change.

[More]

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NATURE
October 11, 2007

Frequency of word-use predicts rates of lexical evolution throughout Indo-European history

Mark Pagel, Quentin D. Atkinson & Andrew Meade

[More]

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NATURE
October 11, 2007

Quantifying the evolutionary dynamics of language
Erez Lieberman, Jean-Baptiste Michel, Joe Jackson, Tina Tang & Martin A. Nowak

[More]

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NATURE
October 11, 2007

Making the paper: Carolyn Porco

Spacecraft's images suggest one of Saturn's moons may host water.

The Cassini spacecraft took seven years to reach Saturn. But for Carolyn Porco, who leads the Cassini imaging team at the Space Science Institute (SSI) in Boulder, Colorado, the images it sent back were well worth the wait. Most exciting of all was the revelation that one of the planet's moons may have the essential ingredients to support life.

[More]

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FORBES
October 11, 2007
Cool Ideas

Radical Ideas
By Bruce Upbin

...Gadgetoff was the brainchild of two brothers, Daniel and Michael Dubno, and friend Greg Harper.

[More]

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TIME
October 11, 2007

VERBATIM

'We are going from reading our genetic code to the ability to write it.'

CRAIG VENTER, U.S. genetic researcher, on news that his team was preparing to announce the creation of the world's first synthetic chromosome, a stepping stone to creating artificial life

[More]

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THE NEW REPUBLIC
October 9, 2007

WHY WE CURSE
What the F***?
by Steven Pinker

[More]

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INTERNATIONAL HERALD TRIBUNE
October 9, 2007

A refugee from Western Europe
By Sam Harris and Salman Rushdie

[More]

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THE NEW YORK TIMES
October 8, 2007
THE MEDIA EQUATION

Nerd Chic Arrives on TV
By David Carr

[More]

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THE GUARDIAN
October 8, 2007

Cracking the code to life

When Craig Venter announced that he was going to unravel the human genome, it sparked one of the most bitterly contested races in the history of science. Here, in an extract from his new memoir, he describes the acrimonious sprint to the finish

By Craig Venter

[More]

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THE GUARDIAN
Saturday, October 6, 2007

FRONT PAGE

I am creating artificial life, declares US gene pioneer

Scientist has made synthetic chromosome * Breakthrough could combat warming Ed Pilkington New York

[More]

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THE GUARDIAN
Saturday, October 6, 2007

Gene genie

Any day now Craig Venter - geneticist, yachtsman and Vietnam veteran - will announce that he has achieved one of the greatest feats in science: the creation of artificial life. He talks to Ed Pilkington

[More]

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This online EDGE edition is available at:
http://www.edge.org/documents/archive/edge226.html

----------------------------------------------------
----------------------------------------------------
EDGE

John Brockman, Editor and Publisher
Russell Weinberger, Associate Publisher
Karla Taylor, Editorial Assistant

Copyright (c) 2007 by EDGE Foundation, Inc.
All Rights Reserved.

Published by EDGE Foundation, Inc.,
5 East 59th Street, New York, NY 10022

EDGE Foundation, Inc. is a nonprofit private operating foundation under
Section 501(c)(3) of the Internal Revenue Code.
----------------------------------------------------
----------------------------------------------------
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You are currently subscribed to edge_editions as: wheresrhys@gmail.com

To unsubscribe send a blank email to leave-2779485-13069806A@sand.lyris.net
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Tuesday, October 9, 2007

Fwd: Edge 222: Alex (1976-2007); Jonathan Haidt -"Moral Psychology and the Misunderstanding of Religion"



---------- Forwarded message ----------
From: Edge <editor@edge.org>
Date: 12 Sep 2007 19:07
Subject: Edge 222: Alex (1976-2007); Jonathan Haidt -"Moral  Psychology and the Misunderstanding of Religion"
To: Rhys Evans <wheresrhys@gmail.com>

Edge 222 - September 12, 2007

(7,375 words)

This online EDGE edition is available at:
http://www.edge.org/documents/archive/edge222.html

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THE THIRD CULTURE
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ALEX (1976-2007)

[photo]

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The New York Times
September 10, 2007

Alex, A Parrot Who Had a Way With Words, Dies
By Benedict Carey

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EdgeLink: "That Damn Bird: A Talk with Irene Pepperberg"
Edge Video

[More]

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MORAL PSYCHOLOGY AND THE MISUNDERSTANDING OF RELIGION
A Talk with Jonathan Haidt

It might seem obvious to you that contractual societies are good, modern, creative and free, whereas beehive societies reek of feudalism, fascism, and patriarchy. And, as a secular liberal I agree that contractual societies such as those of Western Europe offer the best hope for living peacefully together in our increasingly diverse modern nations (although it remains to be seen if Europe can solve its current diversity problems).

I just want to make one point, however, that should give contractualists pause: surveys have long shown that religious believers in the United States are happier, healthier, longer-lived, and more generous to charity and to each other than are secular people.


JONATHAN HAIDT is Associate Professor in the Social Psychology area of the Department of Psychology at the University of Virginia, where he does research on morality and emotion, and how they vary across cultures. He is the author of THE HAPPINESS HYPOTHESIS: FINDING MODERN TRUTH IN ANCIENT WISDOM.

Jonathan Haidt's EDGE Bio Page

[More]

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THIRD CULTURE NEWS
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THE NEW YORK TIMES
September 10, 2007

Evidence of Genetic Response to Diet
By Nicholas Wade

...Richard Wrangham, a primatologist at Harvard and an advocate of the tuber-eating thesis, said the amylase finding was a convincing insight into the different digestive physiology of people and chimps, but that the date of 200,000 years ago, derived from limited genetic information, was not old enough to give direct support to his ideas.

[More]

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NEW SCIENTIST
September 6, 2007

Low-cost personal DNA readings are on the way
Peter Aldhous

"GENETICS is about to get personal." So proclaims the website of 23andMe, a Californian company that is gearing up to offer people a guided tour of their own DNA. For the superstars of genetics, it has already got personal. Earlier this week, genomics pioneer Craig Venter revealed an almost
complete sequence of his genome, while that of James Watson, co-discoverer of DNA's double-helix structure, has been available on the web since late June.

Given that Watson's genome took almost $1 million to read, most of us won't immediately be following in his and Venter's footsteps. It isn't necessary to read your entire genome, however, to browse many of the genetic variations that may influence your health.

According to George Church, a geneticist at Harvard Medical School in Boston, the most pertinent information could be gleaned by sequencing the 1 per cent of the genome that codes for proteins. Thanks to the advances in sequencing technology, that might be done for as little as $1000 per person. "DNA chips", meanwhile, can scan your genome for common "spelling mistakes" for just a few hundred dollars. At that price, the era of personalised genomics is already dawning. "This is the year," claims Church.

To push the field forward, Church has launched the Personal Genome Project (PGP), in which he and nine other volunteers have signed up to have the protein-coding regions of their genome made available on the web, along with their medical records, photographs of facial features and the results of a questionnaire about their health and personal habits. Within a few months, he aims to start scaling up to 100,000 volunteers.

Church is also an adviser to both 23andMe - named for the number of chromosome pairs in the human genome - and Cambridge Genomics, two of the firms hoping to turn personalised genomics into big business. But is the world ready for their services? As well as raising questions about the protection of personal genetic data, there are concerns about how people will use information that, at this stage, even trained medical geneticists find extremely difficult to interpret.


[More]

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TIME
September 6, 2007

Words Don't Mean What They Mean
Steven Pinker

In the Movie Tootsie, The character played by Dustin Hoffman is disguised as a woman and is speaking to a beautiful young actress played by Jessica Lange. During a session of late-night girl talk, Lange's character says, "You know what I wish? That a guy could be honest enough to walk up to me and say, 'I could lay a big line on you, but the simple truth is I find you very interesting, and I'd really like to make love to you.' Wouldn't that be a relief?"

Later in the movie, a twist of fate throws them together at a cocktail party, this time with Hoffman's character dressed as a man. The actress doesn't recognize him, and he tries out the speech on her. Before he can even finish, she throws a glass of wine in his face and storms away.

When people talk, they lay lines on each other, do a lot of role playing, sidestep, shilly-shally and engage in all manner of vagueness and innuendo. We do this and expect others to do it, yet at the same time we profess to long for the plain truth, for people to say what they mean, simple as that. Such hypocrisy is a human universal.

Sexual come-ons are a classic example. "Would you like to come up and see my etchings?" has been recognized as a double entendre for so long that by 1939, James Thurber could draw a cartoon of a hapless man in an apartment lobby saying to his date, "You wait here, and I'll bring the etchings down."

The veiled threat also has a stereotype: the Mafia wiseguy offering protection with the soft sell, "Nice store you got there. Would be a real shame if something happened to it." Traffic cops sometimes face not-so-innocent questions like, "Gee, Officer, is there some way I could pay the fine right here?" And anyone who has sat through a fund-raising dinner is familiar with euphemistic schnorring like, "We're counting on you
to show leadership."

Why don't people just say what they mean? The reason is that conversational partners are not modems downloading information into each other's brains. People are very, very touchy about their relationships. Whenever you speak to someone, you are presuming the two of you have a certain degree of familiarity--which your words might alter. So every sentence has to do two things at once: convey a message and continue to negotiate that
relationship.

