DISCOVER Magazine. Science, Technology and The Future
Current Issue
Subscribe Today »
  • Renew
  • Give a Gift
  • Archives
  • Customer Service
  • Facebook
  • Twitter
  • Newsletter
  • Health & Medicine
  • Mind & Brain
  • Technology
  • Space
  • Human Origins
  • Living World
  • Environment
  • Physics & Math
  • Video
  • Photos
  • Podcast
  • RSS
Gene Expression
« Naturalistic biological evolution
Katz »

Modes of religion

I’ve been blogging a lot about “religion” recently, but I haven’t reallly spelled out what I mean by religion. The answer is many things. Religion, or religious belief and practice, are a suite of behaviors and concepts which explore a multi-dimensional space. This space is inhabited by a wide range of combinations of traits, some more common than others. One of the problems addressing this topic is that everyone has a different perception of the subject, a perception shaped by their own cognitive and social biases.
Here are a few of the axes which I believe religion explores:
1) The axis of intuitive supernatural agency. This is basically god(s)-belief, and serves as the lowest common denominator across cultures. Cognitive anthropologists hypothesize that this tendency emerges out of a combination of our social intelligence mixed with theory of the mind, folk physics and other pattern recognition heuristics and modules. One could posit that schizophrenics and autistics occupy two antipodes of this trait, one group seeing agents all around them, another unable to perceive agency even in human beings in front of them.
2) The axis of social ritual and participation. This is basically the liturgical and outward behavorial aspect of religion. Even in “primitive” societies rituals and rites of passage exist, and they are often imbued with supernatural significance. Some people do not take to these rituals for whatever reason (asociality, fear of crowds, etc.) while others thrive on them and the public forum they offer for their charisma.
3) The social functionality. This is basically the phenomenon where church or religious ties serve as an entree into social accepability and smooth the interactions between individuals within a society. It is a reflection of some of the ideas promoted by David Sloan Wilson regarding group selection. Some individuals might not be particularly supernaturalistic or aroused by ritual, but they know that church membership and nominal profession of belief is essential for good standing within a community.
4) The axis of mystical experience of higher consciousness. This is basically an encapsulation of the program of “neurotheology,” which attempts to show that religion can be characterized as altered states of brain chemistry. Obviously some people are more mystical in orientation, while others are relatively dead to the dreams of the cosmos. This is obviously related to #1, but I don’t think the two are coterminus subsets.
5) The axis of rationality and ideology. This is basically the creeds and doctrines promoted by the “high religions” coupled with the insitutional systems that promote them. Out of this religious mileu come the Five Ways of Aquinas or the Four Noble Truths. This mode of religious expression intersects a great deal with ethical philosophy.


