######### Issues INDEX #########

Issues

Volume 5, Issue 3

September 28, 2020

September 28, 2020


Critical Essays


Review Essays




Book Reviews



Experiment Reviews


Biographies


Letters to the Editors

######### Card Letter *XXX* ######### Confusions Regarding Quantum Mechanics [short_description] Though strong evidence supports the validity of the Standard Model up to the TeV domain, we do not understand why this model would be all there is to describe what happens beyond that scale.
######### Card Letter *XXX* ######### Reflections on a Revolution [short_description] Gauge theories brought about a profound revolution in the way physicists think about the fundamental forces. It is this revolution that is the subject of Sheldon Lee Glashow’s essay.
######### Card Letter *XXX* ######### Further Questions for Glashow [short_description] In “The Yang–Mills Model,” Glashow has described one of the greatest chapters in the history of physics, the story of a beautiful mathematical concept transformed into a theory for all seasons.

######### Card Letter *XXX* ######### On the Origins of Life [short_description] The perspective Brian Miller and Jeremy England bring to their essay on the origins of life is that of physics. Yet the origins of life are, ultimately, chemical and biological.
######### Card Letter *XXX* ######### Terms of Endearment [short_description] The situation may be even worse than Evelina Leivada alluded to, whether we are speaking of parameters, features, or, for that matter, rules, as linguists did in the not-too-distant past.
######### Card Letter *XXX* ######### On Core Concepts and Terminology [short_description] Although terminology issues are raised at the forefront, the crux of the matter with Evelina Leivada’s essay is not terminology per se, but different views of core concepts in linguistics.

######### Card Letter *XXX* ######### On Language Evolution [short_description] Another expression—language evolution—is often misused in linguistics, due to the fact that the same word is used to designate the languages spoken by people and the capacity of language as such.
######### Card Letter *XXX* ######### A Collective Action Problem [short_description] All linguists are aware that our terminology is often unclear, and sometimes downright confusing. What is wrong with linguists? If it is not a case of scientific neglect, what then is the problem?
######### Card Letter *XXX* ######### Terminology and Toothbrushes [short_description] It may be the case that linguists “would rather share each other’s toothbrush than each other’s terminology”—but so what? There are many situations that might prompt the sharing of toothbrushes…

######### Card Letter *XXX* ######### On Attitudes toward Terminology [short_description] Out of the ten key notions that Evelina Leivada focuses on, her discussions of three seem highly problematic: Universal Grammar, faculty of language in the narrow sense, and grammaticality judgment.
######### Card Letter *XXX* ######### The Reductionist Paradox [short_description] Reading is hard work, and writing even harder. We aspire toward deep truths but often end up making sweeping generalizations which bear little resemblance to the complex realities that we experience.
######### Card Letter *XXX* ######### Life and Fate [short_description] As life on earth speeds toward an undesirable end, is there a way we might seize the controls and shape our future at will, adding a surprising twist to the cosmic plot? The solution is space travel…

######### Card Letter *XXX* ######### Inner Speech and Memory [short_description] Speakers generate inner speech and then may externalize it to share their thoughts with others. But communication is only one function of language. Another function is inner monologue as a memory aid.
######### Card Letter *XXX* ######### Language before Thought [short_description] Do inner and overt speech share all their properties except articulation? Are all inner speech episodes composed of words, phrases, and sentences, or can some inner speech episodes be wordless?
######### Card Letter *XXX* ######### Cooper’s Ferry Revisited [short_description] Contrary to the assertions made by Loren Davis et al., the evidence of a pre-13,500 cal. BP occupation at Cooper’s Ferry is meager and does not prove a Pacific Rim migration took place.

######### Card Letter *XXX* ######### On Cultural Connections [short_description] The authors provide further comments to clarify the larger picture of what their research at Cooper’s Ferry might mean for the topic of the Pleistocene peopling of the Americas.
######### Card Letter *XXX* ######### On Theory and Practice [short_description] While Le Corbusier and Walter Gropius were indeed enormously influential in shaping modern architecture, noteworthy designs being done today prove that the International Style is no longer dominant.

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