Antoine de Saint-Exupéry’s “Little Prince” lived on an asteroid scarcely larger than himself. As readers of the childhood classic will remember, his companions were a sheep and a rose, and some baobab seedlings that he carefully weeded, lest they grow into giant trees that would split his tiny world.
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Some cold water for cold fusion
The grand old man of science fiction, Sir Arthur C. Clarke, recently weighed in once again with the opinion that there may be something to cold fusion.
Time to end debate on material vs. ideal
When I was in school back in the 1940s and ’50s — parochial schools — materialism was thrown up to us as the bugbear of bugbears. Not even “Godless communism” offered a more perfidious peril for our souls.
Under magnifier, scum is beautiful
“The angiosperms are the superstars of the plant world,” says Lynn Margulis in her ‘Five Kingdoms: An Illustrated Guide to the Phyla of Life on Earth.’
By nature, man can turn it off
The teaser on the cover of the August [2000] issue of Scientific American was irresistible: “Men’s Sexual Circuitry.”
The endless journey with ‘adequate steps’
Tim Robinson is an Englishman who went to Ireland’s Aran Island in 1972 to write, think, and otherwise jolt his life out of a London rut. In 1984, he moved across Galway Bay to Connemara, where he remains. His long sojourn in those rocky landscapes has led to several wonderful books and maps of surpassing loveliness.
The joy of life after the Big Bang
“In the beginning, there was not coldness and darkness: there was the fire,” wrote the Jesuit mystic, Teilhard de Chardin, in his The Mass on the World. He added: “The flame has lit up the whole world from within…from the inmost core of the tiniest atom to the mighty sweep of the most universal laws of being.”
The great Irish elk: Under ice or overkill?
The Irish love their turf — poet Seamus Heaney’s “kind, black butter.” Sliced and dried, it makes a lovely, aromatic fuel. The turf bogs are also wonderful repositories of Irish history.
Building machines from the atoms up
The pop star physicist, Richard Feynman, had lots of clever ideas in his lifetime, including a few that won him a Nobel Prize, but what he might be best remembered for 100 years from now is something he tossed off almost in passing back in 1959.
Mars photos give us something to drink in
We thrilled to the recent photographs from Mars showing what appear to be relatively recent water channels on the red planet.