These modes that I refer to are not exclusive or independent. To some extent I have laid the list out in from least to most “complex” and contingent. “Primitive” societies might lack #5 for example, and they might not have any individuals gifted with #4 because of their small scale. #3 might be attenuated or poorly developed, but #1 and #2 should still be ubiquitous. I would argue that the further up the list you are, the more naturally “evoked” the traits are from the simple experience of being a human with a particular cognitive architecture that expresses their development within the world as we know it, both social and physical. In contrast, #5 is contingent upon an interlocking set of necessary conditions and a level of social organization which implies that it does not come so “naturally” to human beings. In Theological Incorrectness the cognitive psychologist Jason Slone shows that people who profess world religions in fact conceptualize deities which are no different than class #1. In other words, though monotheists avow a belief in an all powerful god out of time and space, they seem to model in their minds a god of far more limited capacities and characteristics which resembles those of “primitive societies.”
This illustrates a classic problem that shows up when discussing religion: intellectuals monopolize the definition of religion in a modern society and so have reshaped the discourse in their own image, which I believe gives us a false perception of what religion is modally about. Christian philosophers in the tradition of Aquinas, followers of modern day thinkers like Alvin Plantiga, might battle with the legions of atheistic savants, but I suspect to a large extent they are working on the surface of the true phenomenon of religion. Similarly, we might speak of Buddhism as a non-theistic religion which rejects the Creator God and has only an equivocal attitude toward concepts like the soul, but operationally the reality on the ground is that the practices and cognitive states of Therevada Buddhists in Sri Lanka resembles that of their Hindu, Muslim and Christian neighbors, who generally do explicitly appeal to a personal God (there might be an exception in some strains of monistic Hinduism, but again, this is an elite formulation). Early 20th century intellectuals might easily imagine that the demon haunted universe would give way to the bright light of secular humanism as freedom from want and the light of reason illuminated our world and drove the gods into the shadows, but that hasn’t happened. I suspect in large part this is because the intellectuals view religion as a proto-science, an explanatory model which rationally fulfills existential concerns of how and why the world is, but most human beings do not concern themselves with such narrow questions. True, post facto they will assent to the teleological or cosmological explanation as a proof for the existence of God, but these were never atheists before they reflected on the ground of being of the universe.
One implication of this line of reasoning is that many intellectual religionists share more with atheists than they do with the masses of religionists in how they reason about the world and come to their conclusions. That is, Thomists might disagree with Logical Positivists in regards to the probability of the God hypothesis, but they are both traveling the paths of reflective rationality orthogonal to the experience of most humans who know God exists prior to reflection. In a very real sense I do believe that religious people in the generality believe in the same god, but that is not the god bound by the formulae of the philosophers.
Ultimately, as an atheist these are not conclusions that I warm to. I would like to believe that rational argumentation could resolve questions concerning the God hypothesis, and though I am reasonably fluent and capable of dancing around the ontological argument, or refuting arguments in regards to teleology, or Pascalian straw men, I have little to say to those who express a vulgar Kierkegaardian fideism. That is, they believe because they do to their inner bones. This does not mean that higher religions are safe from the assault of modernity, throughout the modern world the power of the mega-religions seems to be waning and smaller and more flexible religious institutions are rising up to fill supernatural needs. In some cases the frequency of avowed atheists and agnostics is rather high, for example in the Far East, but as John Derbyshire once noted, the Chinese are the least religious but most superstitious people. I do not believe that lack of explicit God belief necessarily entails scientific materialism.
Before we can talk about religion as a phenomenon of interest, we have to define the bounds of our topic, but those bounds range far and wide indeed. We need to look hard and perceive beyond our own horizons, constrained by the landscapes of our own personal mental universes. Those of us overly bounded by the domain of books and abstract constructions need to look around particularly hard to see the “truths” bubbling under the dark surface of the swamps beyond our line of sight.

Share

February 23rd, 2006 by Razib Khan in Culture | 9 comments | RSS feed | Trackback >

9 Responses to “Modes of religion”

  1. 1.   Mike the Mad Biologist Says:
    February 23rd, 2006 at 7:54 pm

    I would add one other thing to your list: religion as identity (or culture). For many, identifying as a member of a religion is very important even if they don’t hold with all, or even many of the beliefs of that religion (e.g., people who identify as “Catholic” even though they disagree with the Church on issues such as abortion).
    I agree with you that too often, religion is ‘overconceptualized’ (I think those who never accepted religion to begin with or moved away from it have often done so for philosophical reasons, and consequently, at some gut level, don’t understand the role identity plays). Most people are highly syncretic, and not entirely logical about religion, in part, because the role of religion in identity (or what Mordechai Kaplan called a ‘religious civilization’).

  2. 2.   Matt McIntosh Says:
    February 23rd, 2006 at 7:58 pm

    Great post, Razib. It’s interesting to consider how those five layers interact. It seems obvious that there can be upward causation where the lower levels (say, the social/ritual level) can influence the upper levels (say, the rational/ideological), but downward causation can sometimes occur too (e.g. the ideological level altering the social functionality level). Which way you think the vectors point and how great their respective magnitudes are will largely determine, say, how optimistic or pessimistic you are about the future of the Muslim world and what the proper policies toward it are.

  3. 3.   razib Says:
    February 23rd, 2006 at 8:54 pm

    mike,
    you make a good point. i would argue that religion-as-culture can be decomposed as vectors which lay along some of the axes listed above, especially #2 and #3. but, in this case i think religion is simply a outward gloss which serves as a nominal label for a complex of folkways with which it has been traditionally associated. mordechai kaplan’s reconstructionist movement is a good case in point, it is now post-theistic. additionally, my impression of reconstructionist temples and those who espouse them is that they are also profoundly radical and syncretistic institutions. in other words, religion-as-culture is epiphemenona that emerges out of the correlation of a particular group of people and a complex of religious ideas. as an example, christian arabs recently arrived from the middle east can be considered part of ‘islammic culture.’ the late edward said claimed islamic civilization, despite his anglican upbringing and professed atheism. that being said, the children of these christian arabs will likely quickly dissipate in their identification with islamic civilization, and christian arabs (like tiffany, doug flutie or steve jobs) are among the most assimilated of ‘white ethnics.’ in contrast, muslim arabs maintain a tie with islamic civilization by their fundamental religious profession.
    matt, not only is there is variation between the levels, but there is variation in how powerfully these levels influence the lives of people within a society, and, perhaps societies themselves. addressing these issues requires not being a savage, which is pretty hard as you found out a few weeks ago….

