The New York Times, June 19, 2024

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For thousands of years, philosophers have argued about the purpose of language. Plato believed it was essential for thinking. Thought “is a silent inner conversation of the soul with itself,” he wrote.

Many modern scholars have advanced similar views. Starting in the 1960s, Noam Chomsky, a linguist at M.I.T., argued that we use language for reasoning and other forms of thought. “If there is a severe deficit of language, there will be severe deficit of thought,” he wrote.

Continue reading “Do We Need Language to Think?”

The New York Times, June 19, 2024

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ADVENTURES IN VOLCANOLAND: What Volcanoes Tell Us About the World and Ourselves, by Tamsin Mather

I live on a hump of pink granite, part of a geological formation that stretches across southern Connecticut, lurching out of the ground here and there like a pod of surfacing whales.

Before my wife and I bought our house, we had an inspector give it a look. “Well,” he said, “your foundation goes down a thousand miles into the Earth — so nothing to worry about there.”

The New York Times, June 11, 2024

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Over the past 500 million years, vertebrates have evolved into a staggering variety of forms, from hummingbirds to elephants, bullfrogs to hammerhead sharks, not to mention our peculiar species of upright ape. But underneath all that diversity, vertebrates share some key features.

We all have a backbone made of vertebrae, for example, along with a skull that houses a brain. We share these hallmarks because we all descended from a common ancestor: a fish that swam in the Cambrian seas.

Continue reading “Was This Sea Creature Our Ancestor? Scientists Turn a Famous Fossil on Its Head.”

The New York Times, May 31, 2024

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Last year, Jaume Pellicer led a team of fellow scientists into a forest on Grande Terre, an island east of Australia. They were in search of a fern called Tmesipteris oblanceolata. Standing just a few inches tall, it was not easy to find on the forest floor.

“It doesn’t catch the eye,” said Dr. Pellicer, who works at the Botanical Institute of Barcelona in Spain. “You would probably step on it and not even realize it.”

Continue reading “Scientists Find the Largest Known Genome Inside a Small Plant”

Here is a list of some of the stories and books I have assigned to students over the years in my class, “Writing about Science, Medicine, and the Environment.” I picked them for examples of story-telling, explanation, and bringing humanity to complex subjects.

ARTICLES:

Ross Anderson, “Pleistocene Park”

Burkhart Bilger, “Nature’s Spoils”

Eric Boodman, “In the Dark of Night, a Hunt for a Deadly Bug in the Name of Science”

Rebecca Boyle, “Toward a Grand Unified Theory of Snowflakes”

Peter Brannen, “The Terrifying Warning Lurking in the Earth’s Ancient Rock Record”

Jimmy Breslin, “A Death in Emergency Room One.”

John Colapinto, “The Interpreter”

Gareth Cook, “Autism, Inc.”

Helene Cooper, “They Helped Erase Ebola in Liberia. Now Liberia Is Erasing Them”

David Dobbs, “The Science of Success”

Gretel Ehrlich, “Rotten Ice”

Douglas Fox, “Firestorm”

Rivka Galchen, “The Dream Machine”

Atul Gawande, “Letting Go” (Paired with Ed Yong’s unpacking)

Amanda Gefter,“The Man Who Tried to Redeem the World with Logic”

Gabrielle Glaser, “The Irrationality of Alcoholics Anonymous”

Ben Goldfarb, “The Endling”

Barbara Bradly Hagerty, “When Your Child Is a Psychopath”

Katherine Harmon, “How Ralph Steinman Raced to Develop a Cancer Vaccine — And Save His Life”

Tim Heffernan,“The New Bronze Age”

Antonia Juhasz,“Thirty Million Gallons Under the Sea”

Maggie Koerth, “The Complicated Legacy Of A Panda Who Was Really Good At Sex”

Elizabeth Kolbert, “The Siege of Miami”

Maria Konnikova, “Altered Tastes”

Robert Kunzig, “Between Home and the Abyss”

Seth Mnookin, “One of a Kind”

Sy Montgomery, “Deep Intellect.”

Jon Mooallem, “Who Would Kill A Monk Seal?”

Michael Moyer, “Is Space Digital?”

Annie Murphy Paul, “The First Ache”

David Quammen, “Out of the Wild”

Oliver Sacks, “Altered States”

Kathryn Schultz “The Really Big One”

Matthew Shaer, “Scientists Are Giving Dead Brains New Life. What Could Go Wrong?”

Christopher Solomon, “The Detective of Northern Oddities”

Michael Specter, “A Life of Its Own”

Gary Taubes, “What If It’s All A Big Fat Lie?”

Kenneth R. Weiss and Usha Lee McFarling, “Altered Oceans”

Katie Worth, “Telescope Wars” (pdf at Katieworth.com)

Katherin Wu, “Covid Combat Fatigue”

Ed Yong, “The Last of Its Kind”

Paul Zimmerman, “Talk to Me”

BOOKS:

Rachel Carson, Silent Spring

Joshua Foer, Moonwalking with Einstein

Vicki Hearne, Calling Animals By Name

John McPhee, Encounters with the Archdruid

Richard Rhodes, The Making of the Atomic Bomb

Florence Williams, Breasts: A Natural and Unnatural History

Ed Yong, I Contain Multitudes