[More]

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TIMES LITERARY SUPLLEMENT
September 5, 2007

Bible belter
Richard Dawkins

There is much fluttering in the dovecots of the deluded, and Christopher Hitchens is one of those responsible. Another is the philosopher A. C. Grayling. I recently shared a platform with both. We were to debate against a trio of, as it turned out, rather half-hearted religious apologists ("Of course I don't believe in a God with a long white beard, but . . ."). I hadn't met Hitchens before, but I got an idea of what to expect when Grayling emailed me to discuss tactics. After proposing a couple of lines for himself and me, he concluded, ". . . and Hitch will spray AK47 ammo at the enemy in characteristic style".

Grayling's engaging caricature misses Hitchens's ability to temper his pugnacity with old-fashioned courtesy. And "spray" suggests a scattershot fusillade, which underestimates the deadly accuracy of his marksmanship. If you are a religious apologist invited to debate with Christopher Hitchens, decline. His witty repartee, his ready-access store of historical quotations, his bookish eloquence, his effortless flow of well-formed words, beautifully spoken in that formidable Richard Burton voice (the
whole performance not dulled by other equally formidable Richard Burton habits), would threaten your arguments even if you had good ones to deploy. A string of reverends and "theologians" ruefully discovered this during Hitchens's barnstorming book tour around the United States.

With characteristic effrontery, he took his tour through the Bible Belt states - the reptilian brain of southern and middle America, rather than the easier pickings of the country's cerebral cortex to the north and down the coasts. The plaudits he received were all the more gratifying. Something is stirring in that great country. America is far from the know-nothing theocracy that two terms of Bush, and various misleading polls, had led us to fear. Does the buckle of the Bible Belt conceal some real guts? Are the ranks of the thoughtful coming out of the closet and standing up to be counted? Yes, and Hitchens's atheist colleagues on the American bestseller list have equally encouraging tales to tell..

[More]

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THREE QUARKS DAILY
September 3, 2007

Monday Musing: Pinker's Thinkers

...It seems conventional when reviewing a book favorably to trot out a few petty criticisms to give the appearance of objectivity and balance. I shall commit no such crime and recommend the book as highly as I can recommend any book, without reservation. It ships on September 11th, but you can order it now. Buy it. And read it. You'll find yourself educated and entertained at the same time.

[More]

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NEW SCIENTIST
September 1, 2007

What good is God?
Helen Phillips

Born to be moral

The idea that we have an innate sense of right and wrong has been brought to prominence again by the Harvard University cognitive psychologist Marc Hauser, with the publication of his book Moral Minds. He likens morality to language and its innate core to our innate sense of grammar. In other words, at the heart of human moral codes lie common rules and features that come hard-wired at birth.

Hauser suggests that each culture and generation learns to interpret the moral grammar slightly differently, but the rules, fixed in the biology of the brain, remain the same. One reason he believes this is that the origins of morality, altruism and fair play can be seen in our group-living primate cousins, in behaviours such as loyalty to kin, intolerance of theft and punishment of cheats...

...Jonathan Haidt from the University of Virginia used a hypnosis experiment to show how important emotions are. Under hypnosis, he induced people to feel disgust when they heard a couple of arbitrary words. When these words later came up in connection with moral dilemmas, the subjects judged certain scenarios to be wrong when people who had not been hypnotised did not. When asked to justify their choices, they could not do so to the researchers' satisfaction. Without knowing how or why, their emotions had altered their sense of right and wrong.

Brain-scanning studies have shown a link between damage to the brain regions that house the social emotions and a tendency to make aberrant moral choices. Still, there is more to morality than emotion. Most researchers now think that emotions influence the way our moral decisions are turned into actions or choices, rather than how the decisions are made in the first place. Other brain regions involved in empathy and attributing beliefs about intentions are important too.

[More]

-----------------------------------------------------

This online EDGE edition is available at:
http://www.edge.org/documents/archive/edge222.html

----------------------------------------------------
----------------------------------------------------
EDGE

John Brockman, Editor and Publisher
Russell Weinberger, Associate Publisher
Karla Taylor, Editorial Assistant

Copyright (c) 2007 by EDGE Foundation, Inc.
All Rights Reserved.

Published by EDGE Foundation, Inc.,
5 East 59th Street, New York, NY 10022

EDGE Foundation, Inc. is a nonprofit private  operating foundation under Section 501(c)(3) of  the Internal Revenue Code.

[If at any time you want your name to be taken off this mail list, please let us know.]
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Fwd: Edge 221: LIFE: What a concept! An Edge Special Event



---------- Forwarded message ----------
From: Edge <editor@edge.org>
Date: 6 Sep 2007 22:20
Subject: Edge 221: LIFE: What a concept! An Edge Special Event
To: Rhys Evans <wheresrhys@gmail.com>

               "Life/Consists of propositions about life"
                - Wallace Stevens, "Men Made out of Words"

Edge 221
September 05, 2007

(5,000 words)

This online EDGE edition with streaming video is available at:
http://www.edge.org/documents/archive/edge221.html

----------------------------------------------------
THE THIRD CULTURE
----------------------------------------------------
LIFE: WHAT A CONCEPT!
An Edge Special Event at Eastover Farm

This year's Annual Edge Event took place at Eastover Farm in Bethlehem, CT on Monday, August 27th. Invited to address the topic "Life: What a Concept!" were Freeman Dyson, J. Craig Venter, George Church, Robert Shapiro, Dimitar Sasselov, and Seth Lloyd, who focused on their new, and in more than a few cases, startling research, and/or ideas in the biological sciences.

(EDGE video for each speaker)

A small group of journalists interested in the kind of issues that are explored on EDGE were present: Corey Powell,DISCOVER, Jordan Mejias,FRANKFURTER ALLGEMEINE ZEITUNG, Heidi Ledford, MATURE, Greg Huang, NEW SCIENTIST, Deborah Treisman, NEW YORKER, Edward Rothstein, NEW YORK TIMES, Andrian Kreye, SUDDEUTSCHE ZEITUNG, Antonio Regalado, WALL STREET JOURNAL.

(NOTE: Over the weekend both FRANKFURTER ALLGEMEINE ZEITUNG and SUEDDEUTSCHE ZEITUNG ran front page articles in their Feuilletons covering the event, Full translations are provided online.)

We are witnessing a point in which the empirical has intersected with the epistemological: everything becomes new, everything is up for grabs. Big questions are being asked, questions that affect the lives of everyone on the planet. And don't even try to talk about religion: the gods are gone.

Following the theme of new technologies=new perceptions, I asked the speakers to take a third culture slant in the proceedings and explore not only the science but the potential for changes in the intellectual landscape as well.

VIDEO: We are pleased to present streaming video clips from each of the talks (links below). During the fall season EDGE will publish features on each of the talks with complete texts and discussions.

[more]

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FRANKFURTER ALLGEMEINE ZEITUNG
August 31, 2007
FEUILLETON - Front Page

Let's play God!; Life's questions: J. Craig Venter programs the future (Lasst uns Gott spielen!)
By Jordan Mejias

Was Evolution only an interlude?  At the invitation of John Brockman, science luminaries such as J. Craig Venter, Freeman Dyson, Seth Lloyd, Robert Shapiro and others discussed the question: What is Life?

[more]

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SUEDDEUTSCHE ZEITUNG
September 3, 2007
FEUILLETON - Front Page

DARWIN WAS JUST A PHASE
(Darwin war nur eine Phase)
By Andrian Kreye

Country Life in Connecticut: Six scientists find the future in genetic engineering

The origins of life were the subject of discussion on a summer day when six pioneers of science convened at Eastover Farm in Connecticut. The physicist and scientific theorist Freeman Dyson was the first of the speakers to talk on the theme: "Life: What a Concept!" An ironic slogan for one of the most complex problems. Seth Lloyd, quantum physicist at MIT, summed it up with his remark that scientists now know everything about the origin of the Universe and virtually nothing about the origin of life. Which makes it rather difficult to deal with the new world view currently taking shape in the wake of the emerging age of biology.

---------------------------------------------------
THE REALITY CLUB

RICHARD DAWKINS-FREEMAN DYSON: AN EXCHANGE

RICHARD DAWKINS: ...I would say competition between genes within gene pools. The difference between those two ways of putting it is small compared with Dyson's howler (shared by most laymen: it is the howler that I wrote The Selfish Gene partly to dispel, and I thought I had pretty much succeeded, but Dyson obviously hasn't read it!) that natural selection is about the differential survival or extinction of species. ...[more]

FREEMAN DYSON: ...First response. What I wrote is not a howler and Dawkins is wrong. Species once established evolve very little, and the big steps in evolution mostly occur at speciation events when new species appear with new adaptations. ... [more]

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LIFE: WHAT A CONCEPT!