  4. 4.   John Emerson Says:
    February 24th, 2006 at 7:44 am

    “Civilized Shamans” is a fascinating book about Tibetan religion. What’s interesting is that in (pre-1959) Tibet there was an incredible richness of religious activity supported by a weak economy and very weak, decentralized political organization. (What political order there was was often provided by monasteries). Without an effective state there was also no centralized religious organization. Newspapers will say that the Dalai Lama and Panchen Lama headed of Tibetan religion, but that was only weakly true and mostly because they represented Tibet to the outside powers. There were a multitude of sects, including the pre-Buddhist Bon religion which had been partly Buddhified (just as Tibetan Buddhism had been Bon-ized). There were also many freelance miracle-workers and holy men of many different types who usually were recruited into nominal affiliation with one of the monastic sects. (Pre-1000 AD Irish Catholicism may have been something like that.)
    Even though we talk about the church and the state as adversaries, in Europe the Catholic Church and the feudal state system were really mutually dependent (Charlemagen and at least the legend of Constantine), and conversion to Catholicism usually involved entry into the state system.
    The practice of “religion” is one thing, and political forms of organization (churches) are distinguishable. You can have one without the other, and where there is no political organization of religion, practice is much different and much wilder and more diverse.
    Orthodox churches of all kinds always have to deal with upwellings of unlicensed piety, which sometimes are absorbed and sometimes condemned.

  5. 5.   John Emerson Says:
    February 24th, 2006 at 7:56 am

    On the question of Hinduism and Buddhism, one test might be to find out the degree to which the theistic mass of Buddhist faithful think of elite atheists as heretics and evildoers. Within monotheistic religions atheists are automatically condemned in the strongest terms. I suspect that this is less true in Buddhist / Hindu areas.
    In Hinduism (Louis Dumont) purity rules and ritual seem to be dominant rather than creed or belief, and serve to define groups and establish hierarchies.

  6. 6.   razib Says:
    February 24th, 2006 at 11:50 am

    On the question of Hinduism and Buddhism, one test might be to find out the degree to which the theistic mass of Buddhist faithful think of elite atheists as heretics and evildoers. Within monotheistic religions atheists are automatically condemned in the strongest terms. I suspect that this is less true in Buddhist / Hindu areas.
    interesting point. the only thing i would offer is that heresy and evil tend to be issues that are fleshed out by one group of elites against another, with populist masses roused to action. eg., heresy against priests and ministers to my knowledge has generally been an accusation from someone else of cognate position.

  7. 7.   John Emerson Says:
    February 24th, 2006 at 12:28 pm

    In the US, though, sectarian as it is, one group can attack a whole other group, especially its elite leaders.

  8. 8.   razib Says:
    February 24th, 2006 at 12:59 pm

    john, rod stark’s work deals with sect formation in the USA, and the observed pattern is consistent: as a sect rises in social status and becomes laxer, a breakaway group starts a new sect, which goes through the same process. to give you an empirical example, one reason princeton was started was to offer a genuinely conservative and orthodox alternative to training ministers aside from harvard, which was shifting from reformed christian to unitarian in the 18th century. one reason westminster theological seminary was started was that princeton theological seminary (its own roots remember being a reaction to harvard’s liberalism) had become too liberal.
    one reason patrick henry college was started was because something was ‘missing’ from evangelical schools like wheaton. 50 years from now someone will start a college because something is ‘missing’ from patrick henry college.

  9. 9.   Oran Kelley Says:
    March 1st, 2006 at 2:41 pm

    Interesting post.
    I agree about the levels and the fact that the lower levels are more directly responsive to our natural predipositions.
    I think, though, that the fact that the higher levels (moving otward theology & institutionalized churches) are so widespread. My guess is that they arise almost automatically out of reflections that become more easy to make once a socity develops history, writing, etc.
    My guess is that at a certain stage of civilization atheism begins to seem a lot more plausible relative to the stories that arose out of the basic religious impulse (if not in the perosnal sense (I begin to feel doubt) then in the displacved sense (I can imagine how many of my weaker bethren will begin to feel doubt)), and that more layers keep getting thrown on to stave off the threat of atheism.





