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Blog Forums
Iran: Is it really a threat, and is the
U.S. about to attack it? The U.S. Founding Fathers: Were
they Christians or Deists, and what's their real legacy?
Web 2.0: What are the virtues and vices of the interactive
Web? Princess Diana: What's her legacy, and what should
we make of our obsession with celebrities? These are the
topics debated recently by leading writers at the Britannica
Blog. Jump in with your comments, and join the debate.
The Crusades Revisited
Was
the U.S.-led war against Iraq and Saddam Hussein just another
of Western Christendom's “Crusades” against Islam? And what
were the causes and consequences of these controversial
expeditions of the Middle Ages? Britannica's new coverage
of the Crusades traces their history, discusses their objectives,
and analyzes their relevance as a metaphor today.
Stephen Venables
Britannica
has published some of the most famous climbers in history,
including Tenzing Norgay, the Tibetan Sherpa who accompanied
Edmund Hillary on their historic ascent of Mount Everest
in 1953. Stephen Venables, who conquered Everest without
the aid of supplemental oxygen in 1988, now joins this venerable
group, discussing the continuing lure of Everest and the
commercialization of climbing.
Leprosy, Past
& Present
They
were difficult to look at, dangerous to touch, and so it
was only natural to closet them away—or so it was long believed
when it came to “lepers.” Though leprosy is now entirely
curable, it continues to afflict some 600,000 people annually.
Britannica, in its coverage of leprosy, traces the history
of the disease, discusses its stigma and stereotypes, and
details the latest medical treatments.
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