FREEMAN DYSON

To me the most interesting question in biology has always been  how it all got started, so that has been a hobby of mine. And we're all equally ignorant as far as I can see which is why someone like me can pretend to be an expert. ... [more] - Streaming Video

J.CRAIG VENTER

I have come to think of life in much more a gene-centric view than even a genome-centric view, although it kind of oscillates.  And when we talk about the transplant work, genome-centric becomes more important than gene-centric. But we now have a pool, just from the first third of the expedition we discovered roughly 6 million new genes that doubled the number in the public databases when we put them in a few months ago, and we are probably a short ways from doubling that entire number again. ...[more] - Streaming Video

GEORGE CHURCH

Many of the people here worry about "What is life?" But maybe we need to view it in a slightly more general way-not just ribosomes, but inorganic life. Would we know it if we saw it? It's important as we go and discover other worlds, and as we start creating more complicated robots and so forth, to decide where do we draw the line. I think that's interesting. ...[more] - Streaming Video

ROBERT SHAPIRO

I looked at the papers published on the origin of life and decided that it was absurd, the thought that nature of its own volition putting together a DNA or RNA molelcule was unbelievable. I'm always running out of metaphors to try and explain what the difficulty is. ... [more] - Streaming Video

DITIMAR SASSELOV

We often imagine our place in the universe in the same way we experience our lives and the places we inhabit. We imagine a practically static eternal universe where we, and life in general, are born, grow up, and mature; we are merely one of numerous generations. ... This is so untrue! We now know that the universe is 14 and Earth life is 4 billion years old: life and the universe are almost peers. If the universe were a 55-year old, life would be a 16-year old teenager. The universe is nowhere close to being static and unchanging either.... [more] - Streaming Video

SETH LLOYD

Because the universe is, at bottom, processing information, simple systems such as atoms and molecules must necessarily give rise complex structures such as life, and life itself must give rise to even greater complexity, such as human beings, societies, and whatever comes next.... [more] - Streaming Video

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THIRD CULTURE NEWS
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J. CRAIG VENTER INSTITUTE
The first publication of a diploid human genome from one person
Press Release

... "Today, researchers at the J. Craig Venter Institute, along with collaborators from Hospital for Sick Children in Toronto, the University of California, San Diego, and the Universidad de Barcelona in Spain have published the first diploid genome of an individual-Dr. Venter, in PLoS Biology. This analysis and assembly of the 20 billion base pairs of Dr. Venter's DNA is the first look at both sets of his chromosomes (one inherited from each of his parents) and has shown a greater degree and more kinds of genetic variation with human to human variation five to seven times greater than in previous genome analysis....

[More]
---------------------------------------------------
PLOS BIOLOGY
The Diploid Genome Sequence of an Individual Human. Levy S, Sutton G, Ng PC, Feuk L, Halpern AL, et al.


[More]
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THE NEW YORK TIMES
September 4, 2007

In the Genome Race, the Sequel Is Personal
By Nicholas Wade

...But the loser in the race, Dr. Venter, could still have the last word. In a paper published today, his research team is announcing that it has decoded a new version of the human genome that some experts believe may be better than the consortium's....

[More]

---------------------------------------------------
CNN
Genetic variation greater than expected

... The difference between then and now is that many of the questions today center on what you can learn from reading your genetic code and how soon they can get their genomes sequenced....

[More]

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SCIENCE
How to Build a Craig Venter
By Jon Cohen

...For the first time, researchers have published the DNA sequence from both sets of chromosomes in a single person. That person is none other than pioneering genome researcher J. Craig Venter. The new sequence suggests that there is substantially more variation between humans than previously recognized and pushes personalized medicine a step closer. ...

[More]

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THE GUARDIAN
DNA pioneer publishes own genome
Ian Sample, science correspondent

... Based on the study, the team concluded that genetic variation between humans is more than seven times greater than previously thought....

[More]

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XCONOMY | Kendall Square
August 30, 2007

Rubbing Elbows and Dodging Bees With Synthetic Biology Pioneer George Church
By Gregory T. Huang

...It all took place under a white tent on an impossibly pleasant late-summer day in the Connecticut countryside. We were hosted by the literary agent and cultural impresario John Brockman, who regularly brings together well-known visionaries and thinkers as part of his nonprofit Edge Foundation. ...

[More]

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EL NORTE - MEXICO
August 25, 2007

Tercera cultura y política
Alfonso Elizondo

...Para orientarse en los debates ecológicos, sobre el uso de las energías  disponibles y desde el punto de vista de la sustentabilidad, ayuda mucho la idea de la entropía descrita por Nicolás Georgescu-Roegen y Barry Commoner. Para entender a la ética ambientalista no antropocéntrica sirve mucho la comprensión de la teoría sintética de la evolución de S.J. Gould. Para justificar la defensa de la biodiversidad y de la igualdad social ayuda comprender la genética y la biología molecular de Dobzhansky, y para combatir el racismo y la xenofobia conviene conocer los trabajos de genética de poblaciones de Cavalli Sforza y de Jared Diamond. ...

[More]

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THE NEW YORK TIMES
August 28, 2007
SCIENCE TIMES

Through Analysis, Gut Reaction Gains Credibility
By Claudia Dreyfus

...Dr. Gigerenzer, the director of the Max Planck Institute for Human Development in Berlin, is known in social science circles for his breakthrough studies on the nature of intuitive thinking. Before his research, this was a topic often dismissed as crazed superstition. Dr. Gigerenzer, 59, was able to show how aspects of intuition work and how ordinary people successfully use it in modern life....

[More]

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NEW SCIENTIST
August 26, 2007

Evidence for unified theory may lie in black holes
Zeeya Merali

That may not sound much, but Dirac originally envisaged magnetic monopoles as being a single point without volume. Davies believes that if magnetic monopoles have size, and therefore mass, then adding them to a black hole would increase its entropy, even if it is also shrinking ( www.arxiv.org/abs/0708.1783). "It turns out that there's a very subtle balance between these effects, which help to save the monopole," he says.

[More]

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NEW SCIENTIST
August 25, 2007

Editorial: The power of fiction

....We take worthy tomes on vacation, only to sneakily open up a Henry James or a Dan Brown when we get down to the beach. So why do we feel guilty? Why do we feel the need to justify those hours spent curled up with a good book? Why would Rebecca Goldstein, the lead essayist in this week's Science in Fiction special (see "Science in fiction: Essay by Rebecca Goldstein"), feel she needs to defend her life as a novelist?

[More]

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NEW SCIENTIST
August 25, 2007

Science in Fiction: Essay by Rebecca Goldstein

...Can we make art that reflects on the world with which we've been presented by our ever more powerful sciences? Can we explore what these discoveries mean in human terms? Richard Powers's The Time of Our Singing meditates on the non-linear notion of time in the very structure of the story he tells. I tried to do something similar in Properties of Light: A Novel of Love, Betrayal and Quantum Physics, though, as the sub-title signals, I dwell more on the disruptions to our natural ways of thinking prompted by quantum mechanics, by ideas such as quantum non-locality and entanglement. ...

[More]

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NATURE
August 22, 2007

FROM THE BLOGOSPHERE

...What do Eric Lander, Frank Wilczek, James Randi and Martha Stewart have in common? The answer can be found at Nautilus ( http://tinyurl.com/35xbq9): all attended the recent Science Foo Camp, co-organized by Nature Publishing Group, O'Reilly Media and Google, and hosted at the Googleplex in Mountain View, California...

[More]

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VANITY FAIR
September, 2007

God Bless Me. It's a Best-Seller!
The author's book tour-for God Is Not Great-takes a few miraculous turns, including the P.R. boost from Jerry Falwell's demise, a chance encounter with the Archbishop of Canterbury, and surprising support for an attack on religion.

By Christopher Hitchens

[More]

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THE COLBERT REPORT
August 21, 2007

Dr. Michael Shermer

Is Michael Shermer, the publisher of skeptic Magazine, a professional buzz-kill?

[More]

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SCIENTIFIC AMERICAN
September 2007

SKEPTIC
Rational Atheism
An open letter to Messrs. Dawkins, Dennett, Harris and Hitchens

By Michael Shermer

...Whenever religious beliefs conflict with scientific facts or violate principles of political liberty, we must respond with appropriate aplomb. Nevertheless, we should be cautious about irrational exuberance. I suggest that we raise our consciousness one tier higher for the following reasons.

1. Anti-something movements by themselves will fail. Atheists cannot simply define themselves by what they do not believe. As Austrian economist Ludwig von Mises warned his anti-Communist colleagues in the 1950s: "An anti-something movement displays a purely negative attitude. It has no chance whatever to succeed. Its passionate diatribes virtually advertise the program they attack. People must fight for something that they want to achieve, not simply reject an evil, however bad it may be."...

[More]

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SCIENTIFIC AMERICAN
September 2007
ANTIGRAVITY

What's the Big Idea?
When the lightbulb above your head is truly incendiary

By Steve Mirsky

...The book includes 108 contributions, some of which go egghead-to-egghead. For example, physicist and computer scientist W. Daniel Hillis's dangerous idea is "the idea that we should all share our most dangerous ideas." Whereas psychologist Daniel Gilbert's dangerous idea is "the idea that ideas can be dangerous." I both agree and disagree with both....

[More]

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THE NEW YORK TIMES
August 21, 2007
SCIENCE TIMES

Sleights of Mind
Some magicians have intuitively mastered some of the lessons being learned in the laboratory about the limits of cognition and attention.