    • About Gene Expression

      Razib Khan’s degrees are in biochemistry and biology. He has blogged about genetics since 2002, previously worked in software development, is an Unz Foundation Junior Fellow and lives in the western US. He loves habaneros.

    • Search

    • Recent Comments

      • DrHobo on Free 23andMe genotyping
      • Razib Khan on Loss-of-function & variation in load
      • Jacob Roberson on Loss-of-function & variation in load
      • anthro_apologist on Non-overlapping magisteria for the social and biological?
      • NotMyNormalName on Free 23andMe genotyping
    • Must Read List

      • Principles of Population Genetics
      • Quantitative Genetics
      • The Horse, the Wheel, and Language
      • Albion's Seed
      • The Blank Slate
    • Links

      Blogroll

      Blogroll

      • A Replicated Typo
      • Archives at unz.org
      • Brown Pundits
      • Deep Sea News
      • Dienekes
      • Gene Expression Classic
      • Harappa Ancestry Project
      • John Hawks
      • Less Wrong
      • Randall Parker
      • Razib on Books
      • Razib's Aggregator Blog
      • Secular Right
      • Sepia Mutiny
      • Steve Sailer
      • West Hunter
      Q & A

      Q & A

      • A. W. F. Edwards
      • Adam K. Webb
      • Armand Leroi
      • Bruce Lahn
      • Charles C. Mann
      • Charles Murray
      • Dan Sperber
      • David Haig
      • Heather Mac Donald
      • Hugh Pope
      • James F. Crow
      • John Derbyshire
      • Jon Entine
      • Judith Rich Harris
      • Justin L. Barrett
      • Ken Miller
      • Matthew Stewart
      • Parag Khanna
      • Peter Turchin
      • Warren Treadgold
      Books

