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...ultimately racist field of craniometry, which asserted that intellect could be determined merely by measuring the head, much early work on the brain was nonsense or worse. But today's powerful scanners now allow us to see inside the head as never before. Detailed maps of thousands of genes reveal the DNA blueprint that allows the brain to exist at all. More powerful psychoactive drugs let us understand the chemistry of the brain and fix it when it goes awry. In this issue, we catch up on the latest breakthroughs in this fast-moving field...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Building Our Brain Trust | 1/18/2007 | See Source »

There appears to be what Wittgenstein called an "unbridgeable gulf" between the brain and the conscious mind. The paradox of the mind-body problem is that the explanatory causes of consciousness in the brain are not discoverable by inspecting the brain, and introspection cannot reveal the rootedness of consciousness in brain tissue. Our modes of knowing about the mind-brain nexus don't home in on the glue that binds the two together...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: The Brain: An Unbridgeable Gulf | 1/18/2007 | See Source »

Trying to map the brain has always been cartography for fools. Most of the other parts of the body reveal their workings with little more than a glance. The heart is self-evidently a pump; the lungs are clearly bellows. But the brain, which does more than any organ, reveals least of all. The 3-lb. lump of wrinkled tissue--with no moving parts, no joints or valves--not only serves as the motherboard for all the body's other systems but also is the seat of your mind, your thoughts, your sense that you exist at all. You have...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: The New Map Of The Brain | 1/18/2007 | See Source »

...captures an art form reconnecting with its original mystery: paper, chemicals, light. Such were the essential ingredients of the early?19th century camera-less process of photograms, and by casting everyday objects in a contemporary light, current practitioners such as Christl Berg, Anne Ferran and Penelope Davis seem to reveal the very essence of the photographic process. Here light carries an almost god-like aura, peering into the most inscrutable of subjects. Even in the subtly manipulated Lauren, 2003, Petrina Hicks uses new technologies to highlight photography's old-fashioned alchemy. Left any longer in the darkroom, one imagines...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Dark Reflections | 1/11/2007 | See Source »

...planning required for a minor military campaign. Every significant corporation in Japan throws a shinnenkai for workers, clients and peers, but Dentsu's is beyond compare. Simply accommodating the more than 4,000 guests required that they attend in four shifts of two hours each. Dentsu wouldn't reveal the cost of Tuesday's event, but word on the floor was that over $400 had been spent for each guest...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Blowfish With the Corporate Elite | 1/11/2007 | See Source »

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