Second shot

Is the only way for a victim’s family to heal for the perpetrator to hurt? Revisiting a notorious teenage murder from 1990 - by Aeon Video Watch at Aeon | Continue reading


@aeon.co | 1 year ago

The golden fuel

Asia’s rise to economic power and food security has been powered not by rice but by American maize, the ultimate flexi-crop - by Peter A Coclanis Read at Aeon | Continue reading


@aeon.co | 1 year ago

Connecting the human body to the outside world

How researchers are using insights from Indian classical dance to allow prosthesis patients to ‘feel’ the external world - by Aeon Video Watch at Aeon | Continue reading


@aeon.co | 1 year ago

Family passages

Each new generation learns from its elders. But familial voices now compete for influence with a chorus of urgent others - by Elizabeth Svoboda Read at Aeon | Continue reading


@aeon.co | 1 year ago

Philosophy’s blindspot

Education has long been ignored by contemporary philosophers. That is a myopic view that must change - by David Bakhurst Read at Aeon | Continue reading


@aeon.co | 1 year ago

Deerwoods deathtrap

This is where we nearly died – a folksy reflection on family, memory and the razor-thin margin between comedy and tragedy - by Aeon Video Watch at Aeon | Continue reading


@aeon.co | 1 year ago

Women at the barricades

The transgressions of working-class women formed the revolutionary heart of the 1871 Paris Commune - by Carolyn Eichner Read at Aeon | Continue reading


@aeon.co | 1 year ago

Chemical somnia

An otherworldly experience at the intersection of art and science – staged on a single square inch in a Petri dish - by Aeon Video Watch at Aeon | Continue reading


@aeon.co | 1 year ago

The politics of pain

Medical science can only tell us so much. To understand pain, we need the cultural tools of history, philosophy and art - by Rob Boddice Read at Aeon | Continue reading


@aeon.co | 1 year ago

Blaulicht (Blue light)

A fly-on-the-wall film follows two Swiss paramedic crews for a powerfully involving ride as they attend emergencies - by Aeon Video Watch at Aeon | Continue reading


@aeon.co | 1 year ago

Finding the First Americans

Archaeology and genetics can’t yet agree on when humans first arrived in the Americas. That’s good science and here’s why - by Jennifer Raff Read at Aeon | Continue reading


@aeon.co | 1 year ago

The immediate present

‘Why don’t I paint the sensation of seeing?’ The US artist Alex Katz on eight decades of meditative looking - by Aeon Video Watch at Aeon | Continue reading


@aeon.co | 1 year ago

The first Romantics

How a close group of brilliant friends, in a tiny German university town, laid the foundations of modern consciousness - by Andrea Wulf Read at Aeon | Continue reading


@aeon.co | 1 year ago

Creating a wormhole in a quantum computer

How a century of research culminated in the first lab-built wormhole linking classical physics and the quantum world - by Aeon Video Watch at Aeon | Continue reading


@aeon.co | 1 year ago

Many wisdoms

There are no transcendent insights that rise above human difference. Yet wisdom exists if we look in the right places - by Avram Alpert Read at Aeon | Continue reading


@aeon.co | 1 year ago

How to get better at video games (according to babies)

A delightfully retro animation exploring what the research company DeepMind did to teach an AI to beat a human at video games - by Aeon Video Watch at Aeon | Continue reading


@aeon.co | 1 year ago

Our contaminated future

In Fukushima, communities are adapting to life in a time of permanent pollution: a glimpse of what’s to come for us all - by Maxime Polleri Read at Aeon | Continue reading


@aeon.co | 1 year ago

Believing is seeing

From meowing nuns to teenagers with tics, social contagion is real and causes genuine harm, not least in our social media age - by Aeon Video Watch at Aeon | Continue reading


@aeon.co | 1 year ago

The herd in the head

It is enormously empowering – even intoxicating – to lose yourself to a crowd. That is why we need contrarians - by Costica Bradatan Read at Aeon | Continue reading


@aeon.co | 1 year ago

Violator

‘I can feel the ground crumbling beneath my feet’: a son honours where his father’s turbulent life has taken them both - by Aeon Video Watch at Aeon | Continue reading


@aeon.co | 1 year ago

Home and the birdsong

In the dark, sylvan villages of medieval England, people named places after the birds that filled the night with music - by Michael J Warren Read at Aeon | Continue reading


@aeon.co | 1 year ago

How to become wise

Practice is at the heart of Korean philosophy. In order to lead a good life, hone your daily rituals of self-cultivation - by Kevin Cawley Read at Aeon | Continue reading


@aeon.co | 1 year ago

The great abandonment

‘An opportunity to look within.’ How did Narendra Modi’s lockdown actually affect India’s millions of migrant workers? - by Aeon Video Watch at Aeon | Continue reading


@aeon.co | 1 year ago

The pharaoh’s trumpet

The truly wondrous treasures of Tutankhamun’s tomb are not made of gold. They are the mundane things of everyday life - by Toby Wilkinson Read at Aeon | Continue reading


@aeon.co | 1 year ago

Great art explained: Edward Hopper and cinema

How Edward Hopper’s lonely, voyeuristic scenes drew on the visual language of the cinema, and were captured in their turn - by Aeon Video Watch at Aeon | Continue reading


