“Peer Review”: A new science journal that critiques articles in other journals

May 28, 2026 • 10:45 am

Luana sent me this tweet, which I’d missed, announcing the founding of a new scientific journal that exists to critique articles in other journals (with the original author given the right of reply). Click on the screenshot if you want to go to the original tweet:

 

To see the Wall Street Journal op-ed by Kevin McCaffree and Colin explaining the journal, click on the screenshot below—or you can find the article archived here.

Some excerpts:

We’re often told that science is “self-correcting.” But science isn’t like a thermostat regulating your home’s temperature. It’s a human institution run by fallible human beings. Scientists and scholars are susceptible to career incentives, moral fads, groupthink and fear. When those pressures capture journals or entire fields, peer review can become less a filter for error than a credentialing system for fashionable nonsense.

. . . Decades of studies on publication bias, replication failures and political bias in the social sciences have shown that peer-reviewed papers are often less reliable than the public assumes. John Ioannidis’s famous 2005 paper, “Why Most Published Research Findings Are False,” remains disturbing because its basic insight about the fallibility of medical research remains true. In fields that rely heavily on narrative or qualitative methods, or that touch on politicized topics (as much social science does), ideology influences which questions are asked and which conclusions are professionally acceptable.

The authors then mention the Sokal hoax as well as the “Grievance Studies affair” involving submission of bogus papers to social-science and humanities journals by Helen Pluckrose, James Lindsay, and Peter Boghassian. (There were no submissions to STEM journals in either “affair” unless you consider gender studies journals as being in STEM.

A bit more:

This problem is growing more serious. Across swaths of the humanities, social sciences, medicine and biology, some narratives have become taboo. Papers presenting contrary evidence or dissenting viewpoints are rejected without comment. Letters to the editor, which are supposed to provide a quick way to respond to flawed work, are ignored or unavailable. The result is an ideologically biased literature that’s presented as an expert consensus and cited by journalists, courts, school boards, medical associations, government agencies and lawmakers to justify policies that affect millions of people.

The most obvious answer is better peer review. But ideologically captured fields have little incentive to correct themselves. As a result, objections to progressive orthodoxy are relegated to social-media threads, blog posts and newspaper opinion sections.

This is where the myth of “self-correcting” science becomes a problem. People assume the system will fix itself, but first someone has to notice the problem and create a mechanism for correction.

That is what we have done. As an editor-in-chief and a member of the editorial advisory board of Theory and Society, an interdisciplinary journal published by Springer Nature, we are proud to announce a first-of-its-kind article type called “Peer Review.” The purpose is to avoid procedural traps that can prevent legitimate criticism from being published and to recover what peer review was supposed to be: serious, good-faith analysis by experts seeking clarity and truth.

As in postpublication peer review, a Peer Review article may address a paper from any scholarly journal so long as it raises concerns about methods, evidence, logic, definitions or theory. The focus must be on claims, arguments and scholarly standards, not the author’s character or motives.

Submissions, limited to 2,500 words, will undergo a simple merit review rather than endless rounds of gatekeeping. An editor or subject-matter expert will ask a straightforward question: Is this critique coherent, serious and reasonable enough to deserve scholarly attention? If so, it will be accepted.

This is a good idea, and I can easily see myself writing a short response to some pieces that I find deficient. (Some of my website critiques of “sex-is-a-spectrum” posts might have been appropriate.

The only problem is what to do with papers (not just critiques) that try to air subjects that are forbidden or inflammatory.  Those might be suitable for The Journal of Controversial Ideas, but I’ve never seen a straight science/data paper there. (Granted, I haven’t looked at every issue.)

Anyway, pass this news along to those who might be interested.

Should we allow people who aren’t terminally ill to undergo medically assisted dying?

May 28, 2026 • 9:00 am

Are people suffering from a persistent, debilitating, and apparently incurable psychiatric condition, such as incapacitating suicidal depression, entitled to physician and/or government assistance in dying? (This procedure is also called “physician-assisted suicide”, or “medical assistance in dying”: MAID).  Of course anybody can kill themselves without the help of doctors or the government, but I’m talking about formal programs, often involving ingestion or injection of pentobarbital or secobarbital. This is available for those suffering from apparently incurable and suicidal mental illness in five countries: Belgium, the Netherlands, Switzerland, Luxembourg, and Spain (see details below the fold). All of these countries require, as is proper, a rigorous vetting program by mental-health professionals and doctors to see if all recourses have been tried and if the patient truly want to die and sees no point in living.

One alternative, legal everywhere and mentioned in the piece below, is voluntary stopping of eating and drinking (VSF), which, depending on what you do, will cause death within a week or two.  Some countries, like the Netherlands, will give hospice care to mentally ill people who are not approved for MAID but choose VSF, helping those patients ease out of life when their bodies start to shut down.

While physician-assisted suicide is legal in many places, including 11 states in the U.S., as well as Washington D.C.—laws permitting it have recently passed in Illinois and New York, and will take effect this summer—these are all for people suffering from terminal medical conditions.  The U.S. and all countries other than the five listed above do not allow physician-assisted suicide for other coniditons, whether or not the government assists or helps pay for it.

For a number of reasons I list below, MAID for psychiatric conditions has become quite controversial,  While I tend to side with those who allow it, I also agree that stringent medical and psychological vetting is necessary before a doctor is allowed to help someone die who has such conditions.  In the Free Press article below, author Rupa Subramanya first describes the death of Iris Dekker in the Netherlands, and then discusses the many issues around the procedure.

Click to read, though you’ll have to be a subscriber.