By George Johnson

...In his opening address, Michael Gazzaniga, the president of the consciousness association, had described another form of prestidigitation - a virtual reality experiment in which he had put on a pair of electronic goggles that projected the illusion of a deep hole opening in what he knew to be a solid concrete floor. Jolted by the adrenaline rush, his heart beat faster and his muscles tensed, a reminder that even without goggles the brain cobbles together a world from whatever it can..."In a sense our reality is virtual," Dr. Gazzaniga said. "Think about flying in an airplane. You're up there in an aluminum tube, 30,000 feet up, going 600 miles an hour, and you think everything is all right."...

[More]

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SLATE
August 18, 2007

THE UNDERCOVER ECONOMIST: THE ECONOMIC MYSTERIES OF DAILY LIFE

Milton Friedman, Meet Richard Feynman
How physics can explain why some countries are rich and others are poor.

By Tim Harford

If economics can tell us something useful about crime, marriage, or carpooling-as I believe it can-then other academic disciplines should have something to tell us about economies. Last month, Science published an example that may turn out to be important. Two physicists, Cesar Hidalgo and Albert-László Barabási, and two economists, Bailey Klinger and Ricardo Hausmann, have been drawing unusual pictures of economic "space" that promise a deeper understanding of the biggest question in economics: why poor countries are poor.

[More]

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NATURE
August 23, 2007
Correspondence

Scientists should unite against threat from religion
By Sam Harris

...At a time when Muslim doctors and engineers stand accused of attempting atrocities in the expectation of supernatural reward, when the Catholic Church still preaches the sinfulness of condom use in villages devastated by AIDS, when the president of the United States repeatedly vetoes the most promising medical research for religious reasons, much depends on the scientific community presenting a united front against the forces of unreason.

There are bridges and there are gangplanks, and it is the business of journals such as Nature to know the difference.

[More]
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NEW SCIENTIST
August 25, 2007

Comment: Atheism à la carte
Lawrence Krauss

But having said that, what on earth does Dawkins think his latest campaign will achieve? It seems to me to be as ill-advised as attempting to label atheists as "brights" - with its implication that those who are not atheists are dumb. Dawkins has a great record of using sound intellectual arguments to try to convince the faithful to abandon their faith and persuade non-believers to be open about their scepticism. But before embarking on this new effort to appeal to people's emotions, he might have been well advised to consult a public relations firm. The scarlet A is strongly reminiscent of the A for "adulterer" in Nathaniel Hawthorne's classic novel The Scarlet Letter. I don't know who thought that this, combined with the phrase "coming out" with its gay connotations, and references to a "Jewish lobby", would win hearts and minds in middle America, but I can't imagine that it will.

[More]

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SCIENCE
August 24, 2007

Sacred Barriers to Conflict Resolution
Scott Atran, Robert Axelrod, and Richard Davis

Efforts to resolve political conflicts or to counter political violence often assume that adversaries make rational choices (1). Ever since the end of the Second World War, "rational actor" models have dominated strategic thinking at all levels of government policy (2) and military planning (3). In the confrontations between nation states, and especially during the Cold War, these models were arguably useful in anticipating an array of challenges and in stabilizing world peace enough to prevent nuclear war. Now, however, we are witnessing "devoted actors" such as suicide terrorists (4), who are willing to make extreme sacrifices that are independent of, or all out of proportion to, likely prospects of success. Nowhere is this issue more pressing than in the Israeli-Palestinian dispute (5). The reality of extreme behaviors and intractability of political conflicts there and discord elsewhere--in the Balkans, Kashmir, Sri Lanka, and beyond--warrant research into the nature and depth of commitment to sacred values....

[More]
-----------------------------------------------------

This online EDGE edition is available at:
http://www.edge.org/documents/archive/edge221.html
----------------------------------------------------
----------------------------------------------------
EDGE

John Brockman, Editor and Publisher
Russell Weinberger, Associate Publisher
Karla Taylor, Editorial Assistant

Copyright (c) 2007 by EDGE Foundation, Inc.
All Rights Reserved.

Published by EDGE Foundation, Inc.,
5 East 59th Street, New York, NY 10022

EDGE Foundation, Inc. is a nonprofit private  operating foundation under
Section 501(c)(3) of  the Internal Revenue Code.
----------------------------------------------------
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Fwd: Edge 212: Jerry Coyne, Gino Segre, Werner Heisenberg



---------- Forwarded message ----------
From: Edge <editor@edge.org>
Date: 6 Jun 2007 19:20
Subject: Edge 212: Jerry Coyne, Gino Segre, Werner Heisenberg
To: Rhys Evans <wheresrhys@gmail.com>

Edge 212
JUNE 6, 2007

(10,400 words)

This EDGE edition, at 10,400 words with video, graphics, and links, is available online:
http://www.edge.org/documents/archive/edge212.html

----------------------------------------------------
THE THIRD CULTURE
----------------------------------------------------

DON'T KNOW MUCH BIOLOGY
By Jerry Coyne

Whether he knows it or not, Brownback's forthright declarations, denying
any possibility that empirical matters of fact might differ from those
assumed by his creed, amount to nothing less than a rejection of the
whole institution of science. Who is "we", and where did "our"
conviction and certainty come from? Would Brownback believe these
"spiritual truths" if he hadn't been taught them as a child, or brought
up in the United States instead of China?

According to Brownback, we should reject scientific findings if they
conflict with our faith, but accept them if they're compatible.  But the
scientific evidence says that humans are big-brained, highly conscious
apes that began evolving on the African savannah four million years
ago.  Are we supposed to reject this as "atheistic theology" (an
oxymoron if there ever was one)?

[More]
http://www.edge.org/documents/archive/edge212.html#coyne

----------------------------------------------------

FAUST IN COPENHAGEN
By Gino Segre

The contrast between the two [Bohr & Pauli], the affection felt for both
of them, and the affection they felt for each other, is manifest in a
skit put on by the young physicists at the April 1932 Copenhagen
meeting. That year was the hundredth anniversary of the death of Johann
Wolfgang von Goethe, the passing of the man, both humanist and
scientist, widely regarded as the last true universal genius. As
commemorations marking the occasion took place all over Europe, this
small band of physicists at the annual informal gathering decided to
have a celebration of their own. It took the form of a sketch, a
tongue-in-cheek adaptation to the world of physics of /Faust, /Goethe's
great drama. In the script, written primarily by Delbr¸ck, noble Bohr
was identified as the Lord, sardonic Pauli as Mephistopheles, and
troubled Ehrenfest as Faust. As in Goethe's version Mephistopheles has
the wittiest lines, but that was of course true of Pauli's real-life
speech as well.

[More]
http://www.edge.org/documents/archive/edge212.html#gs

----------------------------------------------------

SCIENCE AND RELIGION
By Werner Weisenberg


"It's all bound to end in tears." - Wolfgang Pauli

[More]
http://www.edge.org/documents/archive/edge212.html#wh

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THIRD CULTURE NEWS
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THE NEW YORK TIMES - SCIENCE TIMES
June 5, 2007

Essay
The Universe, Expanding Beyond All Understanding
By Dennis Overbye

[More]
http://www.edge.org/documents/archive/edge212.html#nytdo

----------------------------------------------------

NEW YORK REVIEW OF BOOKS
JUNE 14, 2007

The Other Einstein By Lee Smolin

[More]
http://www.edge.org/documents/archive/edge212.html#nyrb

----------------------------------------------------

ENTELECHY
summer/fall 2007 no. 9

The Biology of the Imagination
by Simon Baron-Cohen

[More]
http://www.edge.org/documents/archive/edge212.html#ent

----------------------------------------------------

THE NEW YORK TIMES
June 3, 2007

TTHE WEEK IN REVIEW

6 Billion Bits of Data About Me, Me, Me!
By Amy Harmon

[More]
http://www.edge.org/documents/archive/edge212.html#nyt

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THE OBSERVER
June 3, 2007

Beggars belief
Robin McKie on The God Delusion

[More]
http://www.edge.org/documents/archive/edge212.html#to

----------------------------------------------------

THE INDEPENDENT
June 2, 2007

Tim Lott's Week: Scientists need to use their imagination

[More]
http://www.edge.org/documents/archive/edge212.html#ind

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THE WASHINGTON POST
June 1, 2007

Honey, I'm Gone
Abandoned Beehives Are a Scientific Mystery and a Metaphor for Our
Tenuous Times
By Joel Garreau

[More]
http://www.edge.org/documents/archive/edge212.html#wapo
----------------------------------------------------

NATURAL HISTORY
June, 2007

REVIEWS
Darwin in Court

[More]
http://www.edge.org/documents/archive/edge212.html#nh
----------------------------------------------------

THE GUARDIAN
May 29, 2007

Scientists divided over alliance with religion
By Alok Jha, science correspondent

[More]
http://www.edge.org/documents/archive/edge212.html#guardian
----------------------------------------------------

NATURE
May 24, 2007

Celebrity genomes alarm researchers
Scientists slam sequencing as elitist.
By Erika Check

[More]
http://www.edge.org/documents/archive/edge212.html#nature

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BBC NEWS
May 15, 2007

HAPPINESS WINS SCIENCE BOOK PRIZE

[More]
http://www.edge.org/documents/archive/edge212.html#bbc

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THE COLBERT REPORT
May 15, 2007

WALTER ISAACSON

[More]
http://www.edge.org/documents/archive/edge212.html#colbert

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----------------------------------------------------
This EDGE edition, a t10,400 words with video, graphics, and links, is available online at http://www.edge.org/documents/archive/edge212.html
----------------------------------------------------
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EDGE

John Brockman, Editor and Publisher
Russell Weinberger, Associate Publisher
Karla Taylor, Editorial Assistant

Copyright (c) 2007 by EDGE Foundation, Inc.
All Rights Reserved.

