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Compiled by
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the editors of Lingua
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Franca
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(posted Saturday, Sept.
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Holy
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War
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A group of
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scholars known as "biblical minimalists" is claiming that the Good Book is
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thoroughly worthless as a historical document, and that all future efforts to
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reconstruct the early history of Israel must rely strictly on archaeology. In a
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recent discussion of the subject in Bible Review , leading British
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scholar Philip Davies is quoted as saying that "the figure of King David is
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about as real as [that of] King Arthur," and minimalists point out that the
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archaeological evidence for David's existence amounts to a solitary reference
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to the "House of David" on a victory monument at Tel Dan. Similarly, Andrews
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University's David Merling says that "only those who are friendly to the
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biblical story would actually believe in an Exodus event." Discarding the
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biblical narrative, minimalists reinterpret the flight from Egypt into Israel
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as a variety of indigenous peasant revolt in which fed-up Canaanite farmers
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wrested their land from feudal lords. Traditional scholars respond that, while
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the Bible may have a shaky sense of chronology, to dismiss the text entirely is
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irresponsible.
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Deconstructing Martha
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Cultural
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studies scholars are assembling an anthology tentatively titled The Martha
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Stewart Collection that will analyze the "image and rhetoric" of the
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world's most famous homemaker. Hobart and William Smith Colleges Professors
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Linda Robertson and Jodi Dean have circulated a prospectus for the project on
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the Internet. Hoping to inspire submissions, they note that Martha "offers a
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simulacrum of warmth in a house devoid of people; she represents the instinct
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of workmanship to a population long divorced from it." With a nod to another
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leading icon of cultural studies, Robertson and Dean suggest that "one refers
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to Julia Child's cooking, naming her expertise, but to Martha--as with
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Madonna--image is the product."
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Kiss and
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Make Up
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Kathryn
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Harrison's The Kiss, a memoir of her incestuous relationship with her father,
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has been given a glowing review in the Journal of the American Medical
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Association . The review, by physician David Hodo, praises the book as
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"exquisite" and "highly recommended to all physicians." Discussing Harrison's
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harrowing encounters with uncomprehending doctors--such as the physician who
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broke Harrison's hymen in front of her mother--Hodo concludes that "there is
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not much help for a troubled young woman with a fearful secret if a medical
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system fails to be personal, complex, creative, [and] sophisticated." In a
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somewhat mysterious allusion, Hodo also compares Harrison's "pilgrimage" to
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that of Dilsey, the black servant in The Sound and the Fury ; perhaps he
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meant to refer to incest-victim Caddy.
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How the
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Snake Lost Its Legs
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A
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hitherto unnoticed fossil in an Israeli museum is being heralded as the answer
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to this evolutionary mystery. According to Michael Lee of the University of
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Sydney and Michael Caldwell of Chicago's Field Museum, the 100-million-year-old
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fossil, christened Pachyrachis problematicus ("problematic thick-ribbed
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animal") in the late 1970s, is a proto-snake with two legs. Long ignored by
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snake experts, the skeleton shares many physical characteristics with that of
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snakes, including its 140 vertebrae and its extraordinarily flexible jaws.
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Noting the fossil's eel-like tail and other aquatic attributes, Lee and
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Caldwell suggest that these proto-snakes retreated into the water, shed their
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legs, then slithered back out.
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Mostly
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Mozart
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David Cope, a
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professor of music at the University of California at Santa Cruz, claims to
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have created a 42 nd Mozart symphony. Cope broke down the composer's
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41 symphonies into reusable parts, then blended them together in his computer
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into a convincing pastiche. "There's no expert in the world who could, without
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knowing its source, say for certain that [the piece] is not [by] Mozart," Cope
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boasted to Britain's New Scientist . Although Cope grants that his
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artificial intelligence algorithms may not produce masterpieces, he promises
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the result is at least "better than Salieri." (The computer is currently
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composing a new Mahler symphony: "I'm so tired of the 10 symphonies," Cope
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said. "God, it would be great to hear a new one.") Music critics complain about
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the computer's tin ear, but artificial intelligence experts are impressed.
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Indiana University's Douglas Hofstadter, an amateur pianist, recently played
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one of Cope's fake Chopin mazurkas, and told New
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Scientist he was
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"stunned" by its seeming authenticity. Click here to listen to one of Cope's imitation Chopin
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mazurkas.
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Economics 2001
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After
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almost 50 years, a new economics textbook is challenging the supremacy of Paul
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Samuelson's Economics . Written by Harvard's N. Gregory Mankiw, the book,
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Principles of
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Economics, received a $1.4 million advance from Harcourt Brace imprint
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Dryden Press. Whereas Samuelson's text, now in its 15 th edition,
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staunchly advocates Keynesian prescriptions, Mankiw's is touted as
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post-ideological, pitting rival schools of thought against each other. Mankiw
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also updates Samuelson's chatty tone--the putative source of his longstanding
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success with students--with such pop references as Jim Carrey's seemingly
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excessive compensation and Mia Farrow's $2,900 rent-controlled New York City
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apartment. In a typical example, Mankiw illustrates the law of comparative
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advantage by way of Michael Jordan and lawn mowing: "Jordan can probably mow
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his lawn faster than anyone else," Mankiw writes. "But just because he can mow
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his lawn fast, does this mean he should?"
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