Saintmaking

Meet the ‘shock troops of gay liberation’: how the Sisters of Perpetual Indulgence canonised the filmmaker Derek Jarman | Continue reading


@aeon.co | 3 years ago

Why philosophy needs myth

Some see Plato as a pure rationalist, others as a fantastical mythmaker. His deft use of stories tells a more complex tale | Continue reading


@aeon.co | 3 years ago

This is no love story

Strange entanglements of politics and romantic love marked England’s conquest of Ireland and still haunt the Irish today | Continue reading


@aeon.co | 3 years ago

The Posthuman Dog

If humans were to disappear from the face of the Earth, what might dogs become? And would they be better off without us? | Continue reading


@aeon.co | 3 years ago

Thanadoula

An ethereal animation evokes the personal loss that led an end-of-life doula to find value in being there for the dying | Continue reading


@aeon.co | 3 years ago

The biggest picture

No wonder we cannot agree on how globalisation works and whether it’s a good thing. All the stories we have are flawed | Continue reading


@aeon.co | 3 years ago

Bug farm

‘This is a really beautiful roach.’ What’s it like to love an insect? Ask the Florida farmers who work with them every day | Continue reading


@aeon.co | 3 years ago

How do you know?

Correct information doesn’t always come with its own bright halo of truth. What makes something worth believing? | Continue reading


@aeon.co | 3 years ago

Anjan Chatterjee: neurological disorder and art

How can brain damage make people ‘better’ artists? What neuroaesthetics reveals about the complexity of artistic creation | Continue reading


@aeon.co | 3 years ago

The posthuman dog

If humans were to disappear from the face of the Earth, what might dogs become? And would they be better off without us? | Continue reading


@aeon.co | 3 years ago

The Search for Alien Tech

There’s a new plan to find extraterrestrial civilisations by the way they live. But if we can see them, can they see us? | Continue reading


@aeon.co | 3 years ago

Hegel Today

Too dense, too abstract, too suspect, Hegel was outside the Anglophone canon for a century. Why is his star rising again? | Continue reading


@aeon.co | 3 years ago

Homo imaginatus

Imagination isn’t just a spillover from our problem-solving prowess. It might be the core of what human brains evolved to do | Continue reading


@aeon.co | 3 years ago

Street angel

What’s real and what’s artifice in gentrifying Chinatown? A ‘fever dream’ walk through a formerly working-class part of LA | Continue reading


@aeon.co | 3 years ago

Heritage at sea

Must we simply accept the loss of beloved buildings and cities to the floods and rising seas of the climate crisis? | Continue reading


@aeon.co | 3 years ago

The field trip

Work in the 21st century, as experienced by a group of fifth-graders in Portland, Oregon, on a field trip to the ‘real world’ | Continue reading


@aeon.co | 3 years ago

Hegel today

Too dense, too abstract, too suspect, Hegel was outside the Anglophone canon for a century. Why is his star rising again? | Continue reading


@aeon.co | 3 years ago

The development of mindreading

Do babies know other minds exist or do they have a knack for patterns? Philosophers and psychologists are still working it out | Continue reading


@aeon.co | 3 years ago

The search for alien tech

Radio signals is old hat: now it’s all about hunting for extraterrestrial technosignatures. But do we want to be found? | Continue reading


@aeon.co | 3 years ago

Modern technology is akin to the metaphysics of Vedanta

How virtual reality and artificial intelligence can illuminate the metaphysics of the ancient philosophy of Vedanta | Continue reading


@aeon.co | 3 years ago

Could a World Government Work?