      Books

      • 1491
      • 1848
      • A Beautiful Math
      • A Concise Economic History of the World
      • A Farewell to Alms
      • A History of Christianity
      • A History of Iran
      • A History of the Byzantine State and Society
      • A Reason for Everything
      • A Separate Creation
      • A Splendid Exchange
      • A Theory of Religion
      • A World History
      • Aboriginal Australians
      • Adaptation and Natural Selection
      • After Tamerlane
      • After the Ice
      • Age of Abundance
      • Albion's Seed
      • American Judaism
      • Banana
      • Before the Dawn
      • Behavioral Genetics in the Postgenomic Era
      • Biometry
      • Blood of the Isles
      • Bones, Stones and Molecules
      • Born That Way
      • Calculus Made Easy
      • Castes of Mind
      • Catholicism and Freedom
      • Causes of Evolution
      • Children of the Revolution
      • China in World History
      • China's Cosmopolitan Empire
      • China: A New History
      • Clash of Extremes
      • Contours of the World Economy 1-2030 AD
      • Darwin's Cathedral
      • Dawn of Human Culture
      • Deep Ancestry
      • Defenders of the Truth
      • Descartes' Baby
      • Divided by the Faith
      • Dragon Bone Hill
      • Empires and Barbarians
      • Empires of the Silk Road
      • Empires of the Word
      • End of the Bronze Age
      • Endless Forms Most Beautiful
      • Epistasis and Evolutionary Process
      • Europe
      • Europe After Rome
      • Europe Between the Oceans
      • Evolution
      • Evolution and the Genetics of Populations
      • Evolution for Everyone
      • Evolutionary Dynamics
      • Evolutionary Genetics
      • Evolutionary Human Genetics
      • Evolutionary Quantitative Genetics
      • Explaining Culture
      • Fooled By Randomness
      • Fourth Crusade & the Sack of Constantinople
      • Freedom Just Around the Corner
      • From Plato to Nato
      • Genetical Theory of Natural Selection
      • Genetics and Analysis of Quantitative Traits
      • Genetics and Origins of Species
      • Genetics of Populations
      • Genghis Khan & the Making of the Modern World
      • Genome
      • Geography of Thought
      • Global Capitalism
      • God's War
      • Grand New Party
      • Grooming, Gossip, and the Evolution of Language
      • Guns, Germs, and Steel
      • Historical Dynamics
      • History of Rome
      • How Pleasure Works
      • How Rome Fell
      • How We Decide
      • In Gods We Trust
      • In Search of the Trojan War
      • India: A New History
      • Infidels
      • Journey of Man
      • Keepers of the Keys of Heaven
      • Knowledge and the Wealth of Nations
      • Mapping Human History
      • Marketplace of the Gods
      • Mathematical Models in Biology
      • Molecular Evolution
      • Molecular Markers, Natural History, and Evolution
      • Mother Nature
      • Mutants
      • Narrow Roads of Gene Land 1
      • Narrow Roads of Gene Land 2
      • Narrow Roads of Gene Land 3
      • Natural Selection and Social Theory
      • Nature via Nurture
      • No Two Alike
      • Of Moths and Men
      • Origin and Evolution of Cultures
      • Origins of Theoretical Population Genetics
      • Out of Thin Air
      • Pandora's Seed
      • Plagues and Peoples
      • Population Genetics and Microevolutionary Theory
      • Population Genetics, Molecular Evolution, and the Neutral Theory
      • Postwar
      • Power and Plenty
      • Predictably Irrational
      • Prehistory of the Mind
      • Principles of Population Genetics
      • Pursuit of Glory
      • Quantitative Genetics
      • R.A. Fisher, the Life of a Scientist
      • Reading in the Brain
      • Religion Explained
      • Rome and Jersalem
      • Sailing to Byzantium
      • Sewall Wright and Evolutionary Biology
      • Sociobiology
      • Speciation
      • Statistical Methods in Molecular Evolution
      • Supernatural Selection
      • Survival of the Prettiest
      • Synaptic Self
      • Tempo and Mode in Evolution
      • The 10,000 Year Explosion
      • The Age of Confucian Rule
      • The Age of Lincoln
      • The Altruism Equation
      • The Ancestor's Tale
      • The Ascent of Money
      • The Barbarian Conversion
      • The Black Swan
      • The Blank Slate
      • The Classical World
      • The Creationists
      • The Cultural Origins of Human Cognition
      • The Darwin Wars
      • The Descent of Man
      • The Early Chinese Empires
      • The Essential Difference
      • The Evolutionists
      • The Faith Instinct
      • The Fall of Rome
      • The Fall of the Roman Empire
      • The g Factor
      • The Genetics of Human Populations
      • The Germanization of Early Medieval Christianity
      • The Great Arab Conquests
      • The Great Divergence
      • The Great Human Diasporas
      • The Great Upheaval
      • The History and Geography of Human Genes
      • The Horse, the Wheel, and Language
      • The Human Web
      • The Imitation Factor
      • The Invisible Gorilla
      • The Language Instinct
      • The Making of a Christian Aristoracy
      • The Math Gene
      • The Mating Mind
      • The Meme Machine
      • The Moral Animal
      • The Number Sense
      • The Nurture Assumption
      • The Origin of Species
      • The Origin Of The Mind
      • The Origins of Virtue
      • The Power of Babel
      • The Price of Altruism
      • The Red Queen
      • The Reformation
      • The Rise of Western Christendom
      • The Sacred Chain
      • The Selfish Gene
      • The Seven Daughters of Eve
      • The Stuff of Thought
      • The Symbolic Species
      • The Tenth Parallel
      • The Troubled Empire
      • The Vertigo Years
      • The Vikings
      • Throes of Democracy
      • Unknown Quantity
      • Unto Others
      • War and Peace and War
      • War, Wine, and Taxes
      • We Are Doomed
      • Wealth and Poverty of Nations
      • What Hath God Wrought
      • When Baghdad Ruled the Muslim World
      • When Genius Failed
      • Why Sex Matters
      • Why Some Like It Hot
    • Elsewhere on DISCOVER

      RSS Genetics in DISCOVER mag

      Genetics in DISCOVER

      • Here’s Looking at You, Kid

      • Gallery | The Grinches That Stole Valentine's Day: Creatures That Say No to Sex
      • The Spider Assassin That Acts Like Prey and Cloaks Itself With Wind
      • How Did LEGO Become More About Limits Than Possibilities?
      • Top 100 Stories of 2011: #51: Stone Age 
Art Studio Unearthed
      • Top 100 Stories of 2011: #91: Unmasking Earth’s First Life

      • Top 100 Stories of 2011: #61: Aging Effects 
Reversed in Mice

      • Top 100 Stories of 2011: #35: Fossil Stirs Debate Over 
Dinosaurs’ Last Days
    • Gene Expression content

      RSS Recent Posts

      Recent Posts

      • The race question: are bonobos human?
      • Loss-of-function & variation in load
      • Free 23andMe genotyping
      • Europe’s special northeast
      • Extraordinary mutations require extraordinary evidence
      • Kalash haplotype sharing
      • Kalash on the human tree
      • The Nanopore footnote?
      Categories

