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No. 13Summer 2006

No. 13

Summer 2006

Correspondence

Biocapitalism

Essays

Shop Class as Soulcraft

Matthew B. Crawford makes a case for the manual trades

Gifts of the Body

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

The Self-Portrait of a Scientist

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

A Third Way on Network Neutrality

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

The First Fourteen Days of Human Life

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

The Myth of Thomas Szasz

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

The Methanol Alternative

Robert Zubrin on how to alleviate our energy problems

Medicine Without Limits

Daniel P. Sulmasy on therapy, enhancement, and sophistry

Babies for Sale

Cheryl Miller on buying and selling our offspring

On the Shelf

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

China’s Phony Science

Exposing Corruption, Plagiarism, and Fraud

Rethinking Peer Review

How the Internet is Changing Science Journals

Cyber-Insecurity

Computer Theft Puts Veterans’ Data at Risk

Sexist Science?

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

‘Stumbling into a Powerful Technology’

Baroness Greenfield on New Media and Young Minds

Notes & Briefs

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

Stop the Pop

Looking Back

The Stem Cell President

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No. 14Fall 2006

No. 14

Fall 2006

Correspondence

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

Essays

The Paradox of Military Technology

Max Boot on American power and American vulnerability

The Moral Challenge of Modern Science

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

The Case for Kidney Markets

Benjamin Hippen on how to solve the kidney shortage

Is the Body Property?

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

Beyond the Right to Life

Wilfred M. McClay on the “Party of Death”

The Agony of Atomic Genius

Algis Valiunas on the tragedy of J. Robert Oppenheimer

Cloning’s Apologist

Caitrin Nicol on Ian Wilmut’s defense of research cloning

C. S. Lewis Goes to the Laboratory

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

Too Speculative?

Henry Sokolski

The Dotcomrade

Brian Boyd

The Touchy-Feely Laboratory

Christine Rosen

Space Deals

Rand Simberg

Eco-Censorship

Iain Murray

Techno-Horror in Hollywood

Sonny Bunch

‘Oblivious’

Rush Holt on Science, Technology, and Congress

Notes & Briefs

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

400 Million Americans

Looking Back

The Last Breath of Thomas Edison

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No. 15Winter 2007

No. 15

Winter 2007

Correspondence

Principle, Prudence, and the “Party of Death”

Essays

The Hydrogen Hoax

Robert Zubrin on energy charlatans and the politicians who love them

In Whose Image Shall We Die?

Eric Cohen on living well and dying well

The Language of Nature

Steve Talbott on how science drains meaning from experience

The Scientific Mind of Ben Franklin

Jerry Weinberger on America’s first Baconian
Reviews and Reconsiderations

The Red Plague

Cheryl Miller on how China bungled SARS

Psychiatry’s Healer

Philip J. Overby on the medical humanism of Paul McHugh

Our Childless Dystopia

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

Immortality Lite

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

Theory Wars, Again

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

Sucker-Me Elmo

Christine Rosen

The Electoral Politics of Stem Cells

Yuval Levin

Cloning Down Under

Michael Casey

Dead Body Porn

Thomas S. Hibbs

Back to the Moon, To Stay?

Jeff Foust

Bioethics and The Public Interest

A Journal’s Lasting Legacy
Looking Ahead

Windows Whimpers

Looking Back

Sterile Thinking

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No. 16Spring 2007

No. 16

Spring 2007

Correspondence

Rethinking the Hydrogen Economy

Essays

China’s Space Ambitions—and Ours

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

The Right to Life and Human Dignity

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

Brave New World at 75

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

Nanoethics as a Discipline?

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

What’s Ailing Health Care?

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

The Half-Bound World

John Derbyshire reviews Neal Stephenson’s Baroque Cycle

The Greening of Capitalism

Nick Schulz on environmentalism as corporate exhibitionism

The Problem with Plagiarism

Jeremy Lott on the timeless drama of the copycat

Political Pseudoscience

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

Reforming NIH

Yuval Levin

Energy Incrementalism

Stephanie Cohen

Seeing and Believing

Peter Suderman

What Lies Within

Christine Rosen

Digilante Justice

Ruth Martin

‘A Critical Part of the Solution’

Al Gore and the Nuclear Debate

Notes & Briefs

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

The HPV Vaccine Debate

Looking Back

The Human Checkmate

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No. 17Summer 2007

No. 17

Summer 2007

Correspondence

China’s Aims in Space; Debating Nanoethics

Essays

Virtual Friendship and the New Narcissism

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

Human Dignity and Public Bioethics

Gilbert Meilaender on dignity as a useful concept

Melancholy’s Whole Physician

Algis Valiunas reads Robert Burton’s The Anatomy of Melancholy

Heroism, Modernism, and the Utopian Impulse

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

Drug Addiction and the Open Society

Lee Harris on freedom and self-mastery

Parenthood at Any Price

Cheryl Miller reviews Liza Mundy’s Everything Conceivable

Intimations of the Soul

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

Devaluing Science

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

‘Less Morally Problematic Alternatives’

