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Lapham’s Quarterly
Lapham’s Quarterly

8.9K Followers

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Dec 10, 2018

The World’s Greatest Outlaw

The life of Samuel Johnson, would-be attorney-at-law — By Richard Cohen Toward the end of his life, Samuel Johnson drew up a list of subjects that he would like to research. He projected forty-nine works in all; none was on any aspect of the law. According to James Boswell, Johnson’s celebrated biographer, almost the only subjects sure to…

History

13 min read

The World’s Greatest Outlaw
The World’s Greatest Outlaw
History

13 min read


Dec 6, 2018

How to Think Like a Medieval Monk

Self-help for your mind from centuries ago — By Julia Bourke They may have been founded in 1098, but the Cistercian order in France still managed to anticipate one of the most exciting discoveries of modern science. Known as the “white monks” because of their habits of undyed sheep’s wool, the Cistercians envisaged religious life as a process…

Wellness

7 min read

How to Think Like a Medieval Monk
How to Think Like a Medieval Monk
Wellness

7 min read


Dec 4, 2018

The Derangements

How fasting rewired my brain — By Beau Friedlander Here’s what happened when I didn’t eat for prescribed periods of time: it affected every cell in my body, and my mind started working better. I can’t prove any of this. There’s science out there that might explain it, but that work is far from settled. A…

Health

14 min read

The Derangements
The Derangements
Health

14 min read


Nov 29, 2018

In Search of Fear

Notes from a high-wire artist — By Philippe Petit A void like that is terrifying. Prisoner of a morsel of space, you will struggle desperately against occult elements: the absence of matter, the smell of balance, vertigo from all sides, and the dark desire to return to the ground, even to fall. …

Psychology

9 min read

In Search of Fear
In Search of Fear
Psychology

9 min read


Nov 27, 2018

The Vanishing Pugilist and the Poet

The marriage of twentieth-century avant-gardists Arthur Cravan and Mina Loy was blissfully happy — until his mysterious disappearance — By Emma Garman When the surrealist hero and sometime pugilist Arthur Cravan vanished off the coast of Mexico at the age of thirty-one, both the man and the circumstances lent themselves to speculation that he’d faked his own death. Born Fabian Avenarius Lloyd in Switzerland to Anglo-Irish parents, Cravan spent…

History

11 min read

The Vanishing Pugilist and the Poet
The Vanishing Pugilist and the Poet
History

11 min read


Nov 23, 2018

The Person in the Ape

A history of humans trying and failing to understand the minds of apes — By Ferris Jabr Around 500 BC, the Carthaginian explorer Hanno the Navigator guided a fleet of sixty oared ships through the Strait of Gibraltar and along the northwest lobe of the great elephant ear that is the African continent. Toward the end of his journey, on an island in a…

Evolution

18 min read

The Person in the Ape
The Person in the Ape
Evolution

18 min read


Nov 15, 2018

The Ghost and the Princess

The correspondence of René Descartes and Princess Elisabeth of Bohemia — a debate about mind, soul, and immortality — By Anthony Gottlieb There is an “official theory” about the nature of minds that “hails chiefly from Descartes,” wrote Gilbert Ryle, an Oxford philosopher. According to the theory, each person has a mind that is a private, inner world. It has no spatial dimensions and is not subject to laws…

Philosophy

13 min read

The Ghost and the Princess
The Ghost and the Princess
Philosophy

13 min read


Nov 13, 2018

Sight Unseen

A neighborhood along the Underground Railroad — By Alex Green A s long as it has existed, Waltham, Massachusetts, has been a place where outsiders quietly come and go. Bisected by the Great Road, it was once one of few stops on the journey west from Boston to the Massachusetts frontier, nine miles out from the city…

History

16 min read

Sight Unseen
Sight Unseen
History

16 min read


Nov 12, 2018

Castles in Air

The American democracy and dream are the building of castles in air. Whither goeth the one so goeth the other, these days up in smoke and the spout. — By Lewis H. Lapham You can tell the ideals of a nation by its advertisements. — Norman Douglas There may not be an “American character,” but there is the emotion of being American…that feeling…of nostalgia for some undetermined future when man will have improved himself beyond recognition and when all…

Politics

16 min read

Castles in Air
Castles in Air
Politics

16 min read


Nov 8, 2018

Deeper Than Deep

David Reich’s genetics lab unveils our prehistoric past — By Ron Rosenbaum “It’s like the discovery of the New World,” David Reich tells me. “Everything is new, nobody’s looked at it in this way before, so how can things not be interesting?” The excitement surrounding David Reich’s ancient genetics lab at Harvard Medical School is almost palpable. Journals like…

Science

20 min read

Deeper Than Deep
Deeper Than Deep
Science

20 min read

Lapham’s Quarterly

Lapham’s Quarterly

8.9K Followers

A magazine of history and ideas, celebrating ten years in print. Sign up for our weekly newsletter: https://bit.ly/3fxTmiV.

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