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Neuron Culture

David Dobbs on science, nature, and culture.

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dobbspic I write on science, medicine, nature, culture and other matters for the New York Times Magazine, The Atlantic, Slate, National Geographic, Scientific American Mind, and other publications. (Find clips here.) I've also written three books, including Reef Madness: Charles Darwin, Alexander Agassiz, and the Meaning of Coral, which traces the strangest but most forgotten controversy in Darwin's career — an elemental dispute running some 75 years. Oliver Sacks found Reef Madness "brilliantly written, almost unbearably poignant." Check it out.

If you'd like, you can subscribe to Neuron Culture by email. You might also want to see more of my work at my main website or check out my Tumblr log.
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Economics:

Healthcare reform roundup

Category: Economics

The healthcare debate in Lincoln, NE, earlier this year. photo: Nat Harnik, AP, via the NY TimesThe tone of discussions...

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Loss aversion and the rough road for health care reform

Category: Economics

An article from the Standard ponders why, despite widespread recognition that the country needs health care reform, we may not get it: Though it's clear we need reform, it's easier to scare people about what they MIGHT supposedly lose (their present coverage) than to see how a new system will improve things.

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George Will v Public Plan, refereed by Nate Silver. Will loses.

Category: Healthcare policy

Will's argument is apparently this: The government does not need to make a profit and ... therefore it will deliver the same service for less money. That's unfair! Is this really the best argument they can mount against the public option?

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The best bang for the stimulus dollar: Insulate! Insulate!

Category: Economics

The big cost was clearly in paying two or three guys to make racket spraying goop in our basement for 3 or 4 days.

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Deficit I mean Health Care Reform: Eye-popping chart dept.

Category: Healthcare policy

"That orange line headed heaven-ward? That's our deficit. All those other lines dipping down? That's our deficit if we had the same health care spending per person as France, Germany, Canada, and the UK (all countries, incidentally, with higher life expectancies than our own)."

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Overpaying for Educational Underachievement

Category: Education

As I've noted before, the U.S.'s health-care and education systems share some fundamental flaws: In both medical care and schooling we spend far more than other countries and get substandard results. Here's the latest data on the education end.

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Quick Dip: Mindreading, pig flu, green fade, health care costs, and drug money in Vermont

Category: Healthcare policy

The evolving Swine Flu story [Effect Measure] The skinny on a scary run of deadly swine flu, from people who've been doing this a while. ... Eli Lilly Tops List of Drug-Company Pay to Vermont Docs Altogether, 78 drug companies spent just shy of $3 million dollars in payments to health professionals in Vermont last year.

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Behavioral econ at work: Peter Orszag's training tips

Category: Brains and minds

To motivate himself to train for a marathon, Obama's budget director, Peter Orszag, set up a penalty: If he didn't hit his training targets: His credit card would make a contribution to a charity or cause he hated:

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Stewart's Cramer Take-down: Real journalism, serious balls

Category: Economics

Dan Rather supposedly had balls. George W Bush supposedly had balls. They're looking pretty puny next to what we're seeing from Stewart and Obama. This is a realer kind of steel.

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Bad financial decisions: Low-balling risk, high-balling certainty

Category: Brains and minds

The dynamics these instruments claim to represent and control are almost impossibly arcane and complex -- but they got boiled down to formula that, while flummoxing to normal people, had just the right combination of complexity and simplicity -- complexity apparently solved -- to convince mathematical investor types that they solved essential problems and put risk in a bottle.

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