A city but not upon a hill

Entangled with, yet critical of, colonial oppression and the evils of slavery, the true history of Boston can now be told | Continue reading


@aeon.co | 3 years ago

Brains in a Dish

What pea-sized brain organoids reveal about consciousness, the self and our future as a species | Continue reading


@aeon.co | 3 years ago

Brains in a dish

What pea-sized brain organoids reveal about consciousness, the self and our future as a species | Continue reading


@aeon.co | 3 years ago

Light and microscopy

Microbes are, by definition, too small for our eyes to see. How we perceive them depends entirely on the microscopy method used | Continue reading


@aeon.co | 3 years ago

The patriot paradox

Globalism is out. Nationalism is in. Progressives who think they can jump aboard are dangerously naive | Continue reading


@aeon.co | 3 years ago

The patriot paradox

Globalism is out. Nationalism is in. Progressives who think they can jump aboard are dangerously naive | Continue reading


@aeon.co | 3 years ago

Authenticity Is a Sham

From monks to existentialists and hipsters, the search for a true self has been a centuries-long project. Should we give it up? | Continue reading


@aeon.co | 3 years ago

The stroke

From mind-bending animation to jazz improvisation – how an artist inverted the usual process of album-art creation | Continue reading


@aeon.co | 3 years ago

Authenticity is a sham

From monks to existentialists and hipsters, the search for a true self has been a centuries-long project. Should we give it up? | Continue reading


@aeon.co | 3 years ago

Utuqaq

If the ice could speak, what would it say? A sci-fi poem in Greenlandic about scientific exploration of the melting Arctic | Continue reading


@aeon.co | 3 years ago

Milton versus the mob

He spoke truth to power and made heresy a virtue. Lessons on free speech and intellectual combat from John Milton | Continue reading


@aeon.co | 3 years ago

Mathematics for Gamblers

If philosophers and mathematicians struggle with probability, can gamblers really hope to grasp their losing game? | Continue reading


@aeon.co | 3 years ago

Shameful

Women who write about their pain suffer a double shaming: once for getting injured, twice for their act of self-exposure | Continue reading


@aeon.co | 3 years ago

Ladies and gentlemen… Mr Leonard Cohen

Take a walk through the snowy streets of Montreal in 1965 for a riveting glimpse into Leonard Cohen’s life as an artist | Continue reading


@aeon.co | 3 years ago

Changed by art

Gazing at a painting feels like an almost magical encounter with another mind but what real effects does art have on us? | Continue reading


@aeon.co | 3 years ago

The Obesity Era

As the American people got fatter, so did marmosets, vervet monkeys and mice. The problem may be bigger than any of us | Continue reading


@aeon.co | 3 years ago

A Philosophy of Sound

From the Big Bang to a heartbeat in utero, sounds are a scaffold for thought when logic and imagery elude us | Continue reading


@aeon.co | 3 years ago

A mathematician, a philosopher and a gambler walk into a bar

If philosophers and mathematicians struggle with probability, can gamblers really hope to grasp their losing game? | Continue reading


@aeon.co | 3 years ago

The secret language of trees

How trees share food, supplies and the wisdom gained over long lives via an information superhighway in their root systems | Continue reading


@aeon.co | 3 years ago

Mathematics for gamblers

If philosophers and mathematicians struggle with probability, can gamblers really hope to grasp their losing game? | Continue reading


@aeon.co | 3 years ago

Tarikat

Dive into an intimate, entrancing viewing experience that takes you into the midst of dhikr, a ritual at the heart of Sufism | Continue reading


@aeon.co | 3 years ago

Coleridge the philosopher

Though far more often remembered as a poet, Coleridge’s theory of ideas was spectacular in its originality and bold reach | Continue reading


@aeon.co | 3 years ago

The misinformation virus

Lies and distortions don’t just afflict the ignorant. The more you know, the more vulnerable you can be to infection | Continue reading


@aeon.co | 3 years ago

The fall of the Roman Empire was a lucky break for humanity

The fall of the Roman Empire wasn’t a tragedy for civilisation. It was a lucky break for humanity as a whole | Continue reading


@aeon.co | 3 years ago

Why did the Mexican jumping bean jump?

