From the May 2007 issue
Senior Editor Jacob Sullum tackles
the twin topics of porn and public health in this issue. In “An
Epidemic of Meddling” (page 22), he looks at the ways public health
activists are eroding our liberties and asks: What Would John
Stuart Mill Do? Elsewhere in the issue, Sullum reviews a book that
was a gag gift from his wife, The History of Girly
Magazines (page 62). Sullum sees a link between the two
subjects. “Some people try to treat porn, like everything else, as
a public health problem,” he says. “They condemn porn and pretend
it’s all about addiction and disease. They say they are
scientifically studying an epidemic when in fact they object to
porn on moral grounds.”
Contributing Editor Mike Godwin, a
Yale research fellow, calls himself a “reflexive Googler” of facts
and figures. “Anyone who reached adulthood prior to the computer
revolution is startled about the extent to which it has
revolutionized day-to-day life,” he says. Godwin thinks we may be
on the brink of the Singularity, a concept he discusses with Hugo
Award–winning science fiction writer Vernor Vinge in “Superhuman
Imagination” (page 32). Vinge’s novels and essays deal with the
possible results of an unthinkably fast acceleration of
technological change. Godwin says he is looking forward to the
Singularity, which, he drolly notes, “some people call ‘The Rapture
of the Nerds,’ that critical moment when all the geeks can upload
their personality to orbital computers.” Whether that ever happens,
avers Godwin, “the future is coming at us more rapidly than we
assumed.”
Photo Researcher Julie Wolf Alissi
has been selecting images for Reason since 2003. She also
runs the photo department for the Connecticut-based children’s
magazine the Weekly Reader. “One thing I love about
working for reason is that it’s a total switch from working with
children’s publications,” says Alissi. After spending days with
images of “ladybugs and kids in kindergarten,” she really “enjoys
getting into politics and culture. I love the challenge of thinking
differently.”
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