One gets the feeling from the posted article above, which is generally objective, that Subramanya really does oppose MAID for psychiatric conditions, and partly for religious reasons.  In a new hourlong conversation with Coleman Hughes, however, Subramanya pulls no punches; she clearly doesn’t think MAID is ready for primetime.  Coleman is a bit more in favor of it, but also has reservations.

First, a bit about Iris Dekker, who sought MAID in the Netherlands after over a decade of deep depression and suicidality.  She in fact tried to kill herself twice, once by hanging and once by cutting, but her parents found her in both cases and aborted the attempt. She also had a physical condition that may have been related to her mental illness:

Depression was not new to the Dekkers. Omar [Iris’s father] has a history of it, as do other members of his family. But Iris’s was different. Her symptoms were psychological and physical—a condition called functional neurological disorder, associated with severe psychological distress and depression. It often presents with symptoms like paralysis, seizures, and chronic pain, and was once referred to in medical psychology as hysteria. Iris had spent more than two years in a wheelchair after a seizure left her unable to walk.

In the end, after she had tried everything, including electroconvulsive therapy and ketamine treatment, Iris asked for MAID. But she became worse while waiting for approval and so practiced VSF until she died, with her pain palliated by physicians, at age 19.  Her parents didn’t want her to die, but in the end realized that there was no likelihood of a cure, and supported her. The end:

Watching her fade away, Omar felt the full weight of what was happening. He recalled the final night with his daughter as he held her in his arms and listened to her breathing. “In my heart, as a father—and also as a nurse—I was thinking, I have to do something,” he said. “And at the same time, I knew: No. This is what she wants.”

In her final moments, Iris could no longer speak or respond. When she took her last breath, Omar saw a smile on his daughter’s face.

“She looked so happy,” he said. “I couldn’t give her more love than letting her go.” Iris died on March 1, five days before her 20th birthday.

Letting go of those we love is very hard. We take it for granted that it’s humane when we’re dealing with pets who have terminal medical issues, but we cannot know when animals are undergoing unbearable mental suffering. But humans can tell us.

*********

It seems obvious, as I said, that Subramanya doesn’t like the idea of MAID, nor does she say how it could be implemented properly.  Statements like these are what makes me feel that way:

The Dekkers agreed to talk to me in detail about their daughter’s decisions—and theirs. They also showed me medical records for Iris. I tried to understand how loving parents could be persuaded that the best decision for their daughter was an early death. What I found was a system that turns young people’s ambiguous wishes into a diagnosis of incurable depression. The process raises questions about the treatment not only of a few teens like Iris who choose to die by euthanasia, but countless others who are confronted with the idea that their psychological suffering is beyond help.

. . .With each failure, Iris and her parents heard the same conclusion from specialists: Her condition was “treatment resistant,” and doctors had exhausted their options. In fact, the conclusion that depression such as Iris’s can be incurable is itself controversial among psychiatrists. As one recent paper in Psychological Medicine noted, clinicians “cannot accurately predict long-term chances of recovery in a particular patient with treatment-resistant depression.”

In the podcast with Coleman, Rupa makes it clear that while she’s not opposed to assisted dying, she is pretty much opposed to the process when it’s applied to psychiatric illnesses or even, as is legal in Canada, to people who have incurable suffering from a medical condition, like going blind or having diabetes.  I won’t counter her arguments, though I disagree with many of her claims. I just want to list below some of the reasons people oppose MAID for purely psychiatric conditions.  All of these save the first are mentioned in either the article or in the podcast. I have made the list and give my reactions to it.

1.) Religious reason #1: only God can take a life or determine when someone should die, suicide is against religious dictates, etc. I will not deal with this because I don’t believe there are gods and thus don’t think these reasons are worth considering seriously. But they are of course worth countering and discussing. I simply won’t entertain the proposition that “God knows best.”

2.) You can never tell when depression might be alleviated; many people who tried to kill themselves because of depression have later recovered and think their suicidal ideation was mistaken. True, but for someone like Iris Dekker, who had tried everything, saying “you might get better” is letting someone suffer forever despite having made a gazillion attempts to find a reason to live. Note that Subramanya reports that psychiatric MAID is rare even where legal:

Even in countries that have been at the forefront of assisted dying, psychiatric euthanasia is still rare. The Netherlands had 174 cases of psychiatric euthanasia in 2025—about 1.7 percent of its euthanasia deaths and 0.1 percent of deaths overall. Of the 338 euthanasia applications received at the Euthanasia Expertise Center in 2025 from patients younger than 30 that involved psychiatric suffering, only 11 were approved. None were minors.

This worry can be alleviated by a process of rigorous vetting, which, given the statistics above, seems already in place. While it of course cannot guarantee that someone allowed MAID could some day recover from psychiatric illness, if they’ve tried many ways to get better and yet still remain suicidal after years, it seems cruel for someone else to say that we should let them live because we don’t know what would happen. It is in effect trying to control someone else’s existence.

3.) The slippery slope argument: MAID for mental illness will lead not only to expansion of the process to those who don’t really qualify, but also, as Rupa says, “people who were socially isolated, people who were homeless, people who were on disability and people who just felt a great sense of despair.”

Again, this can be alleviated by rigorous vetting, and by involving doctors and therapists who aren’t in the business of willy-nilly approving candidates for MAID, just as there should be procedures preventing doctors from prescribing opioids for no good reason. Of course no system is perfect, but when you see someone like Iris Dekker, who has suffered greatly for years and wants to die–and has tried to die by her own hand–slippery-slope arguments need to be contested.  There’s no need to go all the way to the bottom of the slope once you step off the summit.