Yuval Levin

Soldiers for Rent

Habib Moody

The Man in the Moon

Stephen Bertman

Faces Disappearing

Richard W. Sams II

‘For Better or Worse’

Tony Blair on Politics and the Media

Notes & Briefs

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

The Summer of Love

Looking Back

The Steamboat that Stayed

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No. 18Fall 2007

No. 18

Fall 2007

Essays

Achieving Energy Victory

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

Ghosts in the Evolutionary Machinery

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

The Conquest of Space and the Stature of Man

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

Nature, Man, and Common Sense

Patrick J. Deneen

Science and Totalitarianism

Rita Koganzon

Thumos in Space

Charles T. Rubin

Chariots in the Sky

Stephen Bertman

Our Proud Human Future

Peter Augustine Lawler
Reviews and Reconsiderations

Launching the Space Age

James E. Oberg on the dramatic story of Sputnik

The New Pioneers

Rand Simberg on the burgeoning private space industry

The Evangelical Ecologist

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

The Painless Peace of Twilight Sleep

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

Shot in the Dark

Caitrin Nicol

Science Warrior

Yuval Levin

Unclassifiable

Christine Rosen

Card’s Game

Peter Suderman

‘Americans Will Not Like It’

Michael Griffin on the Global Space Economy

Notes & Briefs

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

First Ripples of the Silver Tsunami

Looking Back

The Heartbeat Heard Round the World

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No. 19Winter 2008

No. 19

Winter 2008

Editorial

John McCain and the Stem Cell Debate

Correspondence

The Logic of Science; Biodiversity and the Bible

Essays

Science and the Left

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

Neuroimaging and Capital Punishment

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

The Limits of Neuro-Talk

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

Blogging Infertility

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

Masters and Possessors of Nature

Thomas W. Merrill reads Descartes’ Discourse on Method

Shop Till You Drop?

Jeremy Lott on suburbs, bomb shelters, and bottled water

Sick and Famous

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

The Clipboard of the Future

James C. Capretta

Till Malfunction Do Us Part

Caitrin Nicol

The Moral Life of Cubicles

David Franz

‘The Steroids Era’

George Mitchell on Drugs in Baseball

Notes & Briefs

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

Adapting to Climate Change

Looking Back

Loose Nukes at Home

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No. 20Spring 2008

No. 20

Spring 2008

Essays

In Defense of Biofuels

Robert Zubrin on ethanol and its critics

Health Care 2008: A Political Primer

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

Public Opinion and the Embryo Debates

Yuval Levin analyzes a revealing new poll on bioethics

Technology and Authenticity

Bruno Macaes on enhancement, action, and truth

Biotech Enhancement and Natural Law

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

The Myth of Multitasking

Christine Rosen on doing too much at once

The Technology of Memory

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

The Motives That Ought to Encourage Us to the Sciences

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

Montesquieu’s Popular Science

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

Einstein’s Quest for Truth

Algis Valiunas on the mind of the man behind relativity

At Home with Down Syndrome

Caitrin Nicol reads memoirs of gratitude
Looking Ahead

An Olympic Fiasco

Looking Back

A Debate Still Patently Alive

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No. 21Summer 2008

No. 21

Summer 2008

Essays

Nuclear Policy and the Presidential Election

Henry Sokolski on nuclear matters and why they matter

Conservatives, Climate Change, and the Carbon Tax

Jim Manzi on the cost of thinking impractically about potential risk

Donated Generation

Cheryl Miller on releasing the identities of egg and sperm donors

Rethinking Public Opinion

Thomas Fitzgerald on the problems of polling

Technology, Culture, and Virtue

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

Is Stupid Making Us Google?

James Bowman on the “Dumbest Generation”

We Are the Change We’ve Been Waiting For

Sebastian Waisman on the “Millennial Generation”

The World Made New

Rita Koganzon on Second Life and real life

The Brat Pack of Quantum Mechanics

John Derbsyhire on a pivotal year for modern physics

The Prudence of Neuroscience

Ivan Kenneally reviews The Heart of Judgment
State of the Art

An Animal to Save the World

Jonathan H. Adler

Taking the Earth’s Temperature

Jordan R. Raney

Pipeline Diplomacy

Adam Blinick

‘Leadership from the Bottom’

Wendell Berry on Rural Revival

Notes & Briefs

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

Counting Correctly

Looking Back

The First Stitch

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No. 22Fall 2008

No. 22

Fall 2008

Essays

Petrodollar Science

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

People of the Screen

Christine Rosen tells a tale of two literacies

Ten Years of “Death with Dignity”

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

Fixing American Health Care

Joseph V. Kennedy on cost, quality, and competition

Health Care with a Conscience

James C. Capretta on protecting Catholic hospitals
Reviews and Reconsiderations

Beyond Mankind

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

The Confused Congresswoman

Yuval Levin on Diana DeGette’s assault on reason

Green Bridge to Nowhere

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

Capturing Carbon

Jordan R. Raney

Staying Afloat

Peter Suderman

‘Categories of Warfare Are Blurring’