Published by EDGE Foundation, Inc.,
5 East 59th Street, New York, NY 10022

EDGE Foundation, Inc. is a nonprofit private  operating foundation under Section 501(c)(3) of  the Internal Revenue Code.
----------------------------------------------------
----------------------------------------------------
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Fwd: EDGE 211: Why Do Some People Resist Science? Paul Bloom & Deena Skolnick Weisberg



---------- Forwarded message ----------
From: Edge <editor@edge.org>
Date: 30 May 2007 15:18
Subject: EDGE 211: Why Do Some People Resist Science?  Paul Bloom & Deena Skolnick Weisberg
To: Rhys Evans <wheresrhys@gmail.com>

Edge 211
May 29, 2007

(5,600 words)

This EDGE edition, at 5,600 words with video, graphics, and links, is available online at http://www.edge.org/documents/archive/edge211.html

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THE THIRD CULTURE
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NEWSWEEK INTERNATIONAL
June 4, 2007

COVER STORY

LIFE 2.0

A band of maverick scientists-including Craig Venter, who decoded the human genome-are in the verge of rewriting life's genetic code from scratch. They think they can create artificial cells that can manufacture drugs and new materials, prowl the bloodstream for caner and turn sunlight into biofuels. Are they playing God?

By Lee Silver
Newsweek International

June 4, 2007 issue - It last happened about 3.6 billion years ago. a tiny living cell emerged from the dust of the Earth. It replicated itself, and its progeny replicated themselves, and so on, with genetic twists and turns down through billions of generations. Today every living organism-every person, plant, animal and microbe-can trace its heritage back to that first cell. Earth's extended family is the only kind of life that we've observed, so far, in the universe.

This pantheon of living organisms is about to get some newcomers - and we're not talking about extraterrestrials. Scientists in the last couple of years have been trying to create novel forms of life from scratch. They've forged chemicals into synthetic DNA, the DNA into genes, genes into genomes, and built the molecular machinery of completely new organisms in the lab-organisms that are nothing like anything nature has produced.

The people who are defying Nature's monopoly on creation are a loose collection of engineers, computer scientists, physicists and chemists who look at life quite differently than traditional biologists do. Harvard professor George Church wants "to do for biology what Intel does for electronics"-namely, making biological parts that can be assembled into organisms, which in turn can perform any imaginable biological activity. Jay Keasling at UC Berkeley received $42 million from Bill Gates to create living microfactories that manufacture a powerful antimalaria agent. And then there's Craig Venter, the legendary biotech entrepreneur who made his name by decoding the human genome for a tenth of the predicted cost and in a tenth of the predicted time. Venter has put tens of millions of dollars of his own money into Synthetic Genomics, a start-up, to make artificial organisms that convert sunlight into biofuel, with minimal environmental impact and zero net release of greenhouse gases. These organisms, he says, will "replace the petrochemical industry, most food, clean energy and bioremediation."
[...more]
http://www.edge.org/documents/archive/edge211.html#nw
                         -----------------------

MAKING IT HAPPEN
Craig Venter galvanized the Human Genome Project. Can he do it for synthetic biology?

By Barrett Sheridan
Newsweek International

June 4, 2007 issue - Craig Venter is the rude boy of molecular biology. He made himself famous by decoding the human genome faster and cheaper than anyone expected, beating a team of rivals led by the U.S. National Institutes of Health. Since then, Venter has spent much of his time aboard Sorcerer II, his high-tech research vessel, trolling the seas in search of new proteins. The findings will be helpful, he says, on his next project: synthesizing a living organism from a handful of inert chemicals. If he succeeds, he'll be able to turn cells into biochemical factories that can churn out biofuels. NEWSWEEK's Barrett Sheridan spoke with him by phone from Edinburgh, Scotland, on the problems and potential of synthetic biology. [...more]
http://www.edge.org/documents/archive/edge211.html#nw
                         ------------------------
OUR SYNTHETIC FUTURES
What might happen if we repurpose biology to our own ends?

Web-exclusive commentary
by Rudy Rucker
Newsweek
May 27, 2007

The SynBio approach is onto something big-a new version of nanotechnology, which is the craft of manufacturing things at the molecular scale. SynBio's plan is to capitalize on the fact that biology is already doing molecular fabrication all the time. What might happen if we repurpose biology to our own ends?

One big worry is what nanotechnologists call the "gray-goo problem." What's to stop a particularly virulent SynBio organism from eating everything on earth? My guess is that this could never happen. Every existing plant, animal, fungus and protozoan already aspires to world domination. There's nothing more ruthless than viruses and bacteria-and they've been practicing for a very long time. [...more]
http://www.edge.org/documents/archive/edge211.html#nw
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WHY DO SOME PEOPLE RESIST SCIENCE?
By Paul Bloom and Deena Skolnick Weisberg

...In sum, the developmental data suggest that resistance to science will arise in children when scientific claims clash with early emerging, intuitive expectations. This resistance will persist through adulthood if the scientific claims are contested within a society, and will be especially strong if there is a non-scientific alternative that is rooted in common sense and championed by people who are taken as reliable and trustworthy. This is the current situation in the United States with regard to the central tenets of neuroscience and of evolutionary biology. These clash with intuitive beliefs about the immaterial nature of the soul and the purposeful design of humans and other animals - and, in the United States, these intuitive beliefs are particularly likely to be endorsed and transmitted by trusted religious and political authorities. Hence these are among the domains where Americans' resistance to science is the strongest. ...

PAUL BLOOM is a psychologist at Yale University and the author of DESCARTES BABY. DEENA SKOLNICK WEISBERG is a doctoral candidate in psychology at Yale University.

[MORE]
http://www.edge.org/documents/archive/edge211.html#bloom2
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PEN/ROBERT BINGHAM FELLOWSHIP FOR WRITERS AWARDED TO JANNA LEVIN

The fellowship honors an exceptionally talented fiction writer whose debut work-a novel or collection of short stories published in 2006-represents distinguished literary achievement and suggests great promise.

2007 Awardee

This year's PEN/Robert Bingham Fellow is Janna Levin for her novel A MADMAN DREAMS OF TURING MACHINES Machines (Knopf).

[MORE]
http://www.edge.org/documents/archive/edge211.html#levin
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THIRD CULTURE NEWS
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THE COLBERT REPORT
May 21, 2007

[Video] JARED DIAMOND

Author Jared Diamond has a book that tells why civilization succeeds. Yeh, I've read it. It's called The Bible.

"Jared Diamond tells Stephen we have about another 50 years to go." ...

[MORE]
http://www.edge.org/documents/archive/edge211.html#colbert
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THE NEW YORK TIMES
SUNDAY BOOK REVIEW
May 27, 2007

'THE CANON: A WHIRLIGIG TOUR OF THE BEAUTIFUL BASICS OF SCIENCE' BY NATALIE ANGIER
Reviewed by Steven Pinker

A refresher course on the fundamentals of science that every person should master.

[MORE]
http://www.edge.org/documents/archive/edge211.html#nytbr
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TEXAS MONTHLY
June 2007

HUMAN MATE SELECTION IS A MANY-SPLENDORED THING

David Buss has a grand unified theory about the evolution of desire. His research has identified 115 love acts, 147 things you can do to upset or annoy the opposite sex, and 237 reasons to copulate. But can that help me find romance?

by Karen Olsson

[MORE]
http://www.edge.org/documents/archive/edge211.html#tm
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THE OBSERVER
May 27, 2007

MY WEEK: RICHARD DAWKINS

Travelling via the US is a bit of a trial for the evolutionary biologist, thanks to security gone mad. But later, he goes on to encounter another, lovely, kind of booby - and a terrific eco-friendly sports car

[MORE]
http://www.edge.org/documents/archive/edge211.html#rd
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THE COLBERT REPORT
May 24, 2007

[Video] JIMMY WALES

Wikipedia founder Jimmy Wales says that his staff is scrambling to protect Wikipedia from Stephen....

[MORE]
http://www.edge.org/documents/archive/edge211.html#wales
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CHARLIE ROSE
May 24, 2007

[Video] DAVID ROCKWELL

A conversation with architect David Rockwell. His book, co-authored with Bruce Mau, is "Spectacle". ...

[MORE]
http://www.edge.org/documents/archive/edge211.html#rockwell
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THE WALL STREET JOURNAL
May 25, 2007

SCIENCE JOURNAL

BIODIVERSE MYSPACE? ONLINE ENCYCLOPEDIA TO NAME ALL SPECIES

By Robert Lee Hotz

Harvard biologist E.O. Wilson and his colleagues launched the new online Encyclopedia of Life with $12.5 million from the MacArthur Foundation and the Sloan Foundation. Over the next decade, they intend to create a Web page for every species known and named. "We are going for nothing less than the complete mapping of the world's biodiversity," Dr. Wilson said. ...

[MORE]
http://www.edge.org/documents/archive/edge211.html#hotz
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LATE NIGHT WITH CONAN O'BRIEN
May 23, 2007

[Video] MARK 'DR. BUGS' MOFFETT

Conan meets some jealous slugs, a deadly frog, and a lesbian lizard....

