When We Are No More

Home > Other > When We Are No More > Page 23
When We Are No More Page 23

by Abby Smith Rumsey


  Lewis-Williams, David and David Pearce. 2005. Inside the Neolithic Mind: Consciousness, Cosmos, and the Realm of the Gods. London: Thames and Hudson.

  Lewontin, Richard. 2005. “The Wars over Evolution.” New York Review of Books, October 20, 51–54.

  Liberman, Nira and Yaacov Trope. 2008. “The Psychology of Transcending the Here and Now.” Science 322: 1201–5.

  Livingstone, David N. 2003. Putting Science in Its Place: Geographies of Scientific Knowledge. Chicago: University of Chicago Press.

  Lloyd, Seth. 2007. “The quantum was quirky.” Nature 450: 1167–68.

  ——. 2008. “Quantum Information Matters.” Science 319: 1209–11.

  “Long-term storage in DNA,” Nature 518: 276.

  Lubenov, Evgueniy V. and Athanassios G. Siapas. 2009. “Hippocampal theta oscillations are traveling waves.” Nature 459: 534–39.

  Luria, A. R. 1987. The Mind of the Mnemonist: A Little Book about a Vast Memory. Translated by Lynn Solotaroff. Cambridge, MA: Harvard University Press.

  Lyons, Jonathan. 2013. The Society for Useful Knowledge. New York: Bloomsbury Press.

  MacCulloch, Diarmaid. 2003. The Reformation: A History. New York: Penguin Books.

  Macdougall, Doug. 2008. Nature’s Clocks: Scientists Measure the Age of Almost Everything. Berkeley: University of California Press.

  MacLeod, Christine. 2009. “The invention of heroes.” Nature 460: 572–73.

  Maier, Pauline. 1997. American Scripture: The Making of the Declaration of Independence. New York: Alfred A. Knopf.

  Malakoff, David. 2000. “Does Science Drive the Productivity Train?” Science 289: 1274–76.

  Mann, Adam. 2011. “The hunting of the dark.” Nature 471: 433–35.

  Marcus, Amy Dockser. 2012. “The Hard Science of Monkey Business.” Wall Street Journal, March 30.

  Margolit, Avishai. 2002. The Ethics of Memory. Cambridge, MA: Harvard University Press.

  Martin, Edwin T. 1952. Thomas Jefferson: Scientist. New York: Collier Books.

  Mason, Malia F., Michael I. Norton, John D. van Horn, Daniel M. Wegner, Scott T. Grafton, and C. Neil Macrae. 2007. “Wandering Minds: The Default Network and Stimulus-Independent Thought.” Science 315: 393–95.

  Mayr, Ernst. 1982. The Growth of Biological Thought: Diversity, Evolution, and Inheritance. Cambridge, MA: Belknap Press of Harvard University Press.

  ——. 1992. “The Idea of Teleology.” Journal of the History of Ideas 52/1: 117–35.

  ——. 1997. This Is Biology: The Science of the Living World. Cambridge, MA: Belknap Press of Harvard University Press.

  ——. 2004. What Makes Biology Unique? Considerations on the Autonomy of a Scientific Discipline. New York: Cambridge University Press.

  McCarthy, James J. 2009. “Reflections On: Our Planet and Its Life, Origins, and Futures.” Science 326: 1646–55.

  McCook, Allison. 2011. “Shelved.” Nature 47: 270–72.

  Mehta, Mayank. 2007. “Fascinating rhythm.” Nature 446: 27.

  Mellars, Paul. 2009. “Origins of the female image.” Nature 459: 176–77.

  “Memory failure detected.” 2011. Times Higher Education.

  Menand, Louis. 2001. “A Marketplace of Ideas.” American Council of Learned Societies Occasional Paper 49.

  “Microscopic models.” 2009. Nature 459: 615.

  Miller, Greg. 2004. “Behavioral Neuroscience Uncaged.” Science 306: 432–34.

  ——. 2007. “A Surprising Connection Between Memory and Imagination.” Science 315: 312.

