We don’t yet know if these strange “obelisks” are helpful or harmful.
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Years of shoddy research have overstated the risk.
AI researcher and author Ken Stanley wonders how our rear-view perspective on success fits into a serendipitous mode of innovation.
In a world of rising cynicism, a celebration of our capacity to create, adapt, and thrive.
“The field is endless, but my life is limited, as are all of ours. But you do what you can with your time,” says CSO Mart Saarma.
Some classic books, like Mark Twain’s “The Adventures of Huckleberry Finn,” remain controversial to this day.
From COVID and cancer vaccines to a steady drop in the number of people living in extreme poverty, there are reasons for optimism in 2023.
It could prevent sun damage and help chemical burns heal faster.
Rutger Bregman’s “Moral Ambition” wants us to aim our careers not at money but solving the world’s biggest problems.
Welcome to The Nightcrawler — a weekly newsletter from Eric Markowitz covering tech, innovation, and long-term thinking.
From surviving on wild plants and game to controlling our world with technology, humanity’s journey of progress is a story of expanding human agency.
A growing body of research suggests that optimism plays a significant role in promoting both physical and mental well-being.
A new wave of preventative cancer vaccines are set to begin trials.
Astronomer Michelle Thaller explains the healing power of physics after losing her husband.
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Poor research can be worse than no research at all.
Running to catch the bus might help you live longer.
The tech world’s fixation on artificial intelligence has spawned beliefs and rituals that resemble religion — complete with digital deities, moral codes, and threats of damnation.
More work is needed before declaring the technique a fountain of youth.
Stem cells from a fetus can live within the mother for decades — and help her heal.
Millennials are reversing a 40-year decline in stroke deaths.
The world needs a moral defense of progress based in humanism and agency.
Paradoxically, some do it for erotic reasons.
If future studies prove it to be successful, this technique for the early detection of pancreatic cancer could save thousands of lives.
Teller and Sagan debated fiercely over nuclear proliferation. But was the conflict as personal as it was intellectual for Teller?
About 8% of our genome is made of leftover viruses from our ancestors’ infections.
There is one obstacle that reliably blocks innovative ideas: how we fund science.
Once activated, the CRISPR-Cas12a2 system goes on a rampage, chopping up DNA and RNA indiscriminately, causing cell death.
“Our risk-benefit analysis showed that benefits exceeded procedural risks… by up to 200 to 1.”