[MORE]
http://www.edge.org/documents/archive/edge211.html#mm
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MOVIE WEB
May 3, 2007

PBS GREENLIGHTS WIRED SCIENCE TO PREMIERE IN OCTOBER

PBS has picked up the first season of Wired Science, a production of KCET/Los Angeles in association with Wired Magazine, to premiere nationwide October 3, 2007, at 8 p.m. The 10-week primetime series translates Wired's award-winning journalism, design and irreverent attitude into a fast-paced, one-hour weekly television show that will span the globe to chronicle the scientific advances and technologies that are transforming the world.

[MORE]
http://www.edge.org/documents/archive/edge211.html#mw
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EDGE BOOKS
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WHAT IS YOUR DANGEROUS IDEA?
Today's Leading Thinkers on the Unthinkable
With an Introduction by STEVEN PINKER and an Afterword by RICHARD DAWKINS Edited By JOHN BROCKMAN

Harper Perennial, US
Free Press, UK

"A selection of the most explosive ideas of our age."- SUNDAY HERALD

"Provocative" - THE INDEPENDENT

"Challenging notions put forward by some of the world's sharpest minds"-  SUNDAY TIMES

"A titillating compilation" - THE GUARDIAN

"Danger - brilliant minds at work...A brilliant book: exhilarating, hilarious, and chilling." _ THE EVENING STANDARD (London)

----------------------------------------------------

WHAT WE BELIEVE BUT CANNOT PROVE
Today's Leading Thinkers on Science in the Age of Certainty
With an Introduction by IAN MCEWAN
Edited By JOHN BROCKMAN

Harper Perennial, US
Pocket Books, UK

"...This collection, mostly written by working scientists, does not represent the antithesis of science. These are not simply the unbuttoned musings of professionals on their day off. The contributions, ranging across many disparate fields, express the spirit of a scientific consciousness at its best - informed guesswork" - Ian McEwan, from the Introduction,in THE TELEGRAPH

"An unprecedented roster of brilliant minds, the sum of which is nothing short of an oracle - a book to be dog-eared and debated." - SEED

"Scientific pipedreams at their very best." - THE GUARDIAN

"Astounding reading." - BOSTON GLOBE

"Fantastically stimulating." - BBC RADIO 4

"Intellectual and creative magnificence." THE SKEPTICAL INQUIRER

----------------------------------------------------
----------------------------------------------------
This EDGE edition, at 5,600 words with video, graphics, and links, is available online at http://www.edge.org/documents/archive/edge211.html
----------------------------------------------------
----------------------------------------------------
EDGE

John Brockman, Editor and Publisher
Russell Weinberger, Associate Publisher
Karla Taylor, Editorial Assistant

Copyright (c) 2007 by EDGE Foundation, Inc.
All Rights Reserved.

Published by EDGE Foundation, Inc.,
5 East 59th Street, New York, NY 10022

EDGE Foundation, Inc. is a nonprofit private  operating foundation under Section 501(c)(3) of  the Internal Revenue Code.
----------------------------------------------------
----------------------------------------------------
---
You are currently subscribed to edge_editions as: wheresrhys@gmail.com

To unsubscribe send a blank email to leave-2667200-13069806A@sand.lyris.net
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Fwd: EDGE 210: Neil Turok: The Cyclic Universe



---------- Forwarded message ----------
From: Edge <editor@edge.org>
Date: 17 May 2007 21:09
Subject: EDGE 210: Neil Turok: The Cyclic Universe
To: Rhys Evans <wheresrhys@gmail.com>

EDGE 210
May 16, 2007

(9,300 words)

This EDGE edition, at 9,300 words with video, graphics, and links, is available online at
http://www.edge.org/documents/archive/edge210.html

----------------------------------------------------
THE THIRD CULTURE
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THE CYCLIC UNIVERSE [5.16.07]
A Talk with Neil Turok

"In recent years, the search for the fundamental laws of nature has forced us to think about the Big Bang much more deeply. According to our best theories - string theory and M theory - all of the details of the laws of physics are actually determined by the structure of the universe; specifically, by the arrangement of tiny, curled-up extra dimensions of space. This is a very beautiful picture: particle physics itself is now just another aspect of cosmology. But if you want to understand why the extra dimensions are arranged the way they are, you have to understand the Big Bang because that's where everything came from."

Edge Video

NEIL TUROK holds the Chair of Mathematical Physics in the department of applied mathematics and theoretical physics at Cambridge University. He is coauthor, with Paul Steinhardt, of ENDLESS UNIVERSE: BEYOND THE BIG BANG.

[MORE]
http://www.edge.org/documents/archive/edge210.html#turok
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THE ENCYCLOPEDIA OF LIFE [ 5.8.07]
A Leap for All Life: World's Leading Scientists Announce Creation of "Encyclopedia of Life"

IMAGINE an electronic for each species of organism on earth available everywhere by single access on command.
- E.O. Wilson

Biodiversity, Science Communities Unite Behind Epic Effort To Promote Biodiversity, Document All 1.8 Million Named Species on Planet

Comprehensive, collaborative, ever-growing, and personalized, the Encyclopedia of Life is an ecosystem of websites that makes all key information about life on Earth accessible to anyone, anywhere in the world. Our goal is to create a constantly evolving encyclopedia that lives on the Internet, with contributions from scientists and amateurs alike. To transform the science of biology, and inspire a new generation of scientists, by aggregating all known data about every living species. And ultimately, to increase our collective understanding of life on Earth, and safeguard the richest possible spectrum of biodiversity.


[MORE]
http://www.edge.org/documents/archive/edge210.html#encyclopedia
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E.O. WILSON: TED PRIZE WISH: HELP BUILD THE ENCYCLOPEDIA OF LIFE [5.8.07]
Chris Anderson, TED Curator

Those of us in Monterey this year watched in awe as E O Wilson unveiled his inspiring TED Prize wish to create an Encyclopedia of Life. (If you weren't there, you can see it at the link above). As E.O. Wilson accepts his 2007 TED Prize, he makes a plea on behalf of his constituents, the insects and small creatures, to learn more about our biosphere. We know so little about nature, he says, that we're still discovering tiny organisms indispensable to life; yet we're still steadily destroying nature. Wilson identifies five grave threats to biodiversity (a term he coined), using the acronym HIPPO, and makes his TED wish: that we will work together on the Encyclopedia of Life, a web-based compendium of data from scientists and amateurs on every aspect of the biosphere.

In Washington DC this morning, the first big step in that dream came true. Five major scientific institutions, backed by a $50m funding commitment led by the MacArthur Foundation, announced the launch of a global effort to launch the Encyclopedia. Ed Wilson described today's announcement as a
dream come true.

[MORE]
http://www.edge.org/documents/archive/edge210.html#ted
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SATURN BACKLIT BY THE SUN
Steven Pinker

One of these days, EDGE may want to run this photo, which planetary scientist Carolyn Porco, leader of the Imaging Team for the Cassini mission to Saturn, showed us at the TED Conference: Saturn backlit by the sun, with the Earth appearing as a tiny dot in upper left (shown in the inset blowup). It is not only perhaps the most stunning photograph ever taken, but the fact that it has not appeared on the cover of TIME, NEW YORK TIMES, etc., is a sign of our culture's indifference to science. This is truly awe-inspiring - not just visually beautiful, but a mind-boggling technical achievement, and a way to depict the finiteness and fragility of the planet in a way that we haven't experienced since the famous "Earthrise" photo from the Apollo program in the late 1960s. - Steve Pinker


[MORE]
http://www.edge.org/documents/archive/edge210.html#saturn
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TIME [ 5.3.07]
THE TIME 100

The People Who Shape Our World Here's our list of the 100 men and women whose power, talent or moral example is transforming the world.

SCIENTISTS & THINKERS

J. CRAIG VENTER
By Jean-Michel Cousteau

When it comes to creatures living in the oceans, I, like most people, have always been enthralled by the popular favorites such as whales, polar bears and sea otters. It takes a special person to appreciate that there is just as much wonder to be found in the ocean's smallest and humblest organic forms-the microbes, genes and proteins without which the more charismatic creatures wouldn't exist at all.

[MORE]
http://www.edge.org/documents/archive/edge210.html#time

LISA RANDALL
By Julie Rawe

Lisa Randall's nonphysicist friends knew she was onto something big when she presented her work at a conference and Stephen Hawking saved her a seat at the banquet afterward. As the first female theoretical physicist to gain tenure at Harvard, Randall, 44, has not only been invited to sit with the boys but has also been leading the conversation because of her ideas about extra dimensions beyond the three that we can see and feel. She's not the first person to theorize that the universe has hidden dimensions, but she revolutionized the field by suggesting that an extra dimension could be infinitely large and that we might be living in a 3-D sinkhole in a higher-dimensional universe. Far from posing idle brain teasers, her research might solve one of physics' great mysteries-namely, why gravity is so weak in contrast to electromagnetism and other forces. (Note how a small magnet can pluck up a paper clip despite the gravitational pull of the entire planet.) After doing some mind-blowing math, she thinks the warped geometry of space-time could mean gravity is weak here and strong elsewhere.

