Brother

This heartfelt portrait of one man’s addiction makes a powerful case for a patient-centred approach to the opioid epidemic - by Aeon Video Watch at Aeon | Continue reading


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Mutual entrapment

As Neolithic people transformed prehistoric forests, they stumbled into an ecological trap. Domestication goes both ways - by Mette Løvschal Read at Aeon | Continue reading


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Smoke break

Say what you will about the vice, the smoke break can spark rare moments of respite and connection between coworkers - by Aeon Video Watch at Aeon | Continue reading


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Leave them alone

Parenting advice from D H Lawrence: don’t smother your children with love. They are more sagacious than you think - by Lara Feigel Read at Aeon | Continue reading


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The Boltzmann brain paradox

Are you a person in a universe or brain in a void? How logicians, cosmologists and philosophers tackle Boltzmann’s paradox - by Aeon Video Watch at Aeon | Continue reading


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Ever more land and labour

Centuries of capitalism saw the global countryside ruthlessly converted into cheap commodities. But at what cost? - by Sven Beckert & Ulbe Bosma Read at Aeon | Continue reading


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Not just a bowl of fruit

‘I’m noticed for that hour’: for an ageing art model, the careful attention of others prompts a frank evaluation of her body - by Aeon Video Watch at Aeon | Continue reading


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Blue-eyed Buddhist

The story of a working-class radical from Ireland who became a celebrated monk and challenged the British Empire in Asia - by Laurence Cox Read at Aeon | Continue reading


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Seeing and somethingness – An evolutionary approach to consciousness

An evolutionary approach to consciousness can resolve the ‘hard problem’ – with radical implications for animal sentience | Continue reading


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Brilliant noise

Unfiltered footage of solar flares is a reminder of the processing behind most space images – and the raw power of the Sun - by Aeon Video Watch at Aeon | Continue reading


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Seeing and somethingness

An evolutionary approach to consciousness can resolve the ‘hard problem’ – with radical implications for animal sentience - by Nicholas Humphrey Read at Aeon | Continue reading


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Dazzling timelapse shows how microbes spoil our food – and sometimes enrich it

Metamorphosis or ruin? A poetic, up-close look at the hidden work of rot asks us to reconsider our relationship with decay | Continue reading


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Fortune favours the shrewd

Attaining and maintaining power lies at the heart of almost all animal societies. And it’s as devious as human politicking - by Lee Alan Dugatkin Read at Aeon | Continue reading


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Wrought

Metamorphosis or ruin? A poetic, up-close look at the hidden work of rot asks us to reconsider our relationship with decay - by Aeon Video Watch at Aeon | Continue reading


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The utopian machine

For children like me, growing up in an utopian community, life was a bewildering chaos of freedom and indoctrination - by Susanna Crossman Read at Aeon | Continue reading


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What Enid Blyton’s school stories taught me about ethics

The unfashionable world of Blyton’s school stories still has much to say about what it means to live an ethical life | Continue reading


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Why the pull of addictive cravings is so hard to resist

The neuroscientific picture of addiction overlooks the psychological and social factors that make cravings so hard to resist | Continue reading


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Drawing on autism

An animator’s ethical conundrum: how does he depict an Autistic person without reducing him to a caricature? - by Aeon Video Watch at Aeon | Continue reading


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Exhuming the truth

Thousands of victims of political executions lie in anonymous graves. Forensics offers hope for the ‘forgotten’ ones - by Nicole Iturriaga Read at Aeon | Continue reading


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Laughter is essential

For philosopher Henri Bergson, laughter solves a serious human conundrum: how to keep our minds and social lives elastic | Continue reading


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Nubia Way

‘It was a very spiritual thing to do.’ How Black Londoners built a community – and their houses – from the ground up - by Aeon Video Watch at Aeon | Continue reading


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Life as a Victorian Teenager

Two 90-year-old women remember the clothes, manners and copious mud of Victorian London when they were teenagers | Continue reading


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Life in the buff

Naturists believed nudity was profoundly beneficial to society. In order to spread the message, they took to photography - by Annebella Pollen Read at Aeon | Continue reading


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