World government is back, in geopolitics and in the academy, but what does the future hold for it? | Continue reading


@aeon.co | 3 years ago

The emancipated Empire

The British Empire was first built on slavery and then on the moral and economic self-confidence of antislavery | Continue reading


@aeon.co | 3 years ago

On the Origin of Minds

Cognition did not appear out of nowhere in ‘higher’ animals but goes back millions, perhaps billions, of years | Continue reading


@aeon.co | 3 years ago

Phenomena: waves

Watch the mesmerising patterns that emerge from nature’s fundamental forces as sound waves meet salt and water | Continue reading


@aeon.co | 3 years ago

On the origin of minds

Cognition did not appear out of nowhere in ‘higher’ animals but goes back millions, perhaps billions, of years | Continue reading


@aeon.co | 3 years ago

Spring fever

When Dutch students learn about sex, love and relationships, there’s no shame but plenty of giggles and camaraderie | Continue reading


@aeon.co | 3 years ago

Against longtermism

It started as a fringe philosophical theory about humanity’s future. It’s now richly funded and increasingly dangerous | Continue reading


@aeon.co | 3 years ago

Blinkity blank

The optical illusion known as persistence of vision bursts to vivid life in this Palme d’Or winner from 1955 | Continue reading


@aeon.co | 3 years ago

Fear Not

You might think that horror movies are a delicious, trashy pleasure. But watching them has surprisingly wholesome effects | Continue reading


@aeon.co | 3 years ago

Defend the deep

Instead of letting waves of exploitation sweep through the deep ocean, we could choose to protect this vast living realm | Continue reading


@aeon.co | 3 years ago

The great world of Gregory Blackstock

The animated story of the autistic, self-taught artist Gregory Blackstock who mines creativity from life’s endless variations | Continue reading


@aeon.co | 3 years ago

Fear not

You might think that horror movies are a delicious, trashy pleasure. But watching them has surprisingly wholesome effects | Continue reading


@aeon.co | 3 years ago

The diamond

Unearthing stories of trauma, struggle and love among the hobbyist miners at the Crater of Diamonds State Park in Arkansas | Continue reading


@aeon.co | 3 years ago

Healthcare workers of yore

Looking past conventional histories of medicine we see that women delivered much of medieval healthcare. Just as today | Continue reading


@aeon.co | 3 years ago

Why is simplicity so unreasonably effective at scientific explanation?

Does the existence of a multiverse hold the key for why nature’s laws seem so simple? | Continue reading


@aeon.co | 3 years ago

The Rashomon effect

The ‘Rashomon effect’ is real. Learn how hidden factors including biases can influence your view of reality and truth | Continue reading


@aeon.co | 3 years ago

Why simplicity works

Does the existence of a multiverse hold the key for why nature’s laws seem so simple? | Continue reading


@aeon.co | 3 years ago

Feeling, in Situ

What if emotions are not universal and hardwired but exquisite acts of meaning-making specific to context and culture? | Continue reading


@aeon.co | 3 years ago

Feeling, in situ

What if emotions are not universal and hardwired but exquisite acts of meaning-making specific to context and culture? | Continue reading


@aeon.co | 3 years ago

Being a Persian

To be Persian before nationalism was to belong to a generous, plural identity woven through language, kin and manners | Continue reading


@aeon.co | 3 years ago

Moths taking flight at 6k frames per second

The incredible biophysics of moths taking flight is a spectacle to behold – especially at 6,000 frames per second | Continue reading


@aeon.co | 3 years ago

Moths in slow motion

The incredible biophysics of moths taking flight is a spectacle to behold – especially at 6,000 frames per second | Continue reading


@aeon.co | 3 years ago

Being Persian

To be Persian before nationalism was to belong to a generous, plural identity woven through language, kin and manners | Continue reading


@aeon.co | 3 years ago

On the art and science of making buildings sound natural

Our movies and offices are engineered to sound natural based on what rang false in the theatres of 18th-century Paris | Continue reading


@aeon.co | 3 years ago

The silent pulse of the Universe

In 1967, when Jocelyn Bell was still a postgraduate, she discovered pulsars. But the Nobel Prize went to her supervisor | Continue reading


@aeon.co | 3 years ago

Acoustic naturalism

Our movies and offices are engineered to sound natural based on what rang false in the theatres of 18th-century Paris | Continue reading


@aeon.co | 3 years ago

The idea of the West has always been in motion and in crisis Essays

While the West belonged to a European geography, its name meant something. Now it is a vague invocation, laden with fear | Continue reading


@aeon.co | 3 years ago

The elephant’s song

A bluesy ballad tells the captivating story of Old Bet, the first circus elephant in the US, from the view of a farm dog | Continue reading


@aeon.co | 3 years ago