Researchers: Malcolm Gladwell was wrong. Practice isn’t perfect.

Many other factors affect genius, sayDavid Z. Hambrick, Fernanda Ferreira and John M. Henderson

Point Person: Harvard President Drew Gilpin Faust

Historian and award-winning author discusses nation’s challenge of affordable higher ed

Raychelle Burks: Go ahead, drink your pumpkin spice latte

A chemist says no chemical is 100-percent safe, but our fear of chemicals needs to be tempered

Chris Farrell: Baby boomers’ latest revolution is unretirement

Working in golden years, on the whole, is good for the economy, the columnist says.

Kathleen Parker: How unpopular is President Obama?

Desperate Dems are in deep denial over the unpopularity of their president, columnist says

Talking Points: Notable quotes from the week’s news

Ebola in Africa, Ebola in Dallas, Dallas Cowboys shoplifter, Bono’s “oops” moment, “old racehorse” Bill Clinton

Ezekiel Emanuel: Why I want to die at 75

A medical ethicist challenges those who think a long life at any cost is the American way.

Point Person: Former Sen. Bill Bradley on making America better

It starts with early childhood education, and, as the title of his new book says, “We Can All Do Better” in several aspects of life.

Mitch Albom: Should you be able to custom-order a baby from a sperm bank?

‘Wrongful birth’ lawsuit raises a question: Where are we going as a society?

Jamelle Bouie: 'Talking white' at home vs. 'talking white' at the office

When it comes to language and race, audience and setting make a difference.

Heather Wilhelm: Don’t buy pre-packaged feminism

Emma Watson’s recent speech at the U.N. was revealing in what she said and how it was received, the columnist says.

Sol Stern: The Free Speech Movement won, but free speech lost

Fifty years after taking part in the successful Berkeley movement, Sol Stern refuses to celebrate the result.

Talking Points: Notable quotes from the week’s news

Ebola death in Dallas, Ebola threat worldwide, Obama’s critics and fans, milder pot in Denver

Mark Lamster: Dallas needs to heal the broken relationship between the built city and its promise of justice

In Texas, courthouses were once a beacon of justice for all. In Dallas today, the jail complex is a distressed symbol of decline, the critic writes.

Cruel punishment is all too usual in U.S. jails and prisons, attorney says

Trial attorney Martin Garbus asks: Do we really find this kind of prisoner treatment acceptable?

Q&A: SMU President R. Gerald Turner on his university’s place in today’s college athletics

Turner says SMU is dedicated to maintaining athletics at the highest NCAA level.

Kathleen Parker: The silly, selective war on women

Democrats pick their spots to invoke the so-called war, the columnist says.

Ruben Navarrette: Hispanics are taken for granted by Dems, forsaken by GOP

Frustration, disillusionment and anger are growing over having to choose ‘lesser of two evils,’ columnist says

Talking Points: Quotable quotes from the week’s news

Dallas Ebola scare, Abbott vs. Davis, Patrick vs. Van de Putte, Obama vs. jihadists

How letting my kid play alone outside led to a CPS investigation

Kari Anne Roy was confident her 6-year-old could play 150 yards from their front porch. A neighbor disagreed. Then came police. And then CPS.

Q&A: SMU's Robert Lawson on the net positives of immigration

The economics professor says that not only do immigrants boost the economy; they also boost American freedom.

Hispandering Heritage Month

Hispanics are tired of being recognized with empty gestures during one month each year, says columnist Esther Cepeda.

Trading silence for safety

37 percent of Americans think the media should be required to get government approval before reporting on national security issues, says Christopher Ingraham

Can Vladimir Putin be stopped?

His behavior fits Russia's history of expansion, says Michael Khodarkovsky

American's are self-segregating by age

Separating society by how long people have lived sows distrust and robs generations of learning from one another, says Leon Neyfakh

Talking Points: Quotable quotes from the week that was

Obama on jihadists, Sen. Kaine on Obama, the Twitterverse on Obama

Obama and the never-ending war

It is hard to imagine an American president more committed to not deepening involvement in the Middle East. Yet here we are again, says David Rothkopf.

Q&A: The vindication of Jim Foster?

The former Dallas County judge was mocked and abandoned by fellow Democrats after he made allegations against John Wiley Price and others. But he’s not done pushing yet.

Stefan Fatsis: Has Roger Goodell finally lost the media?

With owned media properties, the NFL has muscled league coverage. Until now.

Alex Beam: Is this the world’s ‘inglorious end’? Nah, it’s just people.

There’s a tremendous vanity to assuming the world will end on our watch, the columnist says.

Hey, Texas: Time for a real climate-change debate

Tim Cloward: It’s time to get past deniers for a real debate.

Talking Points: Notable quotes from the week’s news

Obama on ground troops, Cornyn on Obama, Facebook for rich people, Ebola scourge, tumult in the NFL

If you think Big Tobacco was bad, wait till you get a whiff of Big Marijuana

It threatens to create a massive new industry intent on addicting the most vulnerable in society, says Kevin Sabet.

Why research is biased against pot to focus on its harm and not its benefits

Back to Iraq. What could possibly go wrong?

The former U.S. Central Command chief uses findings from his new book on the mistakes of war to assess the president’s plans.

The Ivy League? It’s not that bad

But elite universities have largely abandoned their mission of providing a moral education, says David Brooks.

The big fat diet myth

Esther Cepeda shares how the power of a few low-fat proponents threw our eating off balance.

Be very wary about new wave of voter restrictions

American history is rife with examples of misguided attempts to fix the system that did nothing to help, says professor Wendy Schiller.

How divorced parents lost their rights

Judges can decide whether your kids play soccer or piano, says Robert Emery. Instead, our legal system should encourage parents to work together for solutions.

Talking Points: The week’s best quotes

War in the Middle East, turmoil in the NFL, angst in the UK, hands-free soon in Cadillacs

Steve Almond: Why I've stopped watching football

After I came face to face with my mother’s dementia, football’s dangers were no longer abstract, says Steve Almond; they were a moral burden.

Rick Gosselin: The redeeming values of football

Mike Rawlings wouldn’t be the mayor of this great city today if it weren’t for the sport’s core values.

Q&A: Jonathan Neerman on the outlook for Texas Republicans

The former Dallas County GOP chair sees another statewide sweep but says his party must moderate its rhetoric to increase its voting base.

Is it hysterical to prepare for all-out war with Russia?

Considering Putin’s invasion of Ukraine and some signals out of the country, it may be naive not to, says Anne Applebaum.

Our national prayer days aren’t what they used to be

We have more than ever before, notes Christine Wicker, but they appeal to a softer, less demanding God.

Are Snowden’s leaks dangerous? Take claims with a pillar of salt

A brief history of the Pentagon Papers shows that fears are overstated, says Stephen Whitfield.

Mike Gonzalez: Lone Star State beats the Golden one for Hispanics

Texas prevails over California in providing a better society for Latinos, says Mike Gonzalez.

Talking Points: The week’s best quotes

Forgiveness for Josh Brent, lecture for Barack Obama, rosy forecast for Southwest Airlines, free pot in Berkeley.

Just how much do you trust Siri?

Smart machines need the right personality to work well, says Leon Neyfakh, and experts are finding the best choice may not always be what we think we want.

Forget ice; ALS challenge pours the guilt on thick

Sure, it’s raising money for a good cause, but that doesn’t make it a good idea, says Tom Keane.