  Miller, Jonathan F., Markus Neufang, Alec Solway, Armin Brandt, Michael Trippel, Irina Mader, Stefan Hefft, Max Merkow, Sean M. Polyn, Joshua Jacobs, Michael J. Kahana, Andreas Schulze-Bonhage. 2013. “Neural Activity in Human Hippocampal Formation Reveals the Spatial Context of Retrieved Memories.” Science 342: 1111–14.

  Milosz, Czeslaw. 1982. Visions from San Francisco Bay. Translated by Richard Lourie. New York: Farrar, Straus and Giroux.

  ——. 1983. The Witness of Poetry. Cambridge, MA: Harvard University Press.

  Miyashita, Yasushi. 2004. “Cognitive Memory: Cellular and Network Machineries and Their Top-Down Control.” Science 306: 435–40.

  Montaigne, Michel de. 1943. The Complete Works of Montaigne: Essays. Travel Journal. Letters. Translated and edited by Donald M. Frame. Stanford: Stanford University Press.

  Mulcahy, Nicholas J. and Josep Call. 2006. “Apes Save Tools for Future Use.” Science 312: 1038–40.

  Myin, Erik. 2010. “Unbounding the Mind.” Science 330: 589–90.

  Niebuhr, Reinhold. 1952. The Irony of American History. Chicago: University of Chicago Press.

  Nisbet, Robert. 1980. History of the Idea of Progress. New York: Basic Books.

  Nitz, Douglas. 2009. “The inside story on place cells.” Nature 461: 889–90.

  Nordling, Linda. 2010. “Researchers launch hunt for endangered data.” Nature 468: 17.

  Normile, Dennis. 2012. “Experiments Probe Languages’ Origins and Development.” Science 331: 408–11.

  O’Connor, Ralph J. 2008. “Illuminating the Details of Deep Time.” Science 321: 1447–48.

  O’Hara, Kieron, Richard Morris, Nigel Shadbolt, Graham J. Hitch, Wendy Hall, and Neil Beagrie. 2006. “Memory for life: a review of the science and technology.” Journal of the Royal Society 3: 351–65.

  Oppezzo, Marily and Daniel L. Schwartz. 2014. “Give Your Ideas Some Legs: The Positive Effect of Walking on Creative Thinking.” Journal of Experimental Psychology: Learning, Memory, and Cognition 40: 1142–52.

  O’Reilly, Randall C. 2006. “Biologically Based Computational Models of High-Level Cognition.” Science 314: 91–94.

  Ostroff, Linnaea. 2011. “Recalling the future.” Nature 474: 34.

  Pääbo, Svante. 2014. Neanderthal Man: In Search of Lost Genomes. New York: Basic Books.

  Padoa-Schioppa, Camillo and John A. Assad. 2006. “Neurons in the orbito-frontal cortex encode economic value.” Nature 441: 223–26.

  Page, F. W. 1895. “Our Library.” University of Virginia Alumni Bulletin 1–2: 78–85.

  Palmer, Linda and Gary Lynch. 2010. “A Kantian View of Space.” Science 328: 1487–88.

  Pennisi, Elizabeth. 2009. “On the Origin of Cooperation.” Science 325: 1196–99.

  Pesic, Peter. 1999. “Wrestling With Proteus: Francis Bacon and the ‘Torture’ of Nature.” Isis 90/1:81–94.

  Pico, Richard M. 2002. Consciousness in Four Dimensions: Biological Relativity and the Origins of Thought. New York: McGraw-Hill.

  Pierpont, Claudia Roth. 2004. “The Measure of America.” New Yorker, March 8, 48–63.

  Plato. 1925. Phaedrus: Plato in Twelve Volumes. Vol. 9. Translated by Harold N. Fowler. Cambridge, MA: Harvard University Press; London: William Heinemann.

  Pollack, Andrew. 2011. “DNA Sequencing Caught in Deluge of Data.” New York Times, November 30.

  Pollack, Robert. 1999. The Missing Moment: How the Unconscious Shapes Modern Science. Boston: Houghton Mifflin.

  Powell, Adam, Stephen Shannon, and Mark G. Thomas. 2009. “Late Pleistocene Demography and the Appearance of Modern Human Behavior.” Science 324: 1298–1301.

