John Horgan
John Horgan is a freelance journalist and author. A senior writer at Scientific American from 1986 to 1997, he has also written for the New York Times, Washington Post, Time, Newsweek, Science, London Times, New Republic, Discover, and Slate, among other publications. His books include The End of Science (1996); The Undiscovered Mind (1999); and Rational Mysticism: Dispatches from the Border Between Science and Spirituality. He was twice honored with the AAAS Science Journalism Award, in 1992 and 1994, and in 1993 he received the NASW Science-in-Society Award.
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Political ScienceBook Review: The Republican War on Science by Last spring, a magazine asked me to look into a whistleblower case involving a United States Fish and Wildlife Service biologist named Andy Eller. Eller, a veteran of 18 years with the service, was fired after he publicly charged it with failing to protect the Florida panther from voracious development. One of the first species listed under the Endangered Species Act, the panther haunts southwest Florida's forests, which builders are transforming into gated golf communities. After several weeks of interviews, I wrote an article that called the service's treatment of Eller "shameful" - and emblematic of the Bush administration's treatment of scientists who interfere with its probusiness agenda. |
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In Defense of Common SenseAs anyone remotely interested in science knows by now, 100 years ago Einstein wrote six papers that laid the groundwork for quantum mechanics and relativity, arguably the two most successful theories in history. To commemorate Einstein's "annus mirabilis," a coalition of physics groups has designated 2005 the World Year of Physics. The coalition's Web site lists more than 400 celebratory events, including conferences, museum exhibits, concerts, Webcasts, plays, poetry readings, a circus, a pie-eating contest and an Einstein look-alike competition. |
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Clash in Cambridge:Science and Religion Seem as Antagonistic as EverIn the very first lecture of the Templeton-Cambridge Journalism Fellowship in June, a University of Cambridge biologist assured the 10 journalists in his audience that science and religion have gotten along much better, historically, than is commonly believed. After all, scientific pioneers such as Kepler, Newton, Boyle and even Galileo were all devout Christians; Galileo's run-in with the Church was really a spat between two different versions of Catholicism. The notion that science and religion have always butted heads is "fallacious," declared Denis Alexander, who is, not coincidentally, a Christian. Other lecturers, who included four agnostics, a Jew, a deist and 11 Christians, also saw no unbridgeable chasm between science and their faith. |