      Categories

      • Administration
      • Agriculture
      • Anthroplogy
      • Ask a ScienceBlogger
      • Barbarism
      • Behavior Genetics
      • Bioethics
      • Biology
      • Biotech
      • Blog
      • Books
      • Cognitive Science
      • Creationism
      • Culture
      • Data Analysis
      • Demographics
      • Development
      • Ecology
      • Economics
      • Education
      • Environment
      • Evolution
      • Evolutionary Genetics
      • Evolutionary Psychology
      • Fantasy
      • Food
      • Futurism
      • Genetics
      • Genomics
      • Geography
      • GSS
      • Health
      • History
      • Human Evolution
      • Human Evolutionary Genetics
      • Human Evolutionary Genomics
      • Human Genetics
      • Human Genomics
      • International Affairs
      • Linguistics
      • Medicine
      • Paleontology
      • Personal Genomics
      • philosophy
      • Politics
      • Population Genetics
      • Psychology
      • Quantitative Genetics
      • Religion
      • Science
      • Science Fiction
      • Select
      • Social Science
      • Space
      • Sports
      • Statistics
      • Technology
      • Transhumanism
      • Uncategorized
      Archives

      Archives

      • February 2012
      • January 2012
      • December 2011
      • November 2011
      • October 2011
      • September 2011
      • August 2011
      • July 2011
      • June 2011
      • May 2011
      • April 2011
      • March 2011
      • February 2011
      • January 2011
      • December 2010
      • November 2010
      • October 2010
      • September 2010
      • August 2010
      • July 2010
      • June 2010
      • May 2010
      • April 2010
      • March 2010
      • February 2010
      • January 2010
      • December 2009
      • November 2009
      • October 2009
      • September 2009
      • August 2009
      • July 2009
      • June 2009
      • May 2009
      • April 2009
      • March 2009
      • February 2009
      • January 2009
      • December 2008
      • November 2008
      • October 2008
      • September 2008
      • August 2008
      • July 2008
      • June 2008
      • May 2008
      • April 2008
      • March 2008
      • February 2008
      • January 2008
      • December 2007
      • November 2007
      • October 2007
      • September 2007
      • August 2007
      • July 2007
      • June 2007
      • May 2007
      • April 2007
      • March 2007
      • February 2007
      • January 2007
      • December 2006
      • November 2006
      • October 2006
      • September 2006
      • August 2006
      • July 2006
      • June 2006
      • May 2006
      • April 2006
      • March 2006
      • February 2006
      • January 2006
    • Meta

      • Log in
      • Entries RSS
      • Comments RSS
      • WordPress.org
    • RSS Razib’s Pinboard Feed

      • Intergenerational mobility: Bowles and Gintis and Clark
      • Israeli Court Invalidates a Military Exemption - NYTimes.com
      • The American Conservative » Where Did the Moderates Go?
      • What’s the best weather forecast? Why you should use Weather Underground. - Slate Magazine
      • Justices to Hear Case on Affirmative Action in Higher Education - NYTimes.com
      • The NRI double standard: Daughters, go home! | Firstpost
      • Japanese fart scrolls prove that human art peaked centuries ago
      • Jermdemo Raised to the Law: AGBT: digesting diposable MinIONs in diaspora
      • Investor Peter Thiel is the billionaire behind Ron Paul’s presidential campaign. - Slate Magazine
      • Europe Agrees on New Bailout to Help Greece Avoid Default - NYTimes.com
      • Poland Leads Wave of Communist-Era Reckoning in Europe - NYTimes.com
      • In Life's Too Short, Famous Dwarf Tangles With Ricky Gervais | Underwire | Wired.com
      • Mormon population in the U.S.: an interactive map - Slate Magazine
      • Utah Local News - Salt Lake City News, Sports, Entertainment, Business - The Salt Lake Tribune
      • Segregation, Arnold Kling | EconLog | Library of Economics and Liberty
      • Q&A: Henry Louis Gates Jr. on the Mysteries of His Genome - Businessweek
      • Things I have learnt from and about IVF — Crooked Timber
      • Fennoscandia Biographic Project: Finestructure of Fennoscandia - Preliminary result Chr 1-6
      • Tassili-n-Ajjer rock art is at least 9000 years old
      • Spurring the growth of cities


  • Kalmbach Publishing Co.

    Copyright © 2012, Kalmbach Publishing Co.

    Privacy - Terms - Reader Services - Subscribe Today - Advertise - About Us