Reading for Battle

Battle Readings is a regularly updated compilation of articles, essays, and opinion pieces relevant to the themes of the Battle of Ideas.

Choose a theme from the listing on the left to narrow your search, or view all readings.

Science & Environment

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Freedom of information laws are used to harass scientists, says Nobel laureate
Sir Paul Nurse says climate scientists are being targeted by campaigns of requests designed to slow down their research
Alok Jha, Guardian, 25 May 2011

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The unhealthy fallacy of food 'choices'
If you want people to stop eating bad food, stop selling it...Pat Thomas makes a plea for Government to stop tinkering around the edges of health and sustainability.
Pat Thomas, Howl at the Moon blog, 21 May 2011

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The tyranny of science
More and more scientists fancy themselves as gods, with a duty to enlighten those who are ‘deluded to the point of perversity’.
Tim Black, spiked, 13 May 2011

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3D printing – An ‘Industrial Revolution in the Digital Age’?
Lisa Harouni, whose company Digital Forming is bringing 3D printing to high-street fashion brands and consumer product designers, has just convinced even the most skeptical investors here that something transformative is about to happen to the whole business of making things.
David Rowan, Wired, 9 May 2011

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Piecing together Fukushima
Japan's nuclear disasterEconomist, 5 May 2011

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Mechanical Minds: the power of being human
What does it mean to think? The question has bothered philosophers for millennia and computer scientists for decades.Economist, 5 May 2011

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The Social Animal: A Story of How Success Happens

The unconscious mind, it turns out, is most of the mind - the place where the majority of the brain's work gets done, where our most important life decisions are made, where character is formed and the seeds of accomplishment grow.

David Brooks, Short Books Ltd, 5 May 2011


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Tempests and tales: challenges to the study of sex differences in the brain
The topic of sex differences in brain and behavior continues to garner broad interest and generate considerable controversy. A spate of popular books in the past decade has heralded many of the recent advances in the study of the biological basis of human brain differences in relation to sex and gender. This flurry of attention has also generated lightning rods for criticism.
Margaret M McCarthy and Gregory F Ball, Biology of Sex Differences, 28 April 2011

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Nuclear energy: clean, reliable and powerful
Physicist Wade Allison expertly demolishes fears about radiation. If only he was equally as sceptical about the fear-fuelled climate-change panic.
Rob Lyons, spiked, 15 April 2011

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Zero Degrees of Empathy: a new theory of human cruelty

Simon Baron-Cohen, expert in autism and developmental psychopathology, has always wanted to isolate and understand the factors that cause people to treat others as if they were mere objects. In this book he proposes a radical shift, turning the focus away from evil and on to the central factor, empathy. Unlike the concept of evil, he argues, empathy has real explanatory power.

Simon Baron-Cohen, Allen Lane, 7 April 2011


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 The Times blog