  Preserving Our Digital Heritage: Plan for the National Digital Information Infrastructure and Preservation Program. 2002. Washington, D.C.: Library of Congress.

  Pronin, Emily. 2008. “How We See Ourselves and How We See Others.” Science 320: 1177–80.

  Quammen, David. 2006. The Reluctant Mr. Darwin. New York: W. W. Norton.

  Raddick, M. Jordan and Alexander S. Szalay. 2012. “The Universe Online.” Science 329: 1028–29.

  Raichle, Marcus E. 2006. “The Brain’s Dark Energy.” Science 314: 1249–50.

  Ramirez, Steve, Xu Liu, Pei-Ann Lin, Junghyup Suh, Michele Pignatelli, Roger L. Redondo, Tomás J. Ryan, and Susumu Tonegawa. 2013. “Creating a False Memory in the Hippocampus.” Science 341: 387–91.

  Reich, Eugenie Samuel. 2011. “Tevatron’s legacy set to disappear.” Nature 474: 16–17.


  Richerson, Peter J. and Robert Boyd. 2005. Not by Genes Alone. How Culture Transforms Human Evolution. Chicago: University of Chicago Press.

  Richet, Pascal. 2007. A Natural History of Time. Translated by John Venerella. Chicago: University of Chicago Press.

  Ricoeur, Paul. 2004. Memory, History, Forgetting. Translated by Kathleen Blamey and David Pellauer. Chicago: University of Chicago Press.

  Robinson, Andrew. 2008. “A century of puzzling.” Nature 453: 990–91.

  Rodden, Appletree. 2011. “What makes us laugh.” Nature 473: 450.

  Roediger, H. L. III and K. A. DeSoto. 2014. “Forgetting the Presidents.” Science 346: 1106–9.

  Ross, Sydney. 1962. “Scientist: the Story of Word.” Annals of Science 18, 2: 65–85.

  Rossi, Paolo. 1984. The Dark Abyss of Time: The History of the Earth and the History of Nations from Hooke to Vico. Translated by Lydia G. Cochrane. Chicago: University of Chicago Press.

  ——. 2000. Logic and the Art of Memory: The Quest for a Universal Language. Translated by Stephen Clucas. Chicago: University of Chicago Press.

  Rudwick, Martin J. S. 2005. Bursting the Limits of Time: The Reconstruction of Geohistory in the Age of Revolution. Chicago: University of Chicago Press.

  ——. 2008. Worlds Before Adam. The Reconstruction of Geohistory in the Age of Reform. Chicago: University of Chicago Press.

  [Rumsey], Abby Smith. 2003. “Authenticity and Artifact: When Is a Watch Not a Watch?” Library Trends 52/1: 172–82.

  Sahakian, Barbara, Andrew Lawrence, Luke Clark, and Jamie Nicole Labuzetta. 2008. “The innovative brain.” Nature 456: 168–69.

  Sarewitz, Daniel. 2012. “Beware the creeping cracks of bias.” Nature 485: 149.

  Schacter, Daniel L. and Donna Rose Addis. 2007. “The ghosts of past and future.” Nature 445: 27.

  Schacter, D. L., D. R. Addis, and R. L. Buckner. 2007. “Remembering the past to imagine the future: the prospective brain.” Nature Reviews. Neuroscience 9: 675–661.

  Schnabel, Jim. 2009. “Rethinking rehab.” Nature 458: 25–27.

  Schrope, Mark. 2006. “The real sea change.” Nature 443: 622–24.

  Schubert, Stephen Blake. 1993. “The Oriental Origins of the Alexandrian Library.” Libri 43/2: 142–72.

  Science of Memory: Concepts. 2007. Edited by Henry L. Roediger III, Yadin Dudai, and Susan M. Fitzpatrick. New York: Oxford University Press.

  Shapin, Steven. 1996. The Scientific Revolution. Chicago: University of Chicago Press.

  ——. 2001a. “How to Be Antiscientific.” In The One Culture? A Conversation about Science. Edited by J. A. Labinger and Harry Collins. Chicago: University of Chicago Press.

  ——. 2001b. “Proverbial Economies: How an Understanding of Some Linguistic and Social Features of Common Sense Can Throw Light on More Prestigious Bodies of Knowledge, Science for Example.” Social Studies of Science 31/5: 713–69.

