The dubious rise of ‘neurolaw’: “The legal profession in America is taking an increasing interest in neuroscience. There is a flourishing academic discipline of “neurolaw” and neurolawyers are penetrating the legal system. Vanderbilt University recently opened a $27 million neuroimaging centre and hopes to enrol students in a programme in the law and neuroscience. In the courts, as in the trial of serial rapist and murderer Bobby Joe Long, brain-scan evidence is being invoked in support of pleas of diminished responsibility. The idea is abroad that developments in neuroscience – in particular the observation of activity in the living brain, using techniques such as functional magnetic resonance imaging – have shown us that we are not as free, or as accountable for our actions, as we traditionally thought.” (Times.UK)
Daily Archives: 11 Nov 07
When Syphilis Was Trés Chic
“In Belle Epoque Paris, the disease was all the rage. Who didn’t have syphilis in Belle Epoque Paris? Nobody who was anybody — at least if you read Deborah Hayden’s book Pox: Genius, Madness and the Mysteries of Syphilis.” (The Smart Set)
How to Fight Childhood Blindness
“By embracing genetically modified ‘golden rice,’ says Greenpeace co-founder Patrick Moore, the world can help millions of people in developing countries: …’I am often asked why I broke ranks with Greenpeace after co-founding the group in 1971 and then spending 15 years in its leadership as a full-time environmental activist. One of the main reasons was that by the mid-1980s the environmental movement had abandoned science and logic in favor of scare tactics and sensationalism.'” (The American)
Cinema Fiction vs. Physics Reality
“Two physicists examine certain features of popular myths regarding ghosts, vampires, and zombies as they appear in film and folklore.” (Skeptical Inquirer July / August 2007)
Poe’s Mysterious Death:
The Plot Thickens! “There are numerous competing theories about Mr. Poe’s death—the Edgar Allan Poe Museum in Richmond, Virginia, even has an exhibit dedicated to all of them. Some Poe experts believe it was the result of drink. Others think he had rabies. A few argue he was poisoned by corrupt political operatives. But [Matthew] Pearl—a 32-year-old graduate of Harvard College and Yale Law School, whose 2003 debut, the international best seller The Dante Club, prompted Da Vinci Code author Dan Brown to declare him, “the new star of literary fiction”—told The Observer recently that he has unearthed new information that suggests a less sensational answer: ” (The New York Observer)
Eye-Fi:
Yanking Ivy Chains
“It’s easy to hate the Ivy League. Also, it’s fun. …[H]undreds of people cheer wildly as [Malcolm Gladwell] calls for Harvard, Yale, and Princeton to be shut down. That’s right: closed entirely. ” (The Chronicle of Higher Education)
How to listen to Haydn and Mozart
Who Needs Classical Music?
Books: The Musical Mystique: “Last January, Gene Weingarten, a Washington Post columnist, persuaded the violinist Joshua Bell to join him in an experiment. Bell was to dress in jeans, a T-shirt, and a baseball cap, position himself at the head of the escalator in the L’Enfant Plaza subway station at the height of the morning rush hour, open his violin case, take out his $3.5 million Stradivarius, launch into Bach’s D-minor Chaconne for solo violin, and see what happened.” (The New Republic)