4.) Laws like Canada’s that allow MAID if you’re suffering not from terminal illnesses, but from other medical conditions, are not supportable because you can’t judge what is “intolerable suffering.” 

Again, rigorous vetting is the best way to deal with this.  Who better than (objective) mental-health professionals and doctors can judge whether suffering is “intolerable”. especially when multiple drug and/or psychiatric regimens ahve been tried?

5.) The social argument (from Rupa): suffering should be solved and endured collectively rather than by personal choice. 

Here’s what Rupa says;

We’re fully rational actors making these decisions entirely on our own. But in reality, our choices are shaped by our relationships with people. It’s shaped by the environment that we’re in, and it’s shaped by economic conditions, whether we feel loved, supported, or abandoned. So his argument is that autonomy is never fully independent because we make decisions within this context. I think with Canada, and then you have a political class in a place like Canada that is more than happy to enable all of these things. And so I feel like all of these things have come together in Canada, in the Netherlands as well.

I don’t really understand this argument, but it figures in the example of Rupa’s father (see below). If someone is suffering and can’t be cured, why should this be a problem that can’t be solved by the individual?  And of course the state does get involved when MAID is considered.

6.) Different doctors have different standards for “intolerable suffering.” Further, at least in Canada, some doctors, says Rupa, tend to get on oversight committees who are on board with MAID, so the procedure becomes easier to get. Rupa says this:

I think that some of the doctors I’ve spoken to think that they’re basically God. they feel powerful in making these decisions one doctor I spoke to she’s a prolific maid provider in British Columbia in Vancouver and she loves the limelight she loves talking about the patients she’s euthanized over the years and she started off I think she was a she went from delivering babies to now euthanizing people and she told me look and she said this elsewhere as well that I like to push the boundaries as much as I can when it comes to medical assistance anddying and that was pretty extraordinary to me. [JAC: remember, this is a transcript taken from the podcast, so there are infelicities of speech as well as outright errors in transcription.]

Again, choose well known and objective physicians; that is the best you can do. And of course usual more than just two or three doctors. Remember that MAID for mental illness is not yet legal in Canada.

7.) Hastening death is “the path of least resistance”, and in many cases may be less expensive and time-consuming than treatment for years and years. Here’s another quote from Rupa:

You do have cases where people can change their minds, but eventually the system decides that it should be the option. There was another case of a man with cancer who became delirious and very unresponsive in hospital. And according to this report, the doctors aroused him, shook his head and interpreted his blinks and the responses he was mouthing as consent and then proceeded to kill him that very same day. So basically, what all of this tells me is that. . .  there’s a medical culture now which is hastening death. And, you know, as one ethicist put it to me, he said this is the path of least resistance now.

If the law is made with the input of ethicists, this should be prevented. Again, the solution seems to be rigorous vetting and oversight rather than letting people suffer forever. And of course you can give control over your medical treatment to others via “do no resuscitate” orders and the like (I have these).

8.) MAID “normalizes” euthanasia and suicide.  Another quote from Rupa:

Hughes: Are you saying because of MADE, we’re entering this culture of normalization of suicide? And because of that, Some young people, they form that expectation that like, yeah, I have a right to die because of this culture. And then if they get rejected, they seek other means where like maybe in the past, without that culture of normalizing euthanasia and suicide, maybe they wouldn’t have even gone down the road. Is that sort of what you’re implying?

Subramanya: Yeah.

“Normalizing euthanasia” does not necessarily mean making it the go-to option.  And we are talking about euthanasia, not “regular” suicide.

9.) Religious reason #2: One role of religion should be to keep people off the slippery slope. Here’s an exchange from the podcast:

Hughes: But if you don’t have a religious view that life is sacred and that suicide is a sin, then it’s possible to talk yourself into it and kind of reason your way into ending your life if you really are at a low point and you are suffering, right? Is that what this is?

Subramanya: Yes, I think religion is certainly one institution when you look at the fact that as I mentioned earlier We’ve become a very individualistic society where suffering is no longer done communally, it’s not experienced communally, but on your own, where previously, you know, you’d go to the church or to the temple or to the mosque or whatever religion you belong to. But now, you know, a lot of us live in isolation, especially young people, you know, who are, I think, we’re still seeing some of the effects of the pandemic rapidly. right now where young people have been struggling with loneliness and alienation and mental health issues and then where suicide is not treated as something that you prevent but increasingly something that you facilitate so religion for sure. If you’re talking about how institutions once played a very important role in making us feel connected, that’s changed quite a bit.

Subramanya seems to have forgotten that it is also religion that’s been the main obstacle to any form of MAID, even for terminal illness (Mother Teresa is one example of someone who thought Jesus will take people when he’s ready). Is Subramanya suggesting that we should try to foist religious solutions onto someone seeking MAID?  Too late: religion is disappearing now, and you don’t go proselytizing someone who is suffering.

When Subramanya tells this story about her father, who found a reason to live, she seems to use it as an example of why anyone, however ill, can find a reason to live.  But people differ in how they bear suffering:

. . . I learned that my father in India was diagnosed with primary central nervous system lymphoma. They found a cyst in his brain and he needed a very urgent brain biopsy. As I was writing about Keanu’s death, this 27-year-old young person with type 1 diabetes and blindness and that he had given up on life, I was watching my own father fight desperately to hold on to his. And five months later, my father can’t speak because the part of the brain on which they operated controls speech. He has undergone chemotherapy and radiation.

