Tuesday Notes
Michael Balter,"Falling in Love with France and its Troves of Ancient History," NYT, 10 April, tells the remarkable story of NYU's Randall White and his findings in the archaeology of prehistoric France.
Lucy McDonald,"And that's renaissance magic ...," Guardian, 10 April, reviews Luca Pacioli's De viribus quantitatis (On the Power of Numbers). This heretofore unpublished manuscript, written between 1496 and 1508 CE and rarely seen since then, is Europe's earliest book of magic. Pacioli was a Franciscan monk, friend of Leonardo di Vinci, and father of modern accounting.
Peter D. Kramer,"Hearing Voices," NYT, 8 April, reviews Daniel B. Smith's Muses, Madmen, and Prophets: Rethinking the History, Science, and Meaning of Auditory Hallucination.
Anthony Barnes,"Darwin's Doubts Revealed in His Letters to Friends," Independent, 8 April, draws on the Darwin Correspondence Project. Already 5000 letters are online. Eventually, there will be 3 volumes of selected letters and 30 volumes of the complete letters.
John Updike,"The Changeling," New Yorker, 16 April, reviews Hermione Lee's Edith Wharton. Hat tips.
Mark Sherman,"Justice Kennedy the Key in Close Cases," Boston Globe, 7 April, argues that it's a Kennedy Supreme Court. Kennedy has been in the majority on all the Supreme's 5/4 decisions this term, but Alito and Ginsburg have not always voted along liberal/conservative lines.
Finally, John Ridley,"The Lessons of Fat Albert," Boston Globe, 8 April, traces the trajectory of Bill Cosby's career, from his UMass doctoral thesis in 1976 to his rants about the black underclass today. Hat tip.