Why is the joint jumping? On the cozy, claustrophobic lives of the larvae that set up home inside Mexican jumping beans | Continue reading


@aeon.co | 3 years ago

The road from Rome

The fall of the Roman Empire wasn’t a tragedy for civilisation. It was a lucky break for humanity as a whole | Continue reading


@aeon.co | 3 years ago

Gardening with Nietzsche

‘It creates for itself its share of joy on an inhospitable ground’ – why Nietzsche found plants an inspiration for living | Continue reading


@aeon.co | 3 years ago

A philosophy of sound

From the Big Bang to a heartbeat in utero, sounds are a scaffold for thought when logic and imagery elude us | Continue reading


@aeon.co | 3 years ago

Nightmares becalmed

I’m a dream engineer. Through touch, scent and sound, we help people rescript the dramas of their sleeping lives | Continue reading


@aeon.co | 3 years ago

The case of Norman Douglas

He was a literary lion and an infamous pederast: what might we learn from his life about monstrosity and humanity? | Continue reading


@aeon.co | 3 years ago

You and the thing that you love

‘I was just shoving myself into the moment’: how a skateboarder continues to do what he loves after losing his sight | Continue reading


@aeon.co | 3 years ago

Safety is fatal

Humans need closeness and belonging but any society which closes its gates is doomed to atrophy. How do we stay open? | Continue reading


@aeon.co | 3 years ago

Should computers run the world?

As algorithms increasingly shape our lives, their efficient, ethical use demands a dose of humanity, argues Hannah Fry | Continue reading


@aeon.co | 3 years ago

The joy of being animal

Human exceptionalism is dead: for the sake of our own happiness and the planet we should embrace our true animal nature | Continue reading


@aeon.co | 3 years ago

Does Consciousness Come from the Brains Electromagnetic Field?

Instead of a code encrypted in the wiring of our neurons, could consciousness reside in the brain’s electromagnetic field? | Continue reading


@aeon.co | 3 years ago

The artefact artist

‘An Indiana Jones in Gotham’ – how an urban archaeologist unearths centuries-old treasure beneath New York City | Continue reading


@aeon.co | 3 years ago

Brain wifi

Instead of a code encrypted in the wiring of our neurons, could consciousness reside in the brain’s electromagnetic field? | Continue reading


@aeon.co | 3 years ago

My brother’s keeper

Once, these two men were a Guantánamo Bay prisoner and guard; 13 years later, Mohamedou and Steve reunite as friends | Continue reading


@aeon.co | 3 years ago

The gender of dementia

Are women really at greater risk from dementia? Until we reckon with social roles and inequalities, it’s impossible to say | Continue reading


@aeon.co | 3 years ago

Whitey on Mars: Musk and the rise of the Valley’s strange trickle-down science

Elon Musk and the rise of Silicon Valley’s strange trickle-down science | Continue reading


@aeon.co | 3 years ago

Hannah Arendt: What remains?

Beyond ‘Banality’ – a rare interview with Hannah Arendt from 1964 captures her making as an intellectual giant | Continue reading


@aeon.co | 3 years ago

After slavery

Abolition in Africa brought longed-for freedoms, but also political turmoil, economic collapse and rising enslavement | Continue reading


@aeon.co | 3 years ago

Fishcakes and cocaine

Eccentrics, artists and Luddites find community in Scoraig, an off-the-grid settlement on a peninsula in northwest Scotland | Continue reading


@aeon.co | 3 years ago

Madame comrade

How Ivy Litvinov, the English-born wife of a Soviet ambassador, seduced America with wit, tea and soft diplomacy | Continue reading


@aeon.co | 3 years ago

The cosmic chasm

Physics as we know it is elegant and exquisitely accurate. It tells almost nothing about the deepest riddles of the Universe | Continue reading


@aeon.co | 3 years ago

Rooms

‘This is me! Look around’: putting words into pictures to show how the mental and the physical interact in the rooms we call home | Continue reading


@aeon.co | 3 years ago

Vive Madame Roland!

She was a French revolutionary and a politician’s wife. But Manon Roland should be remembered for her philosophical writings | Continue reading


@aeon.co | 3 years ago

Michael Rakowitz: haunting the West

A museum, but also a crime palace: why the artist Michael Rakowitz makes ghosts of looted artefacts to haunt Western museums | Continue reading


@aeon.co | 3 years ago