He’s doing really well. His cancer is in remission. But what strikes me most is Not just merely his resilience, it is his desire to live. I mean, despite the pain and exhaustion, the loss of speech, the humiliations that he’s experienced, that serious illness brings about in people. You mentioned your mother who had who died of cancer. He’s soldiering on. He still loves life. And he wants more time. He’s fighting for every single day. And he finds joy in ordinary moments.

So, you know, for me, you know, as someone who’s written quite extensively about death, I look at my father and I wonder like what Why is he so different from someone who is 73 years old here in Canada, perhaps given a similar diagnosis and chooses made? Or why does a 28-year-old give up on life? And I don’t think my father in India is an outlier in the sense that he wants to live as much as possible. I think in places like India, you still have strong cultural family ties. I think religion continues to be extremely important. And I think these are factors, these are things that are increasingly, they’re disappearing in the West.

Once again we see religion mentioned as a way to keep people off the slippery slope of MAID. But what if you are not religious and cannot force yourself to believe? Someone like me, for instance.

In the end, I see both the article and podcast (not Hughes) infected with religiously-tinged arguments. I’ve long viewed the Free Press, while ideologically appealing in several ways, as too soft on religion—too eager to see it as caulk for our “god-shaped” holes.  This article may be one example.

Click on “continue reading” below to see descriptions of the five countries medical assistance in dying is legal for those with psychiatric issues:

Continue reading “Should we allow people who aren’t terminally ill to undergo medically assisted dying?”

Thursday: Hili dialogue

May 28, 2026 • 6:45 am

Welcome to Thursday, May 28, 2026, and it’s National Hamburger Day. Here’s a bacon burger I had in Honolulu in January, 2019, and, like many Hawaiian plate lunches, it came with macaroni salad. It’s as if the Billy Goat Tavern were transported to Hawaii, and when you ordered a cheeseburger they’d yell, “No fries—macaroni salad!”  But it was good.

It’s also National Brisket Day.  It’s a thin day for commemorations, but brisket and hamburger are sufficient—if you’re a carnivore.  Here I am downing Texas brisket (and sausages) at a BBQ joint in 2004, though I can’t remember the place.  Beans, pickles, potato salad, and (of course) white bread are the sides.

Readers are welcome to mark notable events, births, or deaths on this day by consulting the May 28 Wikipedia page.

Da Nooz:

Breaking news, ripped from the headlinesIran says that it retaliated today for U.S. strikes on missile sites.

Iran said that it had retaliated on Thursday against the latest U.S. strikes in southern Iran by targeting the American military base from which they were launched, warning that its response to further U.S. attacks would be “more decisive.”

The statement from Iran’s Islamic Revolutionary Guards Corps did not say where the U.S. base was or how it had been targeted.

The Kuwaiti military said on Thursday morning that its air defenses were intercepting hostile drones and missiles, without specifying the origin or extent of the attack. The United States has five military bases in Kuwait.

On Wednesday, American forces conducted what a U.S. official said were self-defense strikes in southern Iran. The United States knocked down four one-way attack drones that the official said Iran had launched over the Strait of Hormuz.

The U.S. military then struck a drone ground-control station in the port city of Bandar Abbas before Iran could fire a fifth drone, said the U.S. official, who spoke on the condition of anonymity to discuss operational matters. The Revolutionary Guards said on Thursday that it was responding to U.S. strikes in Bandar Abbas.

The strikes add to the recent hostilities, which have threatened a fragile cease-fire and dimmed hopes that peace talks between Iran and the United States could quickly reopen the strait.

It looks like the “retaliation” was lame: a token effort by Iran to say “we won’t let you attack us without consequences.” In the meantime, Trump still says he’s negotiating and “doesn’t care about the midterms.”  Perhaps a lot of Republicans are, but I don’t know how a protracted war with affect voters’ decisions.

*In theTexas Republican primary for a vacant Senate seat, candidate Ken Paxton wiped the floor with his fellow GOP candidate, incumbent Senator John Cornyn.  This may be good news for Democrats given Paxton’s checkered history, which means it’s bad news for Republicans.  It’s good news for Trump, as he had endorsed Paxton over Cornyn, but Trump will be long gone when the victor sits out his term in the Senate.

President Trump and Democrats rarely find themselves in alignment. Yet both sides wanted the same outcome in Tuesday’s Texas Senate primary runoff election.

Ken Paxton’s trouncing of incumbent Sen. John Cornyn in the Republican runoff represents Trump’s latest triumph in maintaining his grip on his MAGA base after he similarly ousted rivals in Indiana, Louisiana and Kentucky. But to the delight of Democrats, the president’s decision to make an 11th-hour endorsement of Paxton could put the Senate seat in play for James Talarico after decades of Democratic futility in the Lone Star State.

Paxton’s primary showdown with Cornyn was the costliest Senate GOP primary on record, according to AdImpact, with Cornyn’s forces alone spending nearly $100 million in their attempt to defeat the Trump-endorsed state attorney general, who survived impeachment and scandal to win the runoff with nearly 64% of the vote.

Paxton’s wide margin of victory showed the power of the Trump endorsement and his ability to coalesce GOP support around his favored candidates. In the initial March primary, Cornyn narrowly edged Paxton, 42% to 40%, but no one cleared the required 50%, forcing a runoff.

“When everyone in Washington told him to abandon me and abandon the people of Texas, he didn’t listen. Instead, he gave his complete and total endorsement,” Paxton said of the president in a speech to supporters Tuesday night. “His endorsement…is the most powerful force in politics.” He called Talarico “a threat to everything we hold dear in this state and in this country.”

