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The Jonah Lehrer debacle has spawned a series of debates about popular science writing and journalism.
FORBES: What Journalists Bring to Science Writing
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Science writer Jonah Lehrer has questioned the usefulness and validity of self-experiments.
FORBES: Magazine Article
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Behavioral economist Dan Ariely and journalist Jonah Lehrer have written two of my favorite books on the subject, Predictably Irrational and How We Decide.
FORBES: Three Lies You Should Stop Telling Yourself Right Now
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That region, as Jonah Lehrer has pointed out, manages to emulate the functions of bigger, denser cities by encouraging the clustering of talent and enterprise and fostering a high level of information-sharing.
WSJ: To Build Creative Cities, the Sky Has Its Limit by Richard Florida
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For a while, Jonah Lehrer, the science writer who admitted to fabricating quotes, plagiarism, and other journalism sins, seemed to be pulling it off in his mea culpa speech to a Knight Foundation conference.
FORBES: Jonah Lehrer Apologizes, Cashes In On Notoriety
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Citing science writer Jonah Lehrer, who cites Australian psychologist Neil Brewer, Jad Abumrad and Robert Krulwich, co-hosts of Radiolab, describe in a 2007 episode how memory is mercurial, difficult to pin down, and far less solid than we tend to think.
FORBES: Density Of Meaning: Creation As The Flip Side Of Memory
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Jonah Lehrer thinks so.
FORBES: Jonah Lehrer Thinks He Can Humblebrag His Way Back Into Journalism