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Kinsey's
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Kinky Stuff
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Indiana
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University Press is publishing The Art of Desire: Erotic Treasures From the
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Kinsey Institute , an exhibition catalog accompanying the first survey of
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the erotica collected by the institute over the past 50 years. The book,
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complete with 49 illustrations, follows closely on the heels of James H. Jones'
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hostile biography of Alfred Kinsey and seems designed, in part, to counter the
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bad impression left by that book. While the catalog does contain some
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potentially controversial material, such as Hungarian artist Rezso Merényi's
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Mouse Kiss , a 1922 etching of "a grand-scale vagina juxtaposed with two
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mice," the selection, made by the Kinsey Institute itself, mostly highlights
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the highbrow elements of the collection, such as a Chagall lithograph
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displaying some mild buttock fondling. In order to "sustain a celebratory
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tone," write the curators, "representations of certain sexual practices or
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fantasies (those judged by common consensus pathological) were ruled
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inappropriate for our overarching agenda." The truly weird stuff can be seen
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only by appointment. (Here's the Kinsey Institute's Web site.)
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It Isn't
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All Relative
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Recent
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discoveries prove that Albert Einstein was indeed the first to explicate the
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general theory of relativity. Historians of science have long questioned
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whether Einstein truly discovered the idea, or whether the honor goes to
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Göttingen mathematician David Hilbert, who submitted a paper on the subject
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five days before Einstein turned in his work. Though Einstein's paper was
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published first, Hilbert maintained that he was the first to have solved some
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key field equations. Einstein, furious, charged Hilbert with plagiarism.
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Einstein was right. Hilbert's proofs, found this July at the Max Planck Institute in
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Berlin, reveal that crucial steps were missing at the time of his submission,
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which were filled in only after Einstein's paper came out. In an article in
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Science , the research team that scrutinized the drafts concludes that
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Hilbert "revised his paper in response to Einstein's work." It's the second big
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blow to Hilbert's legacy: His audacious attempt to ground all mathematics in a
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finite number of axioms was upended by Gödel's incompleteness theorem in
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1931.
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Mine
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Kampf
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A British
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mining concern has discovered that 1.5 million tons of coal lie buried beneath
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Newstead Abbey, the family estate of Lord Byron. The company is poised to begin
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digging on the dilapidated Nottinghamshire property. Byron scholars are
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concerned that the fragile 800-year-old structure (purchased by the Byron
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family from Henry VIII in 1540) might collapse if the excavation proceeds. The
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strongest protests come not from British scholars, however, but from Greek
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ones. Byron, who led the Greek armed forces in their fight for independence
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against the Ottoman Turks in 1824, is considered a national hero in Greece.
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Scholars at the University of Athens are leading the campaign to protect the
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abbey's romantic ruins. In response, Midlands Mining promises that no harm will
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come to the abbey, which provided a moody backdrop to both Childe Harold
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and Don Juan .
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Body
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Conscious
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The hot
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topic at the Modern Language Association meeting this year will be Disability
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Studies. Scholars in the field decode and debunk the literary tropes that
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rhetorically separate "normal" from "abnormal" bodies. Essays to be delivered
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at the conference, which will take place this December in Toronto, include
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"Oliver Sacks: The P.T. Barnum of the Postmodern World" and "Of Angels and
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Pig-Faced Ladies: Disordering Victorian Desire." Much as feminists champion
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The Awakening and lesbian-studies scholars vaunt The Well of
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Loneliness , disability-studies scholars promise to uncover a slew of
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founding texts written by the differently abled. One such work is the
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long-forgotten 1841 memoir A Narrative of the Experience and Sufferings of
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William Dodd, a Factory Cripple, Written By Himself . A graduate student
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from the University of California at Irvine will present an analysis of the
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Londoner's autobiography at the conference.
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Early
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Music
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An
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approximately 50,000-year-old fragment of bear bone, found at an excavated
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Neanderthal hunting camp in present-day Slovenia in 1995, may be the oldest
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known musical instrument. It contains four circular punctures that eerily evoke
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a flute. Paleontologist Ivan Turk, who discovered the bone, recently told
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Scientific American that the four holes are "really well rounded and
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just about the right separation for humans to put their finger on." And Bob
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Fink, a Canadian musicologist, thinks the hole spacing proves that the
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bone-flute was "inescapably diatonic," suggesting that the eight-tone "Western
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scale" may be much older than we thought. (His analysis
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is posted on the Web.) Based on the fragment, Fink speculates that the original
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flute contained at least six holes and was close to 16 inches long. Not all
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anthropologists agree. T. Temple Tuttle, an ethnomusicologist at Cleveland
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State University, feels the holes conform to "a number of scales," including
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the South Indian system.
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The
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Empire Strikes Back
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A
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book-review editor at Science says she was pressured to retire this past
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summer after she published a negative review of a book that claimed to defend
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science from postmodern critiques. The review was of Higher Superstition:
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The Academic Left and Its Quarrels With Science , written by biologist Paul
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Gross and mathematician Norman Levitt. The article's author, Smithsonian
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curator Paul Forman, accused Gross and Levitt of trying to place "science back
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on its pre-postmodern pedestal." After the review was published, Science
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received a flood of angry telephone calls and letters, according to the editor
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in question, Katherine Livingston. (George Mason University's James Trefil, for
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instance, complained that Forman "gets into material he does not appear to
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understand. ... You couldn't possibly have published a better parody of what
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passes for scholarship in the postmodern world.") In an interview with the
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Chronicle for Higher Education , Levitt took credit for launching the
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letter-writing campaign: "I was mad as hell that such an irresponsible review
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had run in Science ," he said. After reading the complaints,
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Science editor in chief Floyd Bloom formally reprimanded Livingston and
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took away control of the book-review section.
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Earth
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Loses Its Balance
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Geologists say that the
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concept of continental drift may need to be revised to account for some sudden
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reshufflings that took place in Earth's past. Basing their theories on evidence
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found in magnetite grains in Australian bedrock, researchers at Caltech posit
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that 550 million years ago, continents at the poles scooted toward the equator
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while equatorial continents shimmied to the poles, all within a mere 15 million
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years. (Typically, a continental shift takes much longer to complete.) What
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caused the flip-flop? The stability lent by two opposing supercontinents,
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Gondwanaland and Rodinia, was disrupted when Rodinia began to fracture. Earth's
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balance was thrown off, and a massive migration was required to regain
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planetary equanimity. Joseph Kirschvink, a Caltech geophysicist, suggests that
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this upheaval may have enhanced the workings of evolution. "Each time you
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disrupt an ecosystem, you break it into small communities, where evolution
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works fastest," Kirschvink told Discover .
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