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Search resuls for: "David P. Barash"


3 mentions found


‘Eve’ Review: A Female Body of Science
  + stars: | 2023-12-02 | by ( David P. Barash | Cat Bohannon | ) www.wsj.com   time to read: +1 min
Cat Bohannon’s book, “Eve,” erases any lingering misconception about the centrality of women, giving us a detailed look at women’s biology, focused on how—as the subtitle indicates—“the female body drove 200 million years of human evolution.”Grab a Copy Eve: How the Female Body Drove 200 Million Years of Human Evolution By Cat Bohannon Knopf 624 pages We may earn a commission when you buy products through the links on our site. but otherwise, just the same as men’s,” and she critiques the persistent tendency of researchers and physicians to take male bodies as the norm. “From mouse to human, the male body is what gets studied,” she writes. In some circles, it is heretical to maintain that women and men are biologically different, largely because such differences have in the past been manipulated toward misogynist ends. Ms. Bohannon believes that “while the majority of scientists still effectively ignore the female body, there’s a quiet revolution in the science of womanhood brewing.”
Persons: Juan Roballo, Simone de Beauvoir, , Bohannon, Barnes, Organizations: Noble, Columbia University
‘The Underworld’ Review: Life in the Oceanic Abyss
  + stars: | 2023-08-04 | by ( David P. Barash | ) www.wsj.com   time to read: +1 min
A gaggle of rattails and two assfish investigate bait in an image captured by the Caladan Oceanic Five Deeps Expedition. Photo: Tamara Stubbs/Atlantic Productions/DiscoveryIt is said that we know more about the surface of the moon than about the depths of the ocean. That might not be the case for Susan Casey. Across an eventful career Ms. Casey—a former editor in chief of O, the Oprah Magazine—has researched and written books about big waves, great white sharks, dolphins and, in “The Underworld,” the oceanic depths. She dedicates her latest book to “those who love the ocean,” which she clearly does, writing about it with passion, knowledge and insights from personal experience.
Persons: Tamara Stubbs, Susan Casey, Casey —, O, Organizations: Atlantic Productions, Oprah
For most of us, the word “fossil” conjures up old bones, dinosaurs and museums. Dale E. Greenwalt’s “Remnants of Ancient Life: The New Science of Old Fossils” offers a fascinating corrective. Mr. Greenwalt, a researcher at the Smithsonian Institution’s National Museum of Natural History, is no stranger to dinosaurs and their ilk, but his focus is on prehistoric insects and the biochemistry of ancient life forms. It is the latter research—the burgeoning study of ancient biomolecules—that is the most exciting “new science” highlighted in the book’s subtitle. “Remnants of Ancient Life” is an eye-opening guide to this new world of understanding, one that encompasses chemistry along with biology.
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