Japanese thought can’t be easily characterized by just a few books — but this essential guide is a great place to start.
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Welcome to The Nightcrawler — a weekly newsletter from Eric Markowitz covering tech, innovation, and long-term thinking.
Freethink’s weekly countdown of the biggest space news, featuring Starship’s second test flight, a new “dark mysteries” telescope, and more.
Think you can hide your feelings pretty easily?
An excerpt from renowned neuropsychologist Nicholas Humphrey’s book “Sentience: The Invention of Consciousness.”
An excerpt from “Memory,” a primer on human memory, its workings, feats, and flaws, by two leading psychological researchers.
Do grim sci-fi scenarios crush our hopes for real-world growth? Author Michael Harris looks elsewhere to unblock the road to a better future.
A-list lessons for better work-life collaboration — direct from the movie set.
True north, magnetic north, and grid north have aligned. There’s also a connection to James Bond.
Self-help often distills philosophical ideas for the modern ear. Sometimes, its better to go back to the source.
There was a lot of hype and a lot of nonsense, but also some profoundly major advances. Here are the biggest ones you may have missed.
To this day, one cult believes that Lemuria was real, and that its people left us the sacred wisdom to revive their advanced civilization.
“Isn’t it enough to see that a garden is beautiful without having to believe that there are fairies at the bottom of it too?”
After it became clear that the world wasn’t 6,000 years old, some proposed that northern peoples had emerged independently from others.
Boredom isn’t the enemy; it’s a catalyst for changing your relationship to work.
These composers channeled the horror of the Holocaust and Hiroshima while honoring those who lived through it.
With launch, deployment, calibration, and science operations about to commence, here are 10 facts that are absolutely true.
Previously, only the brightest and most active galaxies could pierce the obscuring wall of cosmic dust. At last, normal galaxies break through.
Deepfakes featuring your digital double could replace emails and zoom presentations.
Carnivorous plants fascinate as much now as when their gruesome diet was first discovered.
Presidential gravesites are spread out “democratically” — but this is more by accident than design.
Astronomers possibly solve the mystery of how the enormous Oort cloud, with over 100 billion comet-like objects, was formed.
Is it true that half of disaster relief is motivated politically rather than by need?
In determining what qualifies as solid science, controversy is inevitable.
“It doesn’t erase what happened to you. It just changes the impact it has on your life.”
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.
“She understood me and I understood her. I loved that pigeon.”
And the one step we can take to show extraterrestrials we’re figuring it out. Every year, Earth’s meteor showers accomplish two important tasks. This composite photograph shows a large number of […]
One image can give over 100 times the data we now get from Hubble. NASA’s Hubble Space Telescope, launched in 1990, revealed the previously unseen Universe. The most distant galaxy ever […]