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Daedalus

on Miles Davis, Vince Lombardi, & the crisis of masculinity in mid-century America

Publication |
Daedalus

Should We Trust the Censor?

Central to the American tradition of expanding protections for controversial speech is a robust distrust of potential censors to make reasonable judgments about what speech should be suppressed. But the arguments for a more restrictive approach to speech often implicitly or explicitly evince much greater trust in the likely decision-makers who will be entrusted with the authority to suppress speech. Whether restricting Communist speech, antiwar speech, “hate speech,” or “disinformation,” the case for empowering some authority figure—such as campus administrators, technology company employees, or government officials—builds on an assumption that those authority figures will be motivated by good intentions and be endowed with good judgment to make reasonable distinctions between the speech that should be tolerated and the speech that should not. Such confidence would often seem to be misplaced.
Publication |
Daedalus

Leadership–It’s a System, Not a Person!

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Daedalus

The Protest Psychosis & the Future of Equity & Diversity Efforts in American Psychiatry

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Research Paper

Making the Humanities Count: The Importance of Data

Publication |
Daedalus

Sovereignty Strategies: Enhancing Core Governance Functions as a Postconflict and Conflict-Prevention Measure

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Daedalus

Affirmative Action: The U.S. Experience in Comparative Perspective

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Daedalus

Neuroscience: The Study of the Nervous System & Its Functions

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Daedalus

Divine Care: Care as Religious Practice

Publication |
Daedalus

“You Can’t Dance to It”: Jazz Music and Its Choreographies of Listening

Publication |
Daedalus

Images of the Future

Publication |
Daedalus

Introduction

Publication |
Daedalus

Trials & tribulations: science in the courts

Publication |
Daedalus

The Turing Trap: The Promise & Peril of Human-Like Artificial Intelligence

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Daedalus

How Not to Fight Corruption: Lessons from China

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Daedalus

The biology of race

Publication |
Daedalus

The Past & Future of American Civil Rights

Although American society will not become race-blind anytime soon, the meaning of race is changing, and processes of racial formation now are quite different than those prevailing just two generations ago. Massey puts the present moment in historical perspective by reviewing progress toward racial equality through successive historical epochs, from the colonial era to the age of Obama. He ends by exploring the contours of racial formation in the United States today, outlining a program for a new civil rights movement in the twenty-first century.
Publication |
Daedalus

Mirror, Mirror, on the Wall, Who’s the Fairest of Them All?

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Daedalus

Combating Corruption in Asian Countries: Learning from Success & Failure

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Daedalus

The boundaries of the thinkable

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