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In 1924, sociologist and social reformer Caroline Bartlett Crane designed an award-winning tiny home in Kalamazoo, Michigan.
Foster your own moments of mystery.
Depression applies to individuals and businesses alike — and so does the solution.
In 1934, American Communists translated a Stalinist book about revolution into a children’s game. Curiously, it didn't catch on.
The Reitoff principle gives us permission to "write off" a day and intentionally step away from achieving anything.
Want to write a time-travel story? Do so at your own risk.
But does Amazon know when you're tired or hungry?
"For every PhD there is an equal and opposite PhD."
If everyone just showed up to their appointments, $150 billion of waste could be averted.
Fantasy, meet statistics: The census comes to Middle-earth!
A new snake becomes Instagram famous after its accidental discovery by a graduate student going on a nature walk in northern India.
To make a ton of information stick in your mind, you have to make it chunky.
If the daily grind feels like Sartre's phony act of "bad faith," Heidegger's sense of "being" can help redefine your role.
True north, magnetic north, and grid north have aligned. There's also a connection to James Bond.
Today’s careers don’t offer a clear path forward, but the rewards can be worth more than a gold watch at retirement.
Or, how I learned to stop worrying and love my tsundoku.
From how life emerged on Earth to why we dream, these unanswered questions continue to perplex scientists.
He is only out-sold by William Shakespeare and Lao Tzu.
Every Christmas could be the last Christmas.
Maintain peace of mind during tax season by correctly filling out your W-4.
Video cameras on city streets are only the most visible way your movements can be tracked.
The German-American cartoonist introduced the idea that Santa Claus traveled with a sleigh and reindeer.
A woman’s name would undermine the credibility of the mission. Names of former Nazis, however, were no problem.
The amazing life of “Gudrid the Far-Traveled” was unjustly overshadowed by her in-laws, Erik the Red and Leif Erikson.
The idea that the news can make you sick has a long history.
Walter Pitts rose from the streets to MIT, but couldn’t escape himself.
What started as a viral case of public shaming has morphed into a dark story involving internet sleuths, a criminal network, and the suspicious death of a 62-year-old man in St. Louis.
The artifacts were often made from found objects – an Ivory dish-soap bottle transformed into an earthenware figure.
The author of classics like "A Farewell to Arms" and "The Sun Also Rises" is known and loved for his simple yet effective writing style. Here’s how to imitate it.