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######### Issues INDEX #########
Issues
Volume 4, Issue 2
October 20, 2018
NEXT
PREVIOUS
October 20, 2018
Critical Essays
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Philosophy
Past Masters of the Postmodern
Simon Blackburn
[short_description]
There is a widespread sense, Simon Blackburn observes, that a number of philosophical theories have escaped the academic world, and, in the wild, are doing great harm. Chief among them: postmodernism.
######### Card Article *XXX* # #########
Physics
Spontaneous Symmetry Breaking
Édouard Brézin
[short_description]
Broken symmetries encompass a large number of different phenomena occurring at different scales. Édouard Brézin examines how symmetry has become central to understanding the organization of the universe.
######### Card Article *XXX* # #########
Economics
One Euro, One Europe
Gilles Dryancour
[short_description]
Sixty-seven monetary unions were formed between 1918 and 2012. They all failed. Will the European monetary union meet a similar fate? Gilles Dryancour assesses the Euro’s prospects for survival.
Review Essays
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Physics
Quantum Leaps
Jeremy Bernstein
[short_description]
There is, thoughtful students agree, no entirely satisfactory interpretation of quantum mechanics. Jeremy Bernstein examines John Bell’s discontent with the standard formulations of quantum mechanics.
Book Reviews
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Philosophy
Dialectics of Darkness
Egil Asprem
[short_description]
On the persistence of magic in modernity: Egil Asprem reviews
The Myth of Disenchantment: Magic, Modernity, and the Birth of the Human Sciences
by Jason Josephson-Storm.
######### Card Article *XXX* # #########
Physics
Not So Real
Sheldon Lee Glashow
[short_description]
On the interpretation of quantum mechanics: Sheldon Lee Glashow reviews
What Is Real? The Unfinished Quest for the Meaning of Quantum Physics
by Adam Becker.
######### Card Article *XXX* # #########
Philosophy
Nature and the Babylonians
Daryn Lehoux
[short_description]
How did the ancient Mesopotamians conceive of nature and science? Daryn Lehoux reviews a new account,
Before Nature: Cuneiform Knowledge and the History of Science
, by Francesca Rochberg.
######### Card Article *XXX* # #########
Linguistics
Fodor’s Legacy
David Lobina
[short_description]
The publication of a new volume on the work of the philosopher and cognitive scientist Jerry Fodor is an opportunity to reflect on his enduring legacy. David Lobina assesses Fodor’s contributions and ideas.
######### Card Article *XXX* # #########
Computer Science
An Antique Land
Benjamin Thierry
[short_description]
Benjamin Thierry reviews
Minitel: Welcome to the Internet
by Julien Mailland and Kevin Driscoll. The French Minitel project, according to the authors, was much, much more than simply a public works project gone awry.
Experiment Reviews
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Genetics
Genes within Genes
Tyler Hampton
[short_description]
A new study, “Russian Doll Genes and Complex Chromosome Rearrangements in
Oxytricha trifallax
,” casts fresh light on gene nesting and mathematical patterns. Tyler Hampton examines the key findings.
Biographies
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Logic
Emil Post
Psychological Fidelity
Allyn Jackson
[short_description]
Never a mathematical star during his lifetime, Emil Post created and pursued his research ideas largely on his own. Allyn Jackson describes Post’s tragic life and an array of remarkable contributions.
Letters to the Editors
######### Card Letter *XXX* #########
Anything But Standard
Lawrence Krauss
[short_description]
Key physical and mathematical insights allowed physicists, over a period of twenty-five years, to produce what will be viewed as one of the greatest scientific revolutions of the twentieth century.
######### Card Letter *XXX* #########
The Physics Law of Evolution
Adrian Bejan
[short_description]
Our nature is continuous and morphing, not infinitesimal, discrete, and still. With the law of evolution, physics accounts for form and the time direction in evolving macroscopic structures everywhere.
######### Card Letter *XXX* #########
On Autopoiesis
Adam Scarfe
[short_description]
Autopoiesis points to the basic
hows
underlying the homeostatic far-from-equilibrium states internal to the physiological organism that allow it to persist as a whole in the face of entropy.
######### Card Letter *XXX* #########
Thinking Big about the Plague
John Brooke
[short_description]
It has been suggested that the early plague, carried by the Early Bronze Age Yamnaya peoples (3300–2600 BCE) of the steppe, may have been the cause of population collapse in Neolithic Europe.
######### Card Letter *XXX* #########
On the Importance of History
Daniel Curtis
&
Joris Roosen
[short_description]
As interdisciplinary research on the plague shows, the importance of history and historical data will only increase from its use in conjunction with new forms of scientific evidence and methods.
######### Card Letter *XXX* #########
Old Sources, New Questions
Christof Paulus
[short_description]
Aspects of the plague still have no reasonable explanations. Of particular concern are the current estimates for the amount of time required for the bacterium to spread over such great distances.
######### Card Letter *XXX* #########
A Good Story Well Told
George Saliba
[short_description]
No one could have told the story of al-Bīrūnī’s engagement with Islamic science, or even the story of the development and tribulations of Islamic science itself, better than Julio Samsó.
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