  Sharp, Phillip A. 2014. “Meeting Global Challenges: Discovery and Innovation through Convergence.” Science 348: 1468–71.

  Shaw, Jonathan and Jennifer Carling. 2008. “Eye on the Universe.” Harvard Magazine July–August: 30–35.

  Shettleworth, Sara J. 2007. “Planning for breakfast.” Nature 445: 825–26.

  Shryock, Andrew and Daniel Lord Smail. 2011. Deep History. The Architecture of Past and Present. Berkeley: University of California Press.

  ——. 2013. “History and the ‘Pre.’” American Historical Review 118: 709–37.

  Sibum. H. Otto. 2004. “What Kind of Science Is Experimental Physics?” Science 306: 60–61.

  Skoyles, John R. 2010. “Optimizing Scientific Reasoning.” Science 330: 1477.

  Smail, Daniel Lord. 2008. On Deep History and the Brain. Berkeley: University of California Press.

  Smith, Eliot R. and Diane M. Mackie. 2009. “Surprising Emotions.” Science 323: 215–16.

  Smolin, Lee. 2010. “Space-time turn around.” Nature 467: 1034–35.

  Snyder, Laura J. 2011. The Philosophical Breakfast Club. New York: Broadway Books.

  Sparrow, Betsy, Jenny Liu, and Daniel M. Wegner. 2011. “Google Effects on Memory. Cognitive Consequences of Having Information at Our Fingertips.” Science 333: 776–78.

  Squire, Larry R. and Eric R. Kandel. 1999. Memory: From Mind to Molecules. New York: Scientific American Library.

  Stafford, Ned. 2010. “Science in the digital age.” Nature 467: S19–S21.

  Stirling, Andy. 2010. “Keep it complex.” Nature 468: 1029–31.

  Suddendorf, Thomas. 2006. “Foresight and Evolution of the Human Mind.” Science 312: 1006–7.

  “Sustainable Economics for a Digital Planet: Ensuring Long-term Access to Digital Information. Final Report of Blue Ribbon Task Force on Sustainable Digital Preservation and Access.” 2010.

  Szathmáry, Eőrs and Szabolcs Számadó. 2008. “Language: A Social History of Words.” Nature 456: 40–41.

  Talmi, Deborah and Chris Frith. 2007. “Feeling great about doing right.” Nature 446: 865–66.

  Tattersall, Ian. 2012. Masters of the Planet: The Search for Our Human Origins. New York: Palgrave McMillan.

  Tenenbaum, Joshua B., Charles Kemp, Thomas L. Griffiths, and Noah D. Goodman. 2011. “How to Grow a Mind: Statistics, Structure, and Abstraction.” Science 331: 1279–85.

  The 1812 Catalogue of the Library of Congress. A Facsimile. 1982. Washington, D.C.: Library of Congress.

  The Anatomy of Memory: An Anthology. 1996. Edited by James McConkey. New York: Oxford University Press.

  “The Evidence in Hand: Report of the Task Force on the Artifact in Library Collections.” 2001. Washington, D.C.: Council on Library and Information Resources.

  “The human epoch.” 2011. Nature 473: 254.

  The Jefferson Bicentennial 1743–1943: A Catalogue of the Exhibitions in the Library of Congress. 1943. Washington, D.C.: Library of Congress.

  The Legacy of Isaiah Berlin. 2001. Edited by Mark Lilla, Ronald Dworkin, and Robert Silvers. New York: New York Review of Books.

  “The map in your head.” 2009. Nature 459: 477.

  Thomas Jefferson’s Library: A Catalog with the Entries in His Own Order. 1989. Edited by James Gilreath and Doulas L. Wilson. Washington, D.C.: Library of Congress.

  Thomas Jefferson’s Poplar Forest: A Private Place. 2002. Corporation for Jefferson’s Poplar Forest.

  Thompson, Scott M. and Hayley A. Mattison. 2009. “Secret of synapse specificity.” Nature 458: 296–97.

  Thomson, Keith. 2012. Jefferson’s Shadow: The Story of His Science. New Haven: Yale University Press.