@aeon.co | 1 year ago

Thriving on Mars

Dust storms, long distances and freezing temperatures make living on Mars magnificently challenging. How will we do it? - by Simon Morden Read at Aeon | Continue reading


@aeon.co | 1 year ago

The temple of knowledge

Imagine growing up in a New York City library, where you could wander the stacks and read late into the night. Ronald did - by Aeon Video Watch at Aeon | Continue reading


@aeon.co | 1 year ago

Where God dwelt

For hundreds of years, Christians knew exactly where heaven was: above us and above the stars. Then came the new cosmologists - by Stephen Case Read at Aeon | Continue reading


@aeon.co | 1 year ago

Cluster feeding

‘You cried and I didn’t know how to soothe you’ – the raw poetry of a new mother’s struggle to breastfeed her baby - by Aeon Video Watch at Aeon | Continue reading


@aeon.co | 1 year ago

Geopolitics is for losers

The concept of geopolitics comes from German and Russian attempts to explain defeat and reverse loss of influence - by Harold James Read at Aeon | Continue reading


@aeon.co | 1 year ago

The Rosetta Stone and what it actually says

What did the Rosetta Stone actually intend to say, and what can it tell us about the ancient Egyptians who inscribed it? - by Aeon Video Watch at Aeon | Continue reading


@aeon.co | 1 year ago

Why did consciousness evolve?

How the advent of consciousness 500 million years ago gave way to an evolutionary ‘arms race’ in sophisticated thinking - by Aeon Video Watch at Aeon | Continue reading


@aeon.co | 1 year ago

Moral mathematics

Subjecting the problems of ethics to the cool quantifications of logic and probability can help us to be better people - by Elad Uzan Read at Aeon | Continue reading


@aeon.co | 1 year ago

We are interwoven beings

A dragon needs the clouds and the wind in order to fly. What happens when we too relinquish individualistic reasoning? - by Mercedes Valmisa Read at Aeon | Continue reading


@aeon.co | 1 year ago

Bernard Williams and Bryan Magee on Descartes

How Descartes took the world apart to reconstitute it anew, laying the foundations for modern philosophy and science - by Aeon Video Watch at Aeon | Continue reading


@aeon.co | 1 year ago

Wanderlust of the ancients

The Roman Empire enabled an early version of globalisation that offered travellers adventure, novelty and opportunity - by Fabio Fernandes Read at Aeon | Continue reading


@aeon.co | 1 year ago

Small hours

Welcome to Block Island: holiday hotspot for wealthy tourists, and seasonal home for the workers who keep the place running - by Aeon Video Watch at Aeon | Continue reading


@aeon.co | 1 year ago

Was Colin Wilson a fascist?

For thousands of fans, he made philosophy thrillingly relevant. Yet there is a deep unsavoury undercurrent to his worldview - by Jules Evans Read at Aeon | Continue reading


@aeon.co | 1 year ago

Was Colin Wilson a fascist?

For thousands of fans, he made philosophy thrillingly relevant. Yet there is a deep unsavoury undercurrent to his worldview - by Jules Evans Read at Aeon | Continue reading


@aeon.co | 1 year ago

The love and death of Yosef and Zilli

A filmmaker turns his lens on the beauty of family life as he tries to make sense of his parents’ decision to die together - by Aeon Video Watch at Aeon | Continue reading


@aeon.co | 1 year ago

Our Earth, shaped by life

Darwin was the first to see that all lifeforms, from worms to corals, transform the planet. What does that mean for us? - by Olivia Judson Read at Aeon | Continue reading


@aeon.co | 1 year ago

Obon

An unsparing animation depicts the hell of the bombing of Hiroshima and its aftermath, as told by one of its survivors - by Aeon Video Watch at Aeon | Continue reading


@aeon.co | 1 year ago

This essay isn’t true

Alethic nihilism is the theory that nothing is true. There is much to gain by taking this radical idea seriously - by David Liggins Read at Aeon | Continue reading


@aeon.co | 1 year ago

Ed Yong: the hidden world of animal senses

From tasting feet to electric navigation: the wild world of animal senses lies beyond the limits of human sensory experience - by Aeon Video Watch at Aeon | Continue reading


@aeon.co | 1 year ago

Cogitating black holes

The Universe cannot always be understood through observation. Instead, physicists explore by devising thought experiments - by Michael Dine Read at Aeon | Continue reading


@aeon.co | 1 year ago

Cast out with love

It all begins with the sheep who wears the fleece: a seafaring ode to the sweater that’s warmed Cornish sailors for centuries - by Aeon Video Watch at Aeon | Continue reading


@aeon.co | 2 years ago

The helpful delusion

Evidence is growing that mental illness is more than dysfunction, with enormous implications for treatment - by Justin Garson Read at Aeon | Continue reading


@aeon.co | 2 years ago

Trenches in Chernobyl

Disturbing and inhaling radioactive dust, in their haste Russian soldiers unburied the wrecked, undead Earth itself - by Michael Marder Read at Aeon | Continue reading


@aeon.co | 2 years ago