The risk for Republicans is that more moderate and independent voters in the general election will be turned off by Paxton, providing an opening for Talarico, the seminarian and state lawmaker who has become a fundraising force among national Democrats hungry for victory in Texas. Democrats haven’t won a statewide election in Texas since 1994.

The GOP has been painting Talarico as the Texas version of Kamala Harris, a progressive who takes bizarre positions.  And the GOP is now issuing fake, AI-generated ads, like this one (I won’t show it) going after him.  That has to be illegal or something, no?  Talarico’s “progressive” tweets in the ads are real, I think, but can they really use fake video and an AI-generated voice?

*Every time Bret Stephens comes out with a new op-ed at the NYT I read it ASAP, knowing that what he says (especially about Jews and the Middle East) will likely be agreeable to me, but also sharpen my thinking. That’s the case in his latest piece, “Deal or no deal with Iran”  (I believe you’ll find it archived here, but let me know). First he gives the powerful arguments for striking a deal with Iran, but then says that there are three risks to striking a deal.

First, an agreement that allows the regime to emerge from the war as the perceived victor instantly magnifies our overall geopolitical risks.

China will take note not only of our munitions shortage (which it could have learned of before the current war simply by reading The Times) but also of the fact that the president lost his appetite for war after just 39 days and 13 military fatalities. U.S. allies in the region will take similar note: Why would the Saudis or Pakistanis want to incur the domestic risks of recognizing Israel by joining the Abraham Accords, as Trump is now imploring them to do, if Israel and the United States look like the weak horses against Iran in the struggle for regional hegemony?

. . . Second, the adage, familiar to this administration, that the Iranian regime has never won a war or lost a negotiation happens to be true. That’s not just because the regime has a genius for bargaining, though it does. It has an equal genius for bending and breaking rules and agreements whenever it suits its needs. . . .

The closer we get to the midterms, the more political incentive Trump has to avoid conflict.

The Iranians know this, which is why they’ll play for time with a carefully balanced set of tantalizing promises and extraneous demands, whether about Hezbollah or the financial payoffs they’ll insist upon in exchange for easily reversible concessions.

Iran has done this for ages, yet every American President save Trump in his second term has ignored it.

. . . Finally, Trump will get no political relief in the midterms if his signature presidential act for 2026 is a failed war. Not many like paying more for gas, but many are also willing to swallow the cost for a worthy objective — such as removing a potent and rising menace to America’s security and our vital interests. But economic pain in pursuit of strategic futility is an unforgivable political blunder. Trump is on the cusp of it now.

Here’s Stephens’s solution:

So what should the administration do? Heed the words of Robert Frost: “The best way out is always through.”

Though it’s easy to miss, given the information blackout that (at least until this week) Iran imposed by shutting down the internet, the regime itself hangs by slender threads: a worthless currency, a mostly bankrupt state, a badly wounded military, all-but-undefended airspace, and a leadership whose final claim to legitimacy is that it has stood up to the Great and Little Satans and, so far, survived.

Trump can still deny them that claim. The United States struck some targets in Iran on Monday. Now Trump can announce that we will destroy a facility of military significance to the regime pending a material Iranian concession, and make good on the threat. The next day, two targets, and so on. If Iran opts to retaliate against our Gulf allies, then it’s past time they start behaving like cooperative allies, by either joining the fight or at least not obstructing it.

Trump need not be defeated in this war, but he’s close. Should he lose it, what remains of his presidency will go down with it.

Stephens doesn’t say anything about regime change or the sad plight of the Iranian people, so I wonder what he means by “winning this war”. Presumably it means opening the Strait of Hormuz to all traffic, sans tolls, and ensuring that Iran can no longer make nukes. Yes, those things need to be done, and Trump is cooked if he doesn’t do them, but what about the persistence of a regime that promulgates terror throughout the world?

*Nichola Kristof is at it again, tweeting unsupported allegations that I’m pretty sure are false.  But does he care? He seems bent on demonizing Israel, as he did with the dog-rape accusation, which he justified by citing cases of men committing bestiality.  Have a look at this:

Here’s what the linked Reuters article says:

Activists released from Israeli custody after being detained on a flotilla trying to bring aid to Gaza were subjected to abuse, organisers said on ​Friday, with several hospitalised with injuries and at least 15 reporting sexual assaults, including rape.

Israel’s prison service denied the allegations, and Reuters was not able to verify them independently.

Germany said some ‌of its nationals had been injured and that some accusations were “serious”, without giving further details. A legal source in Italy said prosecutors there were investigating possible crimes including kidnapping and sexual assault.

“The allegations raised are false and entirely without factual basis,” an Israeli prison service spokesperson said in a statement.

“All prisoners and detainees are held in accordance with the law, with full regard for their basic rights and under the supervision of professional and trained prison staff,” it said.

“Medical care is provided according to professional medical judgment and ​in accordance with Ministry of Health guidelines.”

*Rebecca Winthrop, identified by the NYT as “the director of the Center for Universal Education at the Brookings Institution and led its global task force on A.I. and education” maintains in a NYT op-ed that AI is going to erode the writing abilities of students, something I’ve maintained for a while. How can it not? Your writing may look better to a third party, but you haven’t learned how to confect a cohesive and coherent piece of writing using your own brain.

But I’ve recently drawn a sharp line in the sand: no A.I. for writing. I’m not talking about expense reports or routine emails. I mean actual writing, and the creative brainstorming that precedes it to explore different perspectives or develop novel insights. Increasingly, many people I talk to — from students to teachers to peers — tell me that they think it’s OK to use A.I. chatbots for brainstorming as long as they do the “real work” of writing.

