What a jumble! I’m sitting in a doctor’s examining room waiting for a checkup. On the wall is a poster chart of the human digestive system. The first thing I’m reminded of is my sock and underwear drawer.
The greenery’s just for the eyes
There comes a moment in New England woodlands in the spring when up through last season’s decaying leaves and pine needles comes the first green. Like a carpet rolled out overnight, suddenly the greedy leaves of the Canada mayflower are everywhere.
Spacecraft carry Earth’s goodwill
Remember 1972?
Lessons learned from the lichen
“There is a low mist in the woods. It is a good day to study lichens,” wrote Henry David Thoreau in his journal on the last day of 1851. To tell the truth, any day is a good day to study lichens, as Thoreau would have acknowledged.
The masking of the heavens dims our age of enlightenment
A few weeks ago I flew from Miami to Boston on a clear, dark night.
When religion subverts science
Question: Who said, “Whenever [one] hears [our] religion abused, he should not attempt to defend its tenets, except with his sword, and that he should thrust into the scoundrel’s belly, as far as it will enter”?
Future awaits ethical decisions
The Earth’s biosphere has no more ardent champion than Harvard biologist Edward O. Wilson.
Can we use it all and still have it?
We have no shortage of gurus willing to lead us into the environmental future.
Life’s sweet beginnings
“How sweet it is,” said Jackie Gleason. Yes, life is sweet. Sugar is a key ingredient of all life on earth and has been since the beginning.
Finding beauty in the beasts
The tropics are a wonderful place to consider our relationship with other species. I mean, you can hardly help it. Things that creep, slither, fly, or crawl invariably show up where you least expect them.