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Opinion
Comment: The real cost of gold

Comment: The real cost of gold

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Skyrocketing mineral prices are fuelling a mining boom for which few developing nations are prepared, says William Laurance
Comment and Analysis 13 August 2008
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ARTICLES

Review: Human, by Michael Gazzaniga

What is it about our brains that makes us different from apes?
Review - 13 August 2008

Interview: The golden age of cryptography

The "high priest of French cryptography", Jacques Stern, describes how cryptography has emerged from the world of espionage to pervade all of our lives
Interview - 13 August 2008

Review: 13 Things that Don't Make Sense by Michael Brooks

The many things that science can't explain could change the way we see the universe - but it takes time
Review - 13 August 2008

Senator calls for review of anthrax evidence

FBI evidence points to Bruce Ivins as the culprit in the 2001 anthrax attacks, but a US senator is calling for an investigation into the claims
News - 13 August 2008

Review: The Undercover Scientist, by Peter J. Bentley

Want to know what happens when you squirt raw chilli juice in your eye, or when you get a computer virus? This book will tell you
Bookends - 13 August 2008

Review: Prehistory by Colin Renfrew

Archaeology has helped us reconstruct our human past, but unanswered questions remain
Bookends - 13 August 2008

Editorial: Better climate forecasts will bring storms

We need more accurate climate forecasts, even if their predictions threaten to weaken the political imperative to tackle emissions
Editorial - 13 August 2008

Comment: China's green journey

China may look like a carbon-guzzling monster, but there's a clean-tech superpower struggling to get out, says Changhua Wu
Comment and Analysis - 06 August 2008

Editorial: Don't overreact over bioterror research

The US should resist calls to restrict the number of scientists with access to anthrax and other pathogens – we need this crucial research
Editorial - 06 August 2008

Editorial: Intelligence isn't all it's cracked up to be

When it comes to complex problems, best to leave the deliberating to the unconscious – or to machines
Editorial - 06 August 2008

Interview: The father of the internet in Africa

Computers are as important for the future of Africa as food and water, says Ghanaian internet guru Nii Quaynor
Interview - 06 August 2008

Histories: 163 ways to lose your job

Thomas Edison's 163-question quiz for potential and current employees started a craze for "brain testing" that is still with us
Histories - 06 August 2008

Commentary: The importance of knowing how

Critical thinking should be right at the centre of the education system, says A C Grayling
Opinion - 06 August 2008

Comment: Anthropologists should stay off the front line

The US army is seeking the help of anthropologists to help it understand the cultures in which it operates. Not a good idea, says anthropologist Hugh Gusterson
Comment and Analysis - 30 July 2008

Editorial: Where do nutrititional supplements fit in sport?

Efforts to stop Olympic athletes taking performance-enhancing drugs are well recognised, but little attention is given to nutritional supplements. It's time that changed
Editorial - 30 July 2008

Review: Physics for Future Presidents by Richard A Muller

Listen up, McCain and Obama – there's stuff you may need to know in here, like why dirty bombs are unlikely weapons for terrorists
Bookends - 30 July 2008

Interview: The cosmic explorer

In 1996, George Smoot won a Nobel prize for discovering something "which, if you're religious, is like looking at God". So how does he follow that up?
Interview - 05 August 2008

Review: Txtng: The Gr8 Db8 by David Crystal

A linguist argues that text messaging produces talented young writers
Bookends - 30 July 2008

Review: The Score by Faye Flam

A new book explains why men do what they do to get women into bed
Review - 30 July 2008

Past masters of coastal geology

When climate change threatens, coastal engineers and planners should take a few tips from the pre-Raphaelite painters
Histories - 30 July 2008

Commentary: Why God and science don't mix

The Templeton Foundation might seem benign, but aiming to prove the existence of God goes against everything science should stand for, says Lawrence Krauss
Opinion - 30 July 2008

Review: Surrealism, Art and Modern Science by Gavin Parkinson

New evidence shows how much the surrealist art movement was inspired by the strange worlds of relativity and quantum theory
Review - 30 July 2008

Seven reasons why people hate reason

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When rational thinking is threatened by everyone from fundamentalists to pseudoscientists, what can you do but counterattack? A C Grayling sets the scene for our reason special report
Opinion - 23 July 2008

Reason is just another faith

An unconditional, general reliance on a single authority is never sensible, whatever god it may invoke, says philosopher Mary Midgley
Opinion - 23 July 2008

Bubble fusion researcher in big trouble

A Purdue University committee says the scientist who claimed to have triggered "bubble fusion" in 2002 is guilty of research misconduct
News - 23 July 2008

Reason excludes creativity and intuition

Science can be an inspiration, but it can't take the leaps of faith that art can, says 2002 Turner prizewinning artist Keith Tyson
Opinion - 23 July 2008

Editorial: How to make reason more reasonable

Rethinking the rational underpinning of our society is a daunting task, but we are risking a lot if we don't make the attempt
Opinion - 23 July 2008

I hear 'reason', I see lies

Cynical use of the appearance of science is part of the armoury of the PR industry, but the defence is simple, says sociologist David Miller
Opinion - 23 July 2008

Comment: It's time for the Vatican to accept IVF

The Catholic church's demonising of the technologies that facilitate test-tube babies is making it look out of touch and irrelevant, says Michael Brooks
Comment and Analysis - 23 July 2008

Editorial: No complacency on disasters

Reports of the demise of the human race have been greatly exaggerated – but we should still plan for the worst-case scenario
Editorial - 23 July 2008

How humans dared to know

The recent passion for "Enlightenment values" owes a lot to the 18th century. But where do they come from and what do they mean today, asks A C Grayling
Opinion - 23 July 2008

No one really uses reason

If we had to think consciously about everything we did, we would never do anything at all, says neuroscientist Chris Frith
Opinion - 23 July 2008

Reason stands against values and morals

We can't assume that reason alone will tell us how to shape a moral and humane world, says Rowan Williams, Archbishop of Canterbury
Opinion - 23 July 2008

Reason destroys itself

Do we know, for certain, that two plus two is four? Of course we don't. But we must be reasonable about it, says mathematician Roger Penrose
Opinion - 23 July 2008
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