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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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Media:
Category: Brains and minds
That post reported the news (via FiercePharma) that Pfizer had tucked away in its financial disclosure forms a $2.3 billion charge to end the federal investigation into allegations of off-label promotions of its Cox-2 painkillers, including Bextra. ... Because my post was was one of the few things already on the interwebz before Justice held its news conference, the Google rush shot it toward the top of the search results.
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Posted by David Dobbs at 3:19 PM • 0 Comments • 0 TrackBacks
Category: Culture of science
This shouldn't be something that flu experts feel compelled to discuss sotto voce. If the journal has good reasons to sit on the paper for now, it should declare them. If not, it should get the paper out in the open so the data and findings can be examined and vetted openly.
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Posted by David Dobbs at 3:58 PM • 19 Comments • 0 TrackBacks
Category: Brains and minds
Eric Michael Johnson contemplates the hearts, minds, teeth, and claws of bonobos and other primates, while -- no fault of Eric's -- the flu, the end of publishing, and the death of the uninsured march on. Plus some great old surgery footage.
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Posted by David Dobbs at 9:46 AM • 0 Comments • 0 TrackBacks
Category: Digital culture
In the intro to his self-published (on Lulu.com) collection of blog posts, The Wreck of the Henry Clay, New Yorker contributor Caleb Crain sums up nicely the anxieties shared by at least one other writer-with-blogging-addon about blogging, and, by extension about self-publishing books.
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Posted by David Dobbs at 2:23 PM • 1 Comments • 0 TrackBacks
Category: Digital culture
This is how life works. So it's how the blogosphere works too.
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Posted by David Dobbs at 11:37 AM • 3 Comments • 0 TrackBacks
Category: Culture of science
"In one case, for instance, a revised manuscript arrived at his office with four named authors, but when he examined the metadata, he discovered an additional author was making substantial contributions."
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Posted by David Dobbs at 10:10 AM • 4 Comments • 0 TrackBacks
Category: Culture of science
Oh lordy, this is not good: The Times reports that up to 11% of the articles in leading med journals...
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Posted by David Dobbs at 7:28 PM • 0 Comments • 0 TrackBacks
Category: Media
Hang in for the question at 5:55: He asks Obama what he does about "getting bullied a lot." Obama: "I wasn't bullied too much in school."
"Can you dunk?"
"Not anymore."
"Would you like to become my homeboy?"
"You bet."
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Posted by David Dobbs at 12:11 PM • 0 Comments • 0 TrackBacks
Category: Culture of science
I think it helps to have a sense of the history of science, which embeds in a writer or observer a sense of critical distance and an eye for large forces at work beneath the surface. Machinations in government surprise no one who has studied the history of government and politics. Likewise with science.
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Posted by David Dobbs at 11:16 AM • 3 Comments • 0 TrackBacks
Category: Digital culture
In case you missed them (or miss them, and want to read again ...)
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Posted by David Dobbs at 2:22 PM • 0 Comments • 0 TrackBacks