[MORE]
http://www.edge.org/documents/archive/edge210.html#time

RICHARD DAWKINS
By Michael Behe

Of Richard Dawkins' nine books, none caused as much controversy or sold as well as last year's THE GOD DELUSION. The central idea-popular among readers and deeply unsettling among proponents of intelligent design like myself-is that religion is a so-called virus of the mind, a simple artifact of cultural evolution, no more or less meaningful than eye color or height.

[MORE]
http://www.edge.org/documents/archive/edge210.html#time

CHRIS ANDERSON
By Malcolm Gladwell

All writers are in search of the Big Idea. A Big Idea has to matter. But you can have only one of them. Your Big Idea can't be that there are, say, 89 Rules of Power. E=mc(2) was, technically speaking, a Big Idea. But not really, because the best Big Ideas are also transparent. Truly Big Ideas are the rarest of phenomena, and when I first came upon Chris Anderson's THE LONG TAIL last year, I knew this was one.

[MORE]
http://www.edge.org/documents/archive/edge210.html#time

----------------------------------------------------
EDGE BOOKS
----------------------------------------------------

WHAT IS YOUR DANGEROUS IDEA?
Today's Leading Thinkers on the Unthinkable
With an Introduction by STEVEN PINKER and an Afterword by RICHARD DAWKINS
Edited By JOHN BROCKMAN

Harper Perennial, US
Free Press, UK

"A selection of the most explosive ideas of our age."- SUNDAY HERALD

"Provocative" - THE INDEPENDENT

"Challenging notions put forward by some of the world's sharpest minds"-
SUNDAY TIMES

"A titillating compilation" - THE GUARDIAN

"Danger - brilliant minds at work...A brilliant book: exhilarating, hilarious, and chilling." _ THE EVENING STANDARD (London)


----------------------------------------------------

WHAT WE BELIEVE BUT CANNOT PROVE
Today's Leading Thinkers on Science in the Age of Certainty
With an Introduction by IAN MCEWAN
Edited By JOHN BROCKMAN

Harper Perennial, US
Pocket Books, UK

"...This collection, mostly written by working scientists, does not represent the antithesis of science. These are not simply the unbuttoned musings of professionals on their day off. The contributions, ranging across many disparate fields, express the spirit of a scientific consciousness at its best - informed guesswork" - Ian McEwan, from the Introduction,in THE TELEGRAPH

"An unprecedented roster of brilliant minds, the sum of which is nothing short of an oracle - a book to be dog-eared and debated." - SEED

"Scientific pipedreams at their very best." - THE GUARDIAN

"Astounding reading." - BOSTON GLOBE

"Fantastically stimulating." - BBC RADIO 4

"Intellectual and creative magnificence." THE SKEPTICAL INQUIRER

----------------------------------------------------
THIRD CULTURE NEWS
----------------------------------------------------
THE GUARDIAN
May 16, 2007

Search for happiness scoops science prize

By Alok Jha

A search for the scientific basis for happiness has beaten the tale of the world's most famous tortoise and the history of humans in Britain to be named this year's best science book.

Harvard psychologist Daniel Gilbert received the prestigious Royal Society Prize for STUMBLING ON HAPPINESS, which questions the idea that any of us know what happiness actually is, never mind how to achieve or maintain it. He received a £10,000 cheque from the Royal Society's president, Martin Rees, at a ceremony in London this evening. ...

[MORE]
http://www.edge.org/documents/archive/edge210.html#guardian
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THE BOSTON GLOBE
May 13, 2007

Unbelievable
That's what religion is, says Christopher Hitchens in his profoundly
skeptical manifesto

By Daniel C. Dennett

In earlier ages reliable information was rather hard to get, and in general people could be excused for taking the founding myths of their religions on faith. These were the "facts" that "everyone knew," and anybody who had a skeptical itch could check it out with the local priest or rabbi or imam, or other religious authority. Today, there is really no excuse for such ignorance. It may not be your fault if you don't know the facts about the history and tenets of your own religion, but it is somebody's fault. Or more charitably, perhaps we have all been victimized by an accumulation of tradition that strongly enjoins us to lapse into a polite lack of curiosity about these facts, for fear of causing offense. It is rude, after all, to point out somebody's ignorance or gullibility. Besides, if you start calling attention to the frankly incredible creeds and deeds of other religions, they may retaliate and expose some of the embarrassing signs of all-too-human tampering with the heroic tales and traditions of your own tribe.

[MORE]
http://www.edge.org/documents/archive/edge210.html#globe
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NEW YORKER
May 7, 2007

Morality 2012

The social and cultural psychologist Jonathan Haidt talks with Henry Finder about the five foundations of morality, and why liberals often fail to get their message across. From "2012: Stories from the Near Future," the 2007 NEW YORKER Conference.

[MORE]
http://www.edge.org/documents/archive/edge210.html#newyorker
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NEW YORKER
May 7, 2007

ATHEISTS WITH ATTITUDE
Why do they hate Him?

By Anthony Gottlieb

...Since all the arguments against belief have been widely publicized for a long time, today's militant atheists mus sometimes wonder why religion persists. Hitchens says that it is born of fear and probably ineradicable. Harris holds that there are genuine spiritual experiences; having kicked sand in the faces of Judaism, Christianity, and Islam he dives headlong into the surf of Eastern spirituality, encouraging readers to try Buddhist techniques of meditation instead of dangerous creeds. Dawkins devotes a chapter, and Dennett most of his book, to evolutionary accounts of how religion may have arisen and how its ideas spread. It's thin stuff, and Dennett stresses that these are early days for biological account of religion. It may, however, be too late for one. If a propensity toward religious belief is "hard-wired" in the brain, as it is sometimes said to be, the wiring has evidently become frayed. This is especially true in rich countries, nearly all of which-Ireland and America are exceptions-have relatively high rates of unbelief.

[MORE]
http://www.edge.org/documents/archive/edge210.html#newyorker
----------------------------------------------------
PROSPECT
MAY 2007

Why Home Doesn't Matter

The BBC series "Child of Our Time" assumes that studying children with their parents will help us understand how their personalities develop. But this is a mistake: parents influence their children mainly by passing on their genes. The biggest environmental influences on personality are those that occur outside the home

By Judith Rich Harris

During much of the 20th century, it was considered impolite and unscientific to say that genes play any role in determining people's personalities, talents or intelligence. But we're in the 21st century now, the era of the genome. So when Robert Winston informs us, at the opening of each episode of the BBC1 documentary series Child of Our Time, that we're going to "find out what makes us who we are," we know he's going to say that people are the way they are partly for genetic reasons. (In case you've missed it, Child of Our Time is a project tracking the lives of 25 children for their first 20 years, returning to them each year to assess their progress. This year's series-the seventh-is being screened in three episodes, starting on Sunday 6th May.)

[MORE]
http://www.edge.org/documents/archive/edge210.html#prospect
----------------------------------------------------
PUBLISHERS WEEKLY
April 28, 2007

Authors Shine at LA Times Book Prizes
By Bridget Kinsella

...Eric R. Kandel, who has also won the Nobel Prize, joked about the difference between Stockholm verses Los Angeles, where he won the Science prize for IN SEARCH OF MEMORY: THE EMERGENCE OF A NEW SCIENCE OF MIND ( W.W. Norton). "When you go to Stockholm, you know you've got the prize," he said. The LAT doesn't tell the winners ahead of time. ...

[MORE]
http://www.edge.org/documents/archive/edge210.html#PW
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THE NATION
May 28, 2007

Among the Disbelievers
By Daniel Lazare

...For a long time, religion had been doing quite nicely as a kind of minor entertainment. Christmas and Easter were quite unthinkable without it, not to mention Hanukkah and Passover. But then certain enthusiasts took things too far by crashing airliners into office towers in the name of Allah, launching a global crusade to rid the world of evil and declaring the jury still out on Darwinian evolution. As a consequence, religion now looks nearly as bad as royalism did in the late eighteenth century. But while united in their resolve to throw the bum out--God, that is--the antireligious forces appear to have given little thought to what to replace Him with should He go. They may not face the guillotine as a consequence. But they could end up making even bigger fools of themselves than the theologians they criticize.

Richard Dawkins is a case in point. It is no surprise that, along with Sam Harris, author of THE END OF FAITH and LETTER TO A CHRISTIAN NATION, and Daniel Dennett, author of BREAKING THE SPELL: RELIGION AS A NATURAL PHENOMENON, he has emerged at the head of a growing intellectual movement aimed at relegating religion to the proverbial scrapheap of history (which by this point must be filled to overflowing). ...

[MORE]
http://www.edge.org/documents/archive/edge210.html#nation
----------------------------------------------------
THE TIMES
May 12, 2007

How dare you call me a fundamentalist
The right to criticise 'faith-heads'

By Richard Dawkins

...Several critics began with the ominous phrase, "I'm an atheist, BUT . . ." So here is my brief rebuttal to criticisms originating from this "belief in belief" school.

[MORE]
http://www.edge.org/documents/archive/edge210.html#times
----------------------------------------------------
THE NEW YORK TIMES
May 13, 2007
BUSINESS

LANDING IN PRINCETON Back from his space travels, Charles Simonyi, a multimillionaire and a former executive at Microsoft, is taking up a new challenge: serving as chairman of the trustees at the Institute for Advanced Study in Princeton. Albert Einstein was a longtime faculty member at the theoretical research institute, where he sought to gain greater knowledge of the physical universe.

