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    June 2026June 2026
    Standards of Care
    The Sun InterviewBy Naomi PittsStandards of CareRolonda Donelson on Bias and Anti-Science Attitudes in Medicine

    The reason Black women were used to develop the field of gynecology was because they were no more than property. They weren’t seen as people; they were just seen as things. The controlling of Black women’s bodies started with chattel slavery, but it continues today.

    Milk
    Readers WriteBy Our ReadersMilk

    Pumped for an infant, spilled at the dinner table, used as a tear gas antidote

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Biology - Page 3

  • Body and Mind
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    Browse Topics

    Biology

    Biology

      The Dog-Eared Page

      One’s Place Upon The Earth

      As I strolled through a glide of water clear as air, my fisherman’s heart did a somersault when I sighted, not twenty feet away, two chinook salmon easily twenty times the size of the trout I’d been happily catching and releasing.

      By David James DuncanMarch 2020
      One’s Place Upon The Earth
      The Sun Interview

      Wrong Turn

      Biologist Rupert Sheldrake On How Science Lost Its Way

      I suggest that morphogenetic fields work by imposing patterns on otherwise random or indeterminate activity. Morphogenetic fields are not fixed forever, but evolve. The fields of Afghan hounds and poodles have become different from those of their common ancestors, wolves. How are these fields inherited? I propose that they are transmitted from past members of the species through a kind of nonlocal resonance, which I call “morphic resonance.”

      By Mark LevitonFebruary 2013
      Wrong Turn
      The Sun Interview

      Countertop Culture

      Something Is Fermenting In Sandor Katz’s Kitchen

      The revolution I would like to see is a devolution of agriculture. We have to let go of the notion of mass-producing food. It just doesn’t work. Cars and computers may lend themselves to mass production, but with food it has been a disaster. We have to revive small-scale food production and relearn the art of food processing, including fermentation, so we can stop relying on these huge and vulnerable food infrastructures.

      By Liz CrainMay 2010
      Countertop Culture
      The Sun Interview

      The Sincerest Form Of Flattery

      Janine Benyus On The Virtues Of Imitating Nature

      Our mission, in both our business and our nonprofit, is to increase respect for the natural world. Creating more-sustainable products and processes is just an extension of that. To learn from nature, you have to become involved with what Wes Jackson calls the “deep conversation.” To learn how to take carbohydrates and water and turn them into a fiber as strong as steel, as a spider does, you go to a spider and respectfully ask, “How are you doing that?” Then you go and try to do it yourself. And when you fail — it’s very hard to do! — you go back to the organism and ask again.

      By David KupferSeptember 2009
      The Sincerest Form Of Flattery
      The Sun Interview

      Going Underground

      Paul Stamets On The Vast, Intelligent Network Beneath Our Feet

      A mycelial “mat,” which scientists think of as one entity, can be thousands of acres in size. The largest organism in the world is a mycelial mat in eastern Oregon that covers 2,200 acres and is more than two thousand years old. Its survival strategy is somewhat mysterious. We have five or six layers of skin to protect us from infection; the mycelium has one cell wall. How is it that this vast mycelial network, which is surrounded by hundreds of millions of microbes all trying to eat it, is protected by one cell wall? I believe it’s because the mycelium is in constant biochemical communication with its ecosystem.

      By Derrick JensenFebruary 2008
      Going Underground
      Essays, Memoirs & True Stories

      Waiting For Salmon

      How global warming will affect the fate of chinook salmon, and all that’s tied to them, is one of the many Gordian knots in natural history blithely dismissed by Americans still trying to pull Charles Darwin’s pants down.

      By Barry LopezJune 2006
      Waiting For Salmon
      Essays, Memoirs & True Stories

      The Anxiety Of Eating

      An Excerpt From The Omnivore’s Dilemma

      Historically, national cuisines have been remarkably stable and resistant to change, which is why the immigrant’s refrigerator is the very last place to look for signs of assimilation.

      By Michael PollanMay 2006
      The Anxiety Of Eating
      Essays, Memoirs & True Stories

      Stupid Design

      Fundamentalist Christians are leading a movement to teach “intelligent design” in our public schools, as an alternative to evolution. 

      By SparrowMay 2006
      Stupid Design
      The Sun Interview

      Experiencing Deep Time

      Brian Swimme On The Story Of The Universe

      The universe story isn’t just about human beings, but also about trees, for example. You can’t fully understand trees if you understand only their hundred-year life cycle. You’ve got to go back to the very beginning of the universe. Now, that’s what I mean by cosmology as empowerment. When we realize that the world we live in today is a creation of an energy and power that is that deep and that old, it helps us get away from the idea that we’re the managers of the planet and know all about what’s going on here.

      By Renee LertzmanMay 2001
      Essays, Memoirs & True Stories

      Erased Edges

      When, by some act of grace, the lines we think are there dissolve, something else appears, something timeless and rich, an intermediate zone, languid and latent, the lushness of something about to be and in no particular hurry to make it happen. The boundary between physical and spiritual melts, and we see that one is always infused with the other.

      By Barbara HurdMarch 2001
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    Biology - Page 3

    • Body and Mind
      • Abortion
      • Addiction and Recovery
      • Aging
      • Alcoholism
      • Altered States
      • Alternative Medicine
      • Cancer
      • Consciousness
      • Death
      • Dementia
      • Diet
      • Disability
      • Dreams
      • Exercise
      • Fear
      • Grief
      • Happiness
      • Healing
      • Identity
      • Medicine
      • Meditation
      • Mental Health
      • Physical Health
      • Psychology
      • Sexuality
      • Sleep
    • Culture and Society
      • Animal Rights
      • Art and Creativity
      • Cities
      • Counterculture
      • Crime
      • Education
      • Energy
      • Feminism
      • Food
      • Gender
      • Healthcare
      • Incarceration
      • Indigenous Culture
      • The Internet
      • Media
      • Oppression
      • Privacy
      • Race
      • Science and Technology
      • Sexual Violence
      • Social Justice
      • Sports
      • Sustainable Living
      • Travel
      • Vocation
      • Writing
    • Economics
      • Capitalism
      • Consumerism
      • Corporations
      • Employment
      • Globalization
      • Industrialization
      • Poverty
    • Family and Relationships
      • Adolescence
      • Adoption
      • Childhood
      • Companion Animals
      • Divorce
      • Domestic Violence
      • Elder Care
      • Friendship
      • Infidelity
      • Marriage
      • Parenting
      • Parents
      • Pregnancy and Childbirth
      • Romantic Love
      • Siblings
    • The Natural World
      • Agriculture
      • Biology
      • Climate Change
      • Ecology
      • Plants
      • Pollution
      • Wildlife
    • Politics
      • Civil Liberties
      • Democracy
      • Diplomacy
      • Government
      • Nonviolence
      • Pacifism
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      • Spirituality
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