But this misunderstands something critical: Brainstorming is the work that’s fundamental to writing. As a researcher studying A.I.’s effects on education, I have concluded that these tools only superficially improve writing. The bigger and more alarming impact they have is to constrict our full range of thoughts and our ability to generate original and useful ideas — what we call creative thinking. This seems to be especially true for students. A.I.’s smooth sentences, elegant transitions and rich vocabulary give the illusion of expansive creativity and individuality. But the underlying ideas often converge into a few homogenized categories.

The erosion of creative thinking means young people will struggle to navigate uncertainty. Workers will strain to adapt to a shifting labor market. And society will miss out on the new ideas that can solve complex problems and enhance lives.

For the past eight years, the Georgetown University neuroscientist Adam Green has been leading a national research team tracking the range of novel ideas that college-bound high school students present in their application essays, before and after the introduction of ChatGPT. In one study, he and his team examined personal statements from more than 370,000 students, and found that after ChatGPT became available, their essays suddenly used diverse and colorful language, but lacked truly creative ideas. And the linguistic coverup worked; post-ChatGPT essays were rated as more “creative” by human judges, even if the substance of the essays trod familiar territory.

That is all ye need to know; it’s concise, clear, and buttressed with data. I can see no way that outsourcing your contemplation to a computer algorithm can help you be a better writer or a better thinker.  And “writing abilities” goes not just for humanities, but also for science, for scientists too need to learn to write. We already find the literature full of stilted prose, passive voices, and generally unengaging writing. And that’s the literature: every scientist worth their salt should be able to write for the public, and for grant-giving bodies whose members aren’t all in the same field.  There must be an article on how AI is useful and how it’s harmful in science, but I can’t be arsed to find one.

*Cass Sunstein is a polymathic legal scholar who taught at my university for many years, but now teaches at Harvard Law.   Over at his Substack site, there are two essays on viewpoint diversity worth reading.  The first, “Viewpont diversity” describes what it was like to be at the University of Chicago Law school in the Eighties, a time when viewpoint diversity was pervasive and constructive but, argues Sunstein, also largely independent of political leaning.  A more recent essay, “A problem with thje debate over ‘Viewpoint Diversity,” uses his earlier piece along with the Chicago Principles of Free Expression to recommend the best way to form a university with diverse viewpoints.

The first piece is great, recounting the four-time-a-week lunches (yes, Saturday, too) involving a host of Big Brains at the law school. It was not about university business or chit-chat; it was about law, cases, and principles (the subtitle of the piece is “The University of Chicago Law School, 1980s: A love song”).

But I want to emphasize something else: the crackling energy and the sheer intensity of the place.

We had lunch together four times a week: Monday, Wednesday, Friday, and Saturday. The roundtable, as it was (and is) called, was usually full. Sometimes a latecomer couldn’t get a seat. I would often make a lame joke to the effect that some Greek had proved that you could always add a seat to a roundtable – and we would almost always add a seat.

At these lunches, the discussion was always substantive. Always. No one discussed sports or the law school as such, or their families, or other law schools, or even politics, unless there was something academic to say about it. If someone said something that wasn’t substantive (about students, for example, or the news, or gossip), they would get a puzzled, stern, disapproving stare; the norm would kick in, and someone would discuss an article they were thinking about writing.

Examples: Stone had a new idea, to the effect that “viewpoint discrimination” should be forbidden under the First Amendment. Or Epstein had a new idea, to the effect that the takings clause had been interpreted far too narrowly. Or Epstein had a new idea, to the effect that New York Times v. Sullivan was all wrong. (Epstein seemed to have a new idea every day.)

Or Posner had a new idea, which is that courts really should promote “wealth maximization.” Or Easterbrook had a new idea, a seemingly odd one, about “statute’s domains.”

Or McConnell had a new idea, to the effect that the courts had gotten the Establishment Clause all wrong. Or Scalia had a new idea, to the effect that courts could not readily enforce the nondelegation doctrine (and shouldn’t try). Or Strauss had a new idea, to the effect that constitutional law is really common law.

It goes on, but you can read it for yourself. What a time, and what a cast of characters!  In the second piece, Sunstein uses the Chicago Principles—largely the “Shils Report”, on the criteria for hiring and promotion (see the full report here)—to make his point.

In an earlier essay on this platform, I said something like that, but also said that the debate over viewpoint diversity seems to me to have a clanging sound. To get at the problem, I described the University of Chicago Law School in the 1980s, which had plenty of viewpoint diversity, but whose amazingness could not be captured, or could be captured only in a thin, tinny, coarse, and lame way, by pointing to its “viewpoint diversity.” Chicago in the 1980s had that, to be sure, but that was hardly all that Chicago had, and it was not what made Chicago amazing.

My friend Tony Kronman, in a kind and generous note to me on that essay, wrote these words about viewpoint diversity:

“The phrase, I think, is a sad reflection of how habituated we’ve become to thinking of the life of the mind in political terms.”

Thanks Tony. That’s what I did not see clearly enough.

. . . When the University of Chicago Law School hired Michael McConnell as an assistant professor, people said that he was “the most brilliant Chicago student in a generation”; they did not say a word about his “viewpoint.” When the school hired the legal historian Richard Helmholz, they spoke of his pathbreaking work, not of his “viewpoint.” When David Strauss was tenured, his “viewpoint” was neither here nor there. (It was not mentioned.)