Mr. Simonyi spent $25 million getting closer to the universe on a 14-day trip on a Russian Soyuz spacecraft last month.

He has also spent $25 million donating money to the institute, where he has been a trustee since 1997.

The Hungarian-born Mr. Simonyi, 58, will take over his new post from James D. Wolfensohn, the former World Bank president, who is retiring after 21 years as the institute's chairman. ELIZABETH OLSEN

[MORE]
http://www.edge.org/documents/archive/edge210.html#nyt
----------------------------------------------------
THE WALL STREET JOURNAL
May 11, 2007; Page B1
SCIENCE JOURNAL

Scientists Draw Link Between Morality And Brain's Wiring
By Robert Lee Hotz

Most of us feel a rush of righteous certainty in the face of a moral challenge, an intuitive sense of right or wrong hard to ignore yet difficult to articulate.

A provocative medical experiment conducted recently by neuroscientists at Harvard, Caltech and the University of Southern California strongly suggests these impulsive convictions come not from conscious principles but from the brain trying to make its emotional judgment felt.

[MORE]
http://www.edge.org/documents/archive/edge210.html#wsj
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THE COLBERT REPORT
May 8, 2007

NASSIM NICHOLAS TALEB

Nassim Nicholas Taleb believes we create stories to convince ourselves that the future is predictable
http://www.edge.org/documents/archive/edge210.html#colbert
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THE BOSTON GLOBE
May 8, 2007

Cataloguing every species on earth
By Colin Nickerson

Spurred by fears that thousands of animals, plants, and microbes will disappear from the planet before scientists can properly study them, a consortium of world-famous research institutions and funding foundations tomorrow will launch an effort to compile an enormous, computer-based "Encyclopedia of Life" to catalog every species known or found. ...

... Our ignorance is dangerous," said Edward O. Wilson, a pioneering researcher of global biodiversity, professor emeritus of entomology at Harvard, and long-time crusader for creation of an accessible encyclopedia of all life. "Life forms with which we've shared the planet are going extinct at an alarming rate -- usually before we even determine what they are and what role they play in the ecosystem. "Our knowledge of biodiversity is so incomplete that we are at risk of losing a great deal of it before it is even discovered." ...

[MORE]
http://www.edge.org/documents/archive/edge210.html#globe2
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THE GUARDIAN
May 7, 2007

The New Atheists loathe religion far too much to plausibly challenge it

Anti-faith proselytising is a growth industry. But its increasingly hysterical flag-bearers are heading for a spectacular failure

By Madeleine Bunting
It's an extraordinary publishing phenomenon - atheism sells. Any philosopher, professional polemicist or scientist with worries about their pension plan must now be feverishly working on a book proposal. Richard Dawkins has been in the bestseller lists on both sides of the Atlantic since THE GOD DELUSION came out last autumn following Daniel Dennett's success with BREAKING THE SPELL. Sam Harris, a previously unknown neuroscience graduate, has now clocked up two bestsellers, THE END OF FAITH and LETTER TO A CHRISTIAN NATION. Last week, Christopher Hitchens' GOD IS NOT GREAT: HOW RELIGION POISONS EVERYTHING was published in the US. The science writer, Matt Ridley, recently commented that on one day at Princeton he met no fewer than three intellectual luminaries hard at work on their God books.

[MORE]
http://www.edge.org/documents/archive/edge210.html#guardian2
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THE PRESS
(Christchurch, New Zealand)
May 5, 2007

"WHAT IS YOUR DANGEROUS IDEA?" Edited By John Brockman
By Howard Williams

I enjoy dipping into a book of an evening and I can certainly recommend this one. The sometimes but by no means always outrageous ideas proposed by the 108 contributors to this book cover a wide range of science, economics, philosophy, politics, religion and the cosmos. This book is written to provoke, and it succeeds. It will, without doubt, annoy and stimulate many readers. That is what books are for. Having just enjoyed Richard Dawkins' book about religion and delusion - he writes a postscript to this book - it was comforting to see how many other thinkers are of the same mind: that life has no meaning, we are here by evolutionary accident, we are alone in the universe. For those who are not rationalists, mind that blood pressure.

[MORE]
http://www.edge.org/documents/archive/edge210.html#nz
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DE GROENE AMSTERDAMMER
April 20, 2007

Dawkins: God als misvatting (The God Delusion)

...Initially Dawkins seemed to be afraid of his own neoplatonism, but he could not let go of the idea and was more and more passionately looking for unexpected connections between genetic and cultural evolution. He became one of the most prominent representatives of the Third Culture, a group of scientists who aspired to take over the role of traditional intellectuals (philosophers, writers and academics of the arts and humanities) in society.

[MORE]
http://www.edge.org/documents/archive/edge210.html#amsterdammer
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TIME
May 3, 2007

The TIME 100

Paul Allen
By Steven Pinker

Paul Allen is the world's most obscure celebrity, its hippest geek, its most flamboyant introvert. He is also one of its most successful dropouts.  The other is Bill Gates, Allen's Seattle high school chum, with whom he founded a company called Microsoft in 1975.

[MORE]
http://www.edge.org/documents/archive/edge210.html#time2
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TIME
May 3, 2007

The TIME 100

Svante Pääbo
By J. Craig Venter

Even after 148 years, many people still argue about whether Charles Darwin's theory on human evolution is correct. Svante Pääbo has done more than argue, conducting some of the most exacting work ever attempted on the DNA of human and nonhuman primates, including his spectacular 2006 announcement that he had decoded fragments of DNA from remains of Neanderthals. In so doing, he is replacing speculation with scientific fact.

[MORE]
http://www.edge.org/documents/archive/edge210.html#time3
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THE CHRONICLE REVIEW
May 4, 2007

Toward a Unified Theory of Einstein's Life
By John Horgan

In 1921, during a seemingly endless reception in his honor in Washington, Albert Einstein said to the diplomat next to him, "I've just developed a new theory of eternity." That quip came to mind after two new Einstein biographies, which together total more than 1,000 pages, thudded on my doorstep.

Walter Isaacson, a biographer and former executive at CNN and Time, and Jürgen Neffe, a German science journalist, resemble guests who show up, clutching Champagne bottles, for a party that has just ended. At least a dozen books on Einstein were published in 2005, the 100th anniversary of his five revolutionary papers on relativity, quantum mechanics, and thermodynamics. Einstein's "miraculous year" was also celebrated in countless conferences, museum exhibits, and articles in magazines, journals, and newspapers. I contributed a couple of essays to THE NEW YORK TIMES and spoke at an event about relativity at my institution.

[MORE]
http://www.edge.org/documents/archive/edge210.html#chronicle2
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FRESH AIR WITH TERRY GROSS
May 1, 2007

'Lucifer Effect' Asks Why Good People Go Bad

Best known for the landmark Stanford Prison Experiment - in which student volunteers in a mock prison transformed with startling speed into sadistic guards or emotionally broken prisoners - Philip Zimbardo has written a book on the psychology of the unspeakable. It's called THE LUCIFER EFFECT: UNDERSTANDING HOW GOOD PEOPLE TURN EVIL.

[MORE]
http://www.edge.org/documents/archive/edge210.html#npr
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THE WASHINGTON POST
April 30, 2007

When Seeing Is Disbelieving
By Shankar Vedantam

...Nor are U.S. presidents alone when it comes to deluding themselves: Successful politicians may just be more skilled at self-deception than the rest of us. Most people, perhaps all, seem hard-wired to be able to interpret reality to suit their ends.

Self-deception has been uncovered in a wide range of situations, says Robert L. Trivers, an evolutionary biologist at Rutgers University who has studied the phenomenon. Before the Challenger explosion, for example, NASA engineers noticed that one of the O-rings on the space shuttle had been eaten a third of the way through. Since the shuttle had flown and returned to Earth, the engineers concluded that it was not a problem. Surveys show that four in five high school seniors believe they have exceptional leadership ability, and nearly every single professor in the country believes he or she is above average.

[MORE]
http://www.edge.org/documents/archive/edge210.html#wapo
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AERO-NEWS.NET
April 30, 2007
Dreamlike... Flying With Professor Stephen Hawking

A Brief History Of A Day In The Life Of An 'Amazing' Man

by ANN Editor-In-Chief and Zero-G Photographer Jim Campbell Driving back from the Shuttle Landing Facility aboard a NASA crew bus, I watched an amazing man form his first cohesive words, following a triumphant, albeit temporary, release from the clutches of gravity...

[MORE]
http://www.edge.org/documents/archive/edge210.html#aero
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This EDGE edition, at 9,300 words with video, graphics, and links, is
available online at http://www.edge.org/documents/archive/edge210.html
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EDGE

John Brockman, Editor and Publisher
Russell Weinberger, Associate Publisher
Karla Taylor, Editorial Assistant

Copyright (c) 2007 by EDGE Foundation, Inc.
All Rights Reserved.

Published by EDGE Foundation, Inc.,
5 East 59th Street, New York, NY 10022

EDGE Foundation, Inc. is a nonprofit private  operating foundation under Section 501(c)(3) of  the Internal Revenue Code.
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