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While Italy is now famous for its use of the red tomato on pizzas and pastas, the food was introduced the country relatively recently. A historian on how we all came to love the tomato.
"Contrary to the Machiavellian cliché, nice people are more likely to rise to power. Then something strange happens: Authority atrophies the very talents that got them there."
"We think of writing as an author’s cognitive output, but it has a corporeal dimension—writing is an embodied practice." The Smart Set on the loss of novelists' female transcriptionists.
Consumption of marijuana should be legal, but selling it should not be. Mark Kleiman at The Atlantic fears marketers would peddle the vice just as they have alcohol and fast food.
"How do you find contentment in an acquisitive society? By changing the things you spend your money on, says a U.S. academic." The Independent reports on the upside to the recession.
As digital technology increasingly responds to our behavior in realtime, the qwerty keyboard and other hallmarks of our analog experience of life may become relics of the past.
British philosopher Roger Scruton says false hope is the biggest danger to humanity and that doses of pessimism help keep us on track toward gradual positive social change.
"Maybe it's time waterbeds made a comeback." The Atlantic wonders why the bed that once boasted a better sex life and (eventually) a good night's sleep became so unpopular so fast.