This is complicated, I know. Viewpoints have always mattered, at least in some sense; that is inevitable. It would be naive to deny that point. (There are plenty of issues to discuss there.)

Also: Those who seek greater viewpoint diversity are correct. They are responding (I think it fair to say) to people who have seen, and who see, academic life in political terms (sometimes consciously, sometimes unconsciously). They are meeting fire with fire.

Still, some of them are seeing academic life in intensely political terms, and thinking of academic life in intensely political terms. That is their focus. It’s right, sometimes, to focus on what they are focusing on, but consider the possibility that some of them are focusing on it too much (and living in it, kind of, and overexcited by it), and at the expense of other things on which they might focus.

And this is straight out of the Shils Report:

At the University of Chicago Law School in the 1980s, there were three criteria for hiring or promoting faculty members. The first was collegiality. Was the person a good colleague? Meaning: Was the person around a lot? (Every weekday would be good!) Did the person comment on papers? Did the person go to workshops and contribute? Collegiality was not the most important thing, but it was important. Richard Epstein, David Strauss, and Michael McConnell were regarded as exceptional colleagues.

The second was teaching. Was the person a good teacher? Did students think so? If students did not think so, were they wrong, in the sense that they learned a lot (but perhaps were not having a ton of fun)? A bad or not-good teacher would have a tough time getting appointed. David Currie and Walter Blum were regarded as exceptional teachers.

The third was scholarship, and that was the most important. Chicago was (and is) famous for productivity, and sheer quantity mattered. One good article, every three years, would be a problem. Five good articles, every year, would be a really strong plus. Of course quality mattered most. Richard Posner and Frank Easterbrook were regarded as exceptional scholars.

The only thing missing from this discussion is this: neither Kronman nor Sunstein mention that the life of the mind and the evaluation of ideas should also be viewed independently of ethnicity, sex, or gender.

Meanwhile in Dobrzyn, Hili is worried about Andrzej. But look at that great picture of her!

Hili: I’m worried about you.
Andrzej: Why?
Hili: You’ve lost your sense of humor.

In Polish:

Hili: Martwię się o ciebie.
Ja: Dlaczego?
Hili: Straciłeś poczucie humoru.

*******************

From Give Me a Sign:

 

From Cats Doing Cat Stuff:

From CinEmma:

Masih didn’t tweet yesterday, so here are some words of wisdom from the Number Ten Cat:

Two from Luana today. This first one makes me sad.

And I retweeted this one:

Rowling corrects a common misconception (or deliberate distortion) about biological sex:

One from my feed. This is not free speech because, as you’ll hear if you listen to the whole thing, waving flags at a ceremony like this violates University policy. He finally surrenders his flag because he wants his degree. (BTW, have you ever seen a graduate waving an Israeli flag? I haven’t.)

And one I reposted from The Auschwitz Memorial:

Two from Dr. Cobb.  I haven’t yet said anything about the stupid “cage fight” that Trump is putting on at the White House to celebrate America’s 250th anniversary. I can think of many ways to celebrate it, but a cage fight is not one.

This is what happens when a toddler takes over the white house

Adam Parkhomenko (@adamparkhomenko.bsky.social) 2026-05-27T15:50:20.501Z

This is not only morphological camouflage, but behavioral camouflage.  Fantastic! (I’m guessing that it tends to stay in the center.)

Look again!That's a common baron caterpillar (Euthalia aconthea) sitting on its favorite food source, a mango leaf.This little guy, native to India & Sri Lanka, has perfect camouflage so long as it stays perfectly centered on the leaf's midrib.(📷: SatyamRajput004)

c0nc0rdance (@c0nc0rdance.bsky.social) 2026-05-22T01:15:40.711Z

Rick Beato’s top 40 albums of all time: my take

May 27, 2026 • 11:15 am

I simply can’t bear to write anything about war or Trump today, though doubtlessly something related will pop up when I write the news for tomorrow’s Hili post. But until then I want to keep it lighthearted. The Great Duck Egress still weighs heavy on me.

It’s sad that I discovered Rick Beato so late in my life, as I generally share his taste in music, though I remain largely stuck in music of the Sixties through the early Seventies, while he’s much more open to newer music. However, his education and ear make him a great educator, and since I’ve watched his videos I’ve become a lot more attentive in listening to music, especially in understanding what  makes my favorite songs my favorite songs. His analyses of “what makes this song great” are my favorites.

In this video Beato lists what he sees at the top 40 “greatest sounding albums of all time,” and by that he means that all the songs on the album are good—but not only good but that sound good.  In other words, I think he’s choosing albums that show musicality throughout—that stimulate both the ear and the emotions.

I confess that I don’t know about a third of the albums he mentions, and I don’t share his opinion about many of the ones I do know.  Below I’ve put the 12 albums that I have heard and which I think deserve consideration for the list.  But many better albums are missing. For example, he gives the Beatles’ “Revolver” an honorable mention, but wouldn’t any of the Beatles albums after “Rubber Soul” be better music than Sufjean Stevens or Seal, good as they are? Apparently Mr Beato wants a variety of artists.

Note that the albums I list are not identical to the songs that Beato plays to exemplify the album, but, as he says, “Any of the songs from these albums are phenomenally great songs.” I am not sure I agree, though I do agree that his exemplar songs are great.

I list below the albums that I both know of and agree are excellent albums, but I would not say they belong on a list of best-sounding albums. Where is Dylan’s “Highway 61 Revisited”?  And Joni Mitchell’s “Blue” and “For the Roses” are, to me, at least as “musical” as “Court and Spark.”  “Aja” is a dubious choice for Steely Dan; I prefer “Can’t Buy a Thrill” or especially “Katy Lied.” But of course if you included the Beatles or others of that quality, the list would be heavily weighted with just a few artists.

