This month, Basic Books is publishing a new edition of my first book, The End of Science, originally released in 1996.
Posts published in “Opinion”
This past week I attended two of the bigger events on campus. One of them unites most organizations on campus to celebrate ethnic diversity and harmony, and the other one unites organizations on campus to cut budgets.
Everyone gets warned about Senioritis. There are survival tips on WikiHow. There are informative Youtube videos. Look to the right side of this page – yes, even a whole column in The Stute named after the dreadful disease.
It is finally nice outside on campus. Spring is here, birds are chirping, Frisbees are being thrown, and smiles are more present.
Announced at E3 last year, “Tom Clancy’s Rainbow Six Siege” looked like it was ready to revitalize the team-based multiplayer shooter franchise with new ideas and some deviations.
The Apple Watch was made available for pre-order last week, coinciding with the embargo being lifted on major publications’ reviews for the device.
Ever since I was elected Editor-in-Chief of The Stute, I’ve been at conflict with how I should be Editor-in-Chief. From my predecessor telling others that I should be more hands-off, to my old habits as Managing Editor of being incredibly hands-on and informal/jokey with the general body rearing their head, I have been hearing two different sides to being one thing: Editor-in-Chief.
I recently knocked science journalist Chris Mooney for asserting that “You Have No Business Challenging Scientific Experts.” Non-experts have the right and even the duty, I retorted, to question scientific experts, who often get things wrong.
