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...Pleased as he is that English speakers are embracing Maori, Piripi fears that some are squeezing it out of shape. His Language Commission has had a long, and so far losing, argument with newspapers that insist on anglicizing Maori words - adding s to mark the plural, for example. Pronunciation is another disputed point. It's said Kiwis have 11 different ways of saying "Maori," from the hackle-raising "Mayo-ree" to the correct "Mow-rri." "New Zealanders have a long way to go in terms of pronunciation," says Piripi. "Really, 200 years of occupation without achieving five simple vowel sounds...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Kiwi Tongues at War | 6/5/2005 | See Source »

...What nonsense. The campaign against certainty is merely the philosophical veneer for an attempt to politically marginalize and intellectually disenfranchise believers. Instead of arguing the merits of any issue, secularists are trying to win the argument by default on the grounds that the other side displays unhealthy certainty or, even worse, unseemly religiosity...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: In Defense of Certainty | 6/1/2005 | See Source »

...presence of small people living within strolling distance of Liang Bua has cast doubt over the separate-species theory, and sparked a bitter split in scientific circles over its validity. Battle lines have been drawn, with each side vigorously trying to discredit the other. Rampasasa "makes the short-stature argument completely irrelevant," says skeptic Alan Thorne, an anthropologist at the Australian National University. "There are plenty of Pygmies in that area. In the case of these bones, it was probably a diseased Pygmy." Counters Peter Brown, the University of New England paleoanthropologist who co-wrote the Nature report with...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Bones of Contention | 5/30/2005 | See Source »

...argument should have been at least partly settled by a study conducted by a group of Australian, U.S. and Indonesian scientists (including Brown and Morwood) earlier this year that used computer tomography and 3-D reconstruction techniques to model the brain of H. floresiensis. The resulting paper, published in the journal Science in March, contended that the findings supported the theory of a new species and strongly downplayed the possibility of a disease like microcephaly playing a role. But critics remained unconvinced, citing flaws in the study, such as the suitability of skulls used for comparison. Even...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Bones of Contention | 5/30/2005 | See Source »

Well, if one side has a national security strategy (mistaken though it may be), and the other side says nothing but “me too,” who is going to win? The correct argument was twofold: one, Bush has actually made the country less strong (on homeland security, and on the fight against al Qaeda); and two, here is what Democrats will do to better protect our people in a dangerous world...

Author: By Brian M. Goldsmith, | Title: Moving On | 5/20/2005 | See Source »

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