Tuesday, April 17, 2012

Discover Magazine - Can Anyone Help Me Buy Discover Magazine?

By Daniel Turbin


Rarely does one discover a magazine online or off that provides the intellectual banquet which could be found in Discover Magazine. Oh, you could find a magazine written specifically for foodies, techies, fashionistas and geeks. You could locate magazines on the health and well being of the planet Earth and her creatures or you could locate a publication dedicated to hunting those same creatures down and serving them up on your dinner table. No matter what your particular interest, in the world of periodic magazine publications, there is certainly something for everybody. However, it seems that Discover Magazine has all of it.

The science-minded individual has a never-ending desire for facts and there is no shortage of publications to feed that requirement. Keen science readers may choose magazines such as Scientific American Magazine, Wired Magazine, Science Magazine and Smithsonian Magazine to quell their hunger for information on Mother Earth and the Space beyond. These fine magazines can be purchased in hard copy or, as many prefer, online. Technology has made the content of these online publications even better with streaming video and interactive games and applications. There is just no shortage of scientific thought, viewpoint and theory for people who hunger and thirst for it.

Like all thinkers, people with a scientific bend also like to speculate on various other topics too. Remarkably, a short review of the science magazines mentioned above unveils that these magazines are expanding to incorporate articles about politics, travel, and also other tidbits not strictly related to accepted scientific thought. Still, these offerings are generally entertaining. In addition, the content leans decidedly toward common theories such as global warming, climatic change and also conjecture about the much heralded 2012 apocalypse. (Certainly, it ought to be said that people who pooh-pooh these theories might find fodder for disagreement, discussion - maybe even outrage - among the pages. Nevertheless, we remain hopeful that readers of science theory permit others whose opinions differ from their very own to voice their opinions too.)

If magazines such as Discover Magazine appear to have an agenda, may be simply because there is a solid market segment that adheres to the Malthusian theory that man is bad for the planet. These folks seek validation for their particular mind-set and are richly rewarded within the pages of magazines like those stated above. A growing sector of the world's population worries over deeply-held concerns about man's reckless use and abuse of our resources and the planet as a whole. These are fine and noble worries worthy of continuous attention. When fed and nourished, such concerns may yield workable solutions for real problems like our society's woeful dependence upon fossil fuel, as well as the growing number of animal species which seem to be decreasing. We simply cannot resolve problems unless we address them, after all.

In the mean time, the exchange of ideas and theories must be allowed to flow openly amongst stakeholders - and since humans have much at stake in these debates, the need for magazines, books and television programming that explores man's problems from new and innovative angles is important. When ideas ignite sets off which kindle innovative new solutions to old problems, the synergy is to be celebrated. Regrettably, it is human nature to be doubtful of ideas and techniques not our very own. In a perfect world, we would all take time every single day to examine new and different approaches to the challenges we encounter. There would, no doubt, be astounding results.




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