Max Brockman: Preface
Laurence C. Smith: Will We Decamp for the Northern Rim?
At stake is no less than the global pattern of human settlement in
the twenty-first century.
Christian Keysers: Mirror Neurons: Are We Ethical by Nature?
Evolution has equipped our brains with circuits that enable us to
experience what other individuals do and feel.
Nick Bostrom: How to Enhance Human Beings
Given our rudimentary understanding of the human organism,
particularly the brain, how can we hope to enhance such a system?
It would amount to outdoing evolution. . . .
Sean Carroll: Our Place in an Unnatural Universe
The early universe is hot and dense; the late universe is cold and
dilute. Well . . . why is it like that? The truth is, we have no
idea.
Stephon H. S. Alexander: Just What Is Dark Energy?
Dark energy, itself directly unobservable, is the most bewildering
substance known, the only “stuff” that acts both on subatomic
scales and across the largest distances in the cosmos.
Sarah-Jayne Blakemore: Development of the Social Brain in
Adolescence
Using modern brain-imaging techniques, scientists are discovering
that the human brain does indeed change well beyond early
childhood.
Jason P. Mitchell:Watching Minds Interact
Perhaps the least anticipated contribution of brain imaging to
psychological science has been a sudden appreciation for the
centrality of social thought to the human mental repertoire.
Matthew D. Lieberman: What Makes Big Ideas Sticky?
Big Ideas sometimes match the structure and function of the human
brain such that the brain causes us to see the world in ways that
make it virtually impossible not to believe them.
Joshua D. Greene: Fruit Flies of the Moral Mind
People often speak of a “moral faculty” or a “moral sense,”
suggesting that moral judgment is a unified phenomenon, but recent
advances in the scientific study of moral judgment paint a very
different picture.
Lera Boroditsky: How Does Our Language Shape the Way We
Think?
Language is a uniquely human gift, central to our experience of
being human. Appreciating its role in constructing our mental lives
brings us one step closer to understanding the very nature of
humanity.
Sam Cooke: Memory Enhancement, Memory Erasure: The Future of Our
Past
Once we come to understand how our memories are formed, stored, and
recalled within the brain, we may be able to manipulate them—to
shape our own stories. Our past—or at least our recollection of our
past—may become a matter of choice.
N
Deena Skolnick Weisberg: The Vital Importance of Imagination
One of the main ways in which both adults and children learn about
the world around them is by asking “What if?” using their
imagination to think about what might have happened in the past or
what might happen in the future. Far from being used only for
childhood games or daydreams, this ability to get outside of
reality can have profound effects on our interactions with
reality.
David M. Eagleman: Brain Time
The days of thinking of time as a river—evenly flowing, always
advancing—are over. Time perception, just like vision, is a
construction of the brain and is shockingly easy to manipulate
experimentally.
Vanessa Woods and Brian Hare: Out of Our Minds: How Did Homo
sapiens Come Down from the Trees, and Why Did No One Follow?
In the six million years since hominids split from the evolutionary
ancestor we share with chimpanzees and bonobos, something happened
to our brains that allowed us to become master cooperators,
accumulate knowledge at a rapid rate, and manipulate tools to
colonize almost every corner of the planet.
Nathan Wolfe: The Aliens Among Us
While viruses have to infect cellular forms of life in order to
complete their life cycles, this does not mean that causing
devastation is their destiny. The existing equilibrium of our
planet is dependent on the actions of the viral world, and its
elimination would have profound consequences.
Seirian Sumner: How Did the Social Insects Become Social?
We would like to know what the conditions and selection pressures
were that tipped the ancestors of the eusocial insects over the
ledge and down toward eusociality.
Katerina Harvati: Extinction and the Evolution of Humankind
It is now clear that humans (whether fossil or living) are not
immune from biological forces and that extinction was (and, indeed,
is) a distinct possibility.
Gavin Schmidt: Why Hasn’t Specialization Led to the Balkanization
of Science?
Even as scientific output has increased exponentially, concerns
have been raised that growing specialization will end by making it
impossible for scientists in different fields to communicate, let
alone collaborate.
Acknowledgments
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