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Chapter one
Getting Together
The Parallel Universes of a Woman in Science
In physics and in life, choice and possibility play against each other.
How an Elephant Loses Its Tusks
Elephants without tusks are a response to the selective pressure of poaching.
The Problem with Modern Romance Is Too Much Choice
Are we happier with few or many choices? One subject settles the debate—dating.
Families of Choice Are Remaking America
Through their networks of friends, singles are strengthening society’s social bonds.
Spark of Science: Joyce Poole
The elephant researcher tells her story.
Chapter two
Moral Decisions
To Rescue Democracy, Go Outside
Real spaces, not digital ones, will fix our politics.
How Einstein and Schrödinger Conspired to Kill a Cat
The rise of fascism shaped Schrödinger’s cat fable.
The Weaker Sister
When we have to evacuate Earth, only the strong will survive.
Why Egg Freezing Is an Impossible Choice
I don’t want to surrender to a lottery. But will I regret not playing?
Euclid as Founding Father
We hold this mathematics to be self evident.
How to Choose Wisely
From Yelping to dating, there’s a better way.
Chapter three
In the Field
Only Street Dogs Are Real Dogs
Purebreds don’t satisfy the biological definition of a species.
There Are No True Rebels
We follow others no matter how hard we try.
How Necking Shaped the Giraffe
The private life of the African giant offers a remarkable view on evolution.
The Trouble with Milk
Only 1 in 3 people have evolved tolerance to lactose.
Chapter four
In the Wild
The Martians Are Coming—and They’re Human
How settling Mars could create a new human species.
What Counts as Science?
The arXiv preprint service is trying to answer an age-old question.
Feel Different: Breaking Your Cell Phone’s Hold
Unreliable rewards trap us into addictive cell phone use, but they can also get us out.
The Strange Inevitability of Evolution
Good solutions to biology’s problems are astonishingly plentiful.
Ingenious: Richard Dawkins
The evolutionary biologist reads Robert Frost.
Natural Selection in an Outbreak
Every time a disease spreads, it has another chance to mutate.
Related Facts So Romantic
“Reality provides us with facts so romantic that imagination itself could add nothing to them.” —Jules Verne
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