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

Notes & Briefs

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

The Future of Cell Biology

Looking Back

The Model T and American Life

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No. 23Winter 2009

No. 23

Winter 2009

Correspondence

Debating “Death with Dignity”; Obsolete Librarians

Editorial

Science and the Obama Administration

Essays

The Ethics of Counterinsurgency

Keith Pavlischek on irregular warfare and international law

Military Robots and the Laws of War

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

Why Minds Are Not Like Computers

Ari N. Schulman on fundamental confusion about artificial intelligence

Reality and the Postmodern Wink

James Bowman champions curmudgeonliness as an antidote to cynicism

Nations, Liberalism, and Science

Peter Augustine Lawler on civil theology and civil biology

Socialism and Cancer

David Gratzer on how government ruins medicine
Reviews and Reconsiderations

The Great Breath of Hell

Algis Valiunas on the modern way of madness

Making Men Modern

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

Dilly-Dallying on Iran

Looking Back

The Inventor President

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No. 24Spring 2009

No. 24

Spring 2009

Essays

AIDS Relief and Moral Myopia

Travis Kavulla on African culture and the public health community

Embryos in Limbo

Jacqueline Pfeffer Merrill on IVF and indecision about nascent life

What and When Is Death?

Alan Rubenstein on knowing human living to define human dying

Technocracy and Populism

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

Is Water a Human Right?

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

In Search of Chinese Science

John Derbyshire on Joseph Needham, sinologist and scientist

The Virtual Public Square

Alan Jacobs reviews Richard John Neuhaus’s final book

The True Face of Digital Democracy

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

The Road to Rationing

Paul Howard and David Gratzer

Keeping Books Safe

Elizabeth Mullaney Nicol

The Rise of Cyber-Schools

Liam Julian

Disability Politics

Ari Ne’eman

At the Gates of a Magical Garden

G. Anthony Gorry

Down in Flames

James E. Oberg
Looking Ahead

The Stakes in the Health Care Fight

Looking Back

Fifty Years of “Two Cultures”

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No. 25Summer 2009

No. 25

Summer 2009

Essays

A Space Program for the Rest of Us

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

The Lost Prestige of Nuclear Physics

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

The Ambiguous Utopia of Iain M. Banks

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

Plato in Space

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

Unchosen Lives

Caitrin Nicol on Jodi Picoult’s tales at the threshold

Creating Frankenstein

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

The Fusion Illusion

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

Too Hot to Handle

Jordan R. Raney throws cold water on climate extremists

Medicine and Moral Authority

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

Fighting Fake Drugs

Roger Bate

Test Ban Treaty, Take Two

Christopher A. Ford

Romancing the Atom

Robert R. Johnson

China’s Organ Market

S. Elizabeth Forsythe

Nutrition and Tradition

John Schwenkler
Looking Ahead

Get Moving on Yucca

Looking Back

Our Petroleum Prosperity

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No. 26Fall 2009 - Winter 2010

No. 26

Fall 2009 - Winter 2010

Essays

The Future of Chemical Weapons

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

The Financial Crisis and the Scientific Mindset

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

On Bioethics in Public

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

Science and the Decline of the Liberal Arts

Patrick J. Deneen

The Technocratic American University

Ivan Kenneally

Human Dignity and Higher Education

Peter Augustine Lawler

The Soul of the Scientist of Man

Shilo Brooks

The Ivy League Lament

Rita Koganzon
Reviews and Reconsiderations

Darwin’s World of Pain and Wonder

Algis Valiunas on the great scientist’s spiritual torment

Cheap Thrills

Noemie Emery defends the American consumer

The Formation of Character

David Skinner on how we write and who we are

Why We Walk

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

Nathaniel Hawthorne and the Spirit of Science

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

Wasting the Water of Life

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

Dr. Heidegger’s Experiment

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

Bioethics: Left, Right, and Wrong

Looking Back

The Bhopal Injustice

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No. 27Spring 2010

No. 27

Spring 2010

Essays

Why Not Nuclear Disarmament?

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

Proportionality in Warfare

Keith Pavlischek on the abuse of an important just war principle

The Tortured Logic of Obama’s Drone War

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

The Most Useful Man Who Ever Lived

William Rosen on making heroes of inventors
Reviews and Reconsiderations

Scientists Fallen Among Poets

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

One Man’s Quantum Culture

Jeremy Axelrod reviews a memoir of strange science and swanky society

Avatar and the Flight from Reality

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

From Cursive to Cursor

Alan Jacobs on whether it matters how we write

Bad Advice for Scientists

Ari N. Schulman reviews Unscientific America
Hawthorne Series

Artful by Nature

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

The New Adam and Eve

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

A Regrettable Reform

David Gratzer

Going Nowhere

Robert Zubrin

Claude Lévi-Strauss, RIP

Travis Kavulla

Missing the Big Picture

Jeff Robbins

The Case for Boredom

Adam J. Cox

Avatars in the Workplace

G. Anthony Gorry

‘The Unique Worth of an Individual Human Life’

On conversing with and learning from Paul Ramsey
Looking Ahead

The Future of Health Care

Looking Back

Part of Our Complete Breakfast

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