  Thurman, Judith. 2008. “First Impressions: What Does the World’s Oldest Art Say About Us?” New Yorker, June 23, 58–67.

  Turner, Fred. 2006. From Counterculture to Cyberculture: Stewart Brand, the Whole Earth Network, and the Rise of Digital Utopianism. Chicago: University of Chicago Press.

  ——. 2009. “Capturing digital lives.” Nature 461: 1206–8.

  Ulam, S. M. 1991. Adventures of a Mathematician. Berkeley: University of California Press.

  Underwood, Emily. 2014. “Brain’s GPS Finds Top Honor.” Science 346: 149.

  Velez, Juan-Pablo. 2011. “An Unusual Library Finds a Home.” New York Times, November 12.

  “Vive la révolution.” 2011. Nature 469: 443.

  Vogel, Gretchen. 2004. “Behavioral Evolution: The Evolution of the Golden Rule.” Science 303: 1128–31.

  Von Baeyer, Hans Christian. 2004. Information: The New Language of Science. Cambridge, MA: Harvard University Press.

  von Neumann, John. 2002. The Computer and the Brain. 2nd ed. New Haven, CT: Yale University Press.

  Weinberg, Steven. 1987. “Newtonianism, reductionism, and the art of congressional testimony.” Nature 330: 433–37.

  ——. 1995. “Reductionism Redux.” New York Review of Books, 42/15.

  Whiten, Andrew. 2014. “Incipient tradition in wild chimpanzees.” Nature 514: 178–79.

  Wigner, Eugene. 1960. “The Unreasonable Effecti
veness of Mathematics in Natural Sciences.” Communications in Pure and Applied Mathematics 13/1.

  ——. 1992. The Recollections of Eugene P. Wigner as Told to Andrew Szanton. New York: Basic Books.

  Willis, K. J. and H. J. B. Birks. 2006. “What Is Natural? The Need for a Long-Term Perspective and Biodiversity Conservation.” Science 314: 1261–65.

  Wilson, Douglas L. 1984. “Sowerby Revisited: The Unfinished Catalogue of Thomas Jefferson’s Library.” William and Mary Quarterly 36: 503–23.

  Wilson, Edward O. 1998. Consilience: The Unity of Knowledge. New York: Alfred A. Knopf.

  ——. 2012. “On the Origins of the Arts.” Harvard Magazine, May–June.

  Wolf, Maryanne. 2007. Proust and the Squid: The Story and Science of the Reading Brain. New York: Harper Perennial.

  Wood, Gordon S. 2006. Revolutionary Characters: What Made the Founders Different. New York: Penguin Books.

  Yang, Guang, and Cora Sau Wan Lai, Joseph Cichon, Lei Ma, Wei Li, Wen-biao Gan. 2014. “Sleep promotes branch-specific formation of dendritic spines after learning.” Science 344: 1173–78.

  Yates, Frances A. 2001. The Art of Memory. London: Pimlico.

  Zimmer, Carl. 2009. “On the Origin of Life on Earth.” Science 323: 198–99.

  ——. 2011. “Nonfiction: Nabokov Theory on Butterfly Evolution is Vindicated.” New York Times, January 25.

  ILLUSTRATION CREDITS

  1 Rough Draft of Declaration of Independence. Courtesy of the Library of Congress.

  2 Chauvet Cave. Getty Images.

  3 Pushmi-pullyu from The Story of Doctor Dolittle. Abby Smith Rumsey.

  4 Cuneiform from library of Ashurbanipal. © Trustees of the British Museum.

  5 Giant Bible of Mainz and Gutenberg Bible. Courtesy of the Library of Congress.

  6 Charles Willson Peale Portrait of Thomas Jefferson. Courtesy of Independence National Historical Park.

  7 Jefferson catalogue, 1815. Courtesy of the Library of Congress.

  8 Sainte-Geneviève Library. © La Collection/Jean-Claude N’Diaye. Delivered on September 11, 2015.

  9 F. Quesnel drawing of Michel de Montaigne, ca. 1588. Reprinted with permission from the Montaigne Studies website.

  10 Alexander Romanovich Luria. Reprinted with permission from www.luria.ucsd.edu.

 

‹ Prev