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HOME > CLASSIC ISSUES

American Scientist Classics

Perennially popular feature articles from past issues:

The Origin of Animal Body Plans

Douglas Erwin, James Valentine, David Jablonski

Molecular biology provides insights into the Early Cambrian explosion

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Rivers

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Science in 2006

Lewis Branscomb

A scientist in 2006 looks back on the two decades of extraordinary progress, change and controversy that followed Sigma Xi's Centennial

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Rising Scores on Intelligence Tests

Ulric Neisser

Test scores are certainly going up all over the world, but whether intelligence itself has risen remains controversial

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A Review of Darwin's Black Box: The Biochemical Challenge to Evolution, by Michael J. Behe

Robert Dorit

This review originally appeared in the September-October 1997 issue of American Scientist.

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The Ecology of Lyme-Disease Risk

Richard Ostfeld

Complex interactions between seemingly unconnected phenomena determine risk of exposure to this expanding disease

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CAFEBABE

Brian Hayes

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Fullerene Nanotubes: C1,000,000 and Beyond

Boris Yakobson, Richard Smalley

Some unusual new molecules—long, hollow fibers with tantalizing electronic and mechanical properties—have joined diamonds and graphite in the carbon family

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Machine Politics

Brian Hayes

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Laughter

Robert Provine

The study of laughter provides a novel approach to the mechanisms and evolution of vocal production, perception and social behavior

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The Beginnings of Life on Earth

Christian de Duve

The cradle of life may have been an acrid, boiling brew, reeking of volcanic hydrogen sulfide-laden fumes

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The Square Root of NOT

Brian Hayes

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The Role of Intelligence in Modern Society

Earl Hunt

Are social changes dividing us into intellectual haves and have-nots? The question pushed aside in the 1970s is back, and the issues are far from simple

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Chimpanzee Hunting Behavior and Human Evolution

Craig Stanford

Chimpanzees are efficient predators that use meat as a political and reproductive tool. Are there implications for the evolution of human behavior?

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Ethical Problems in Academic Research

Judith Swazey, Melissa Anderson, Karen Louis

A survey of doctoral candidates and faculty raises important questions about the ethical environment of graduate education and research

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The Science of Scientific Writing

George Gopen, Judith Swan

If the reader is to grasp what the writer means, the writer must understand what the reader needs

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