Kevin P. Hand: On the Coming Age of Ocean
Exploration
What makes ocean worlds like Jupiter’s moon Europa compelling
places for astrobiology? Despite considerable evidence to the
contrary, Earth was not a particularly good place for life to
arise. The main ingredients for life as we know it are a lot easier
to find farther out in the solar system.
Felix Warneken: Children’s Helping Hands
Several novel empirical findings suggest that human altruism has
deeper roots than previously thought.
William McEwan: Molecular Cut and Paste: The New Generation
of Biological Tools
A combination of cheap DNA synthesis, freely accessible databases,
and our ever expanding knowledge of protein science is conspiring
to permit a revolution in creating powerful molecular tools.
Anthony Aguirre: Next Step: Infinity
Infinity can violate our human intuition, which is based on finite
systems, and create perplexing philosophical problems.
Daniela Kaufer & Darlene Francis: Nurture, Nature, and the
Stress That Is Life
Why is it that when faced with the same challenges, some of us
crumble, some of us survive, and some of us even thrive?
Jon Kleinberg: What Can Huge Data Sets Teach Us About
Society and Ourselves?
Vast digital trails of social interaction allow us to begin
investigating questions that have been the subject of theoretical
inquiry and small-scale analysis for a century or more.
Coren Apicella: On the Universality of Attractiveness
My quest to understand the natural origins of attractiveness
preferences led me to the African savannah near Lake Eyasi in
Tanzania.
Laurie R. Santos: To Err Is Primate
Why do house sellers, professional golfers, experienced investors,
and the rest of us succumb to strategies that make us
systematically go wrong?
Samuel M. McClure: Our Brains Know Why We Do What We
Do
The goal of the new field of decision neuroscience is a greatly
improved understanding of the variability that dominates our
moment-to-moment decision-making behavior.
Jennifer Jacquet: Is Shame Necessary?
Balancing group and self-interest has never been easy, yet human
societies display a high level of cooperation. To attain that
level, specialized traits had to evolve, including such emotions as
shame.
Kirsten Bomblies: Plant Immunity in a Changing World
To what degree plant populations can adapt to novel disease
pressures in an altered and increasingly unpredictable climate
remains largely unknown.
Asif A. Ghazanfar: The Emergence of Human Audiovisual
Communication
The basic patterns of neocortical anatomy that produce a set of
fixed neural rhythms are conserved throughout the mammalian
lineage, and they predate the elaboration of vocal repertoires.
Naomi I. Eisenberger: Why Rejection Hurts
The experience of social pain, while temporarily distressing and
hurtful, is an evolutionary adaptation that promotes social bonding
and, ultimately, survival.
Joshua Knobe: Finding the Mind in the Body
People’s intuitions about whether a given entity has a mind do not
appear to be based entirely on a scientific attempt to explain that
entity’s behavior.
Fiery Cushman: Should the Law Depend on Luck?
How will advances in the science of moral judgment change the way
we think about the law?
Liane Young: How We Read People’s Moral Minds
Recent work suggests that our moral judgment of another person
depends on specific brain regions for reasoning about that other
person’s mental state.
Daniel Haun: How Odd I Am!
Cross-culturally, the human mind varies more than we generally
assume.
Joan Y. Chiao: Where Does Human Diversity Come
From?
Culture-gene coevolutionary theory describes a complementary
process by which adaptive mechanisms in the human mind and brain
evolved to facilitate social group living through both cultural and
genetic selection.
Max Brockman is the CEO of Brockman, Inc., a literary agency, and the editor of What’s Next? Dispatches on the Future of Science. He also works with the Edge Foundation, Inc., a nonprofit organization that publishes www.edge.org. He lives in New York City.
“A title wave of talent. . . . A wealth of new and exciting
ideas."
—Stephen Pinker, author of The Stuff of Thought
“I would have killed for books like this when I was a student!”
—Brian Eno
“This remarkable collection of fluent and fascinating essays
reminds me that there is almost nothing as spine-tinglingly
exciting as glimpsing a new nugget of knowledge for the first time.
These young scientists give us a treasure trove of precious new
insights.”
—Matt Ridley, author of The Red Queen and Rational Optimism
“A good overview of what’s happening in today’s laboratories.”
—Booklist
“A glimpse of how today’s daring science is defining tomorrow’s
lines for inquiry. . . . Readers will delight in the complexity of
its exciting mosaic.”
—Kirkus Reviews
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