My opinions are of course subjective, and everyone will see omissions on Beato’s list, or inclusions that don’t merit mention. That said, here is where I agree with Beato: these albnums are great as wholes—but not the best albums of all time, not by a long shot.

#35:  Bonnie Raitt, “Luck of the Draw”

#32: Tears for Fears, “Song from the Big Chair”.

#29  Sufjean Stevens, “Jacksonville”

#28  Sarah McLaughlin, “Fumbling towards Ecstasy”

#27  Chicago, “Greatest Hits”

#16  The Rolling Stones, “Let it Bleed”

#9   Seal, Seal

Here’s where I started agreeing more with Beato:

#6  The Beach Boys,”Pet Sounds”

#4 Steely Dan, “Aja”

#3   Stevie Wonder “Songs in the Key of Life”

#2  Joni Mitchell, “Court and Spark”

#1   John Coltrane, Jonny Hartman “John Coltane and Johnny Hartman”, which Beato describes as “Probably the most beautifully recorded record ever. “

Honorable Mention (there are several): one is the Beatles “Revolver”

I was delighted to see Coltrane and Hartman nab the top spot, and it’s one of my favorite jazz albums. To me, it is the greatest jazz album of modern times (by that I mean albums released after 1955).  But Coltrane/Hartman is jazz, not rock, pop, or folk like the others, and I’m not sure why Beato put it on the list. If you’re going to include jazz in the list of all-time best albums, well, you’re playing a whole new ballgame.

The entire Coltrane/Hartman album in its original incarnation is on YouTube, and I’ve put it below so you can have the pleasure of listening to it. It’s only 31 minutes long, so you have time to hear it today.  It’s the album I would give people who weren’t familiar with jazz to ease them into the genre, and I gave it to several women I fancied as a nuptial gift: the musical equivalent of a spider proffering to his swain a silk-wrapped fly.

Anyway, here’s Beato’s list. Don’t confuse his exemplar songs with the quality of the album itself; Beato is touting the album but selling it with a snippet of one of its songs.

Here’s the entire Coltrane/Hartman album. Coltrane is at his best, not too out there to put off newbies, but soft and ballad-y. Most of all his renditions blend perfectly with the smoky voice of Johnny Hartman, an underrated singer. (Hartman died at 60 of lung cancer, and I’m sure his voice reflected many cigarettes.)

Jesus ‘n’ Mo ‘n’ Hafiz

May 27, 2026 • 9:00 am

In today’s Jesus and Mo strip, called “peer”, Mo asserts that many Muslims have memorized the Qur’an word for word. The belief that the book is literally true is ubiquitous among Muslims; one poll by Pew showed this:

 Only Muslims in sub-Saharan Africa were asked whether they view the Quran as the word of God or a book written by men; across most of the African nations polled, nine-in-ten or more Muslims say that the Quran is the word of God, including more than seven-in-ten who believe it should be taken literally, word for word.

But how many Muslims have memorized the entire word of God? Mo implies many, but Jesus calls to his attention that there’s confirmation bias.

The strip came with a short note saying, “It’s called Hifaz,” which is the name for the practice of memorizing the whole Qur’an  And indeed, there are sites that will, for a fee, help you memorize the entire book.

Readers’ wildlife photos

May 27, 2026 • 8:15 am

Today we have some intertidal photos taken in California by UC Davis math professor Abby Thompson. Abby’s captions and IDs are indented, and you can enlarge her photos by clicking on them.

May is a great month on the California coast, with extreme high and low tides.   Here are some photos from the most recent, excellent, set:

Pollicipes polymerus (Gooseneck barnacles). I’ve shown these, and some relatives, several times before, but they’re amazing animals. In case you think it’s too many barnacles, Darwin spent eight years looking at barnacles.   “Originally planning a brief month-long study to establish his credentials in invertebrate zoology, he became deeply immersed and cataloged every known living and fossil species.”  (Google AI).  I’m not sure what the green is doing here, presumably just growing on top of the animals.   Some relatives of the nudibranchs stay green from what they eat, and retain bits with the ability to photosynthesize, most famously the adorable leaf sheep:.

Dendronotus venustus (nudibranch):

Paciocinebrina lurida (a snail):

Tonicella lokii (flame-lined chiton):

Genus Tegula (maybe) (another snail). There was a hermit crab living in the shell- I didn’t get a good photo of him.    I’m not sure the genus is correct, but the shell was so pretty I wanted to post it:

Nucella ostrina (Northern striped dogwinkle). About the common name—well, it has stripes.   And it’s a “winkle” (a word you have to love), or “little whelk”.  The dog part, I dunno.   They’re very common, and voracious. Some species of Nucella (not sure about this one) can be used to make a deep purple dye, which used to be hard to come by.  There’s a fun account of making the dye here, although I’m afraid many snails must have been sacrificed in the process:

Paradialychone ecaudata (worm):

Limpet, probably Lottia pelta (shield limpet). The little lacy edge is tentacles: “Pallial tentacles are tiny, sensory structures lining the mantle margin (pallium) of limpets. . . The tips and shafts of these tentacles are covered in dense tufts of non-motile cilia, which act as sensory receptors.” (Google AI):

Seagulls at sunset:

As always, thanks to experts on inaturalist for help with some IDs.   Camera is an Olympus TG-7.