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...important as what you eat. Americans are fixated on nutrients, good and bad, while the French and Italians focus on the whole eating experience. The lesson of the "French paradox" is you can eat all kinds of supposedly toxic substances (triple crème cheese, foie gras) as long as you follow your culture's (i.e., mother's) rules: eat moderate portions, don't go for seconds or snacks between meals, never eat alone. But perhaps most important, eat with pleasure, because eating with anxiety leads to poor digestion and bingeing. There is no French paradox, really, only an American paradox...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Six Rules for Eating Wisely | 6/11/2006 | See Source »

...Union troops in the Civil War. In March, which won the Pulitzer Prize, Brooks liberates him from obscurity and follows him as he wanders a country divided by racism and blasted by atrocity. March could easily have come off as a preachy pill, but Brooks plays him as a paradox--an intellectual buffeted by passion, a man of faith bedeviled by doubt. He is constantly confronted with moral dilemmas that he can only bluff his way through. But he's aptly named: the deeper March sinks into the mire, the more determined he is to keep marching homeward...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: 5 Fine Books You Missed (We Did) | 6/11/2006 | See Source »

Then again, he may mean just what he says about feeling the noise. Paradox, disassociation and derangement of the senses are things Nouvel loves to play with. That window, for instance, is set in a deep recess of mirrored stainless steel. Look up and you see, reflected in the upper panel, the cars on the roadway beneath you. Look down and the lower panel reflects the sky. Up, earth; down, sky. His Cartier Foundation in Paris is a glass-walled structure with a freestanding glass wall situated a few yards in front of it. The effect is to create multiple...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Architecture: Curtain Up! | 6/11/2006 | See Source »

...Motivated, but perhaps also haunted. The looking-glass quality of images of the wounded and dying, after all, makes for a difficult paradox. Military public affairs officers must make a tradeoff when granting media embedded access within medical units. While it is an opportunity to see the successes of military medicine -- one highly touted fact is that 90 percent of the wounded in Iraq survive -- it is also the chance to witness the emotional and physical suffering of the those injured, fatally...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Why Some Military Docs Are Tuning Out "Baghdad ER" | 5/20/2006 | See Source »

...better to put paradox into concrete form than architect Nouvel? The light-sensitive fa?ade of his best-known building, the Institut du Monde Arabe, both veils and reveals the culture within, and for the MQB, it was his idea to hand over the administrative wing to the left of the museum's main entrance as a blank canvas for the Australian artists. While the building functions as a bookshop, curatorial offices and library, it was also Nouvel's idea for it to be viewed as a 3D artwork from the street. Every available window, wall, ceiling and column was seen...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: A Parisian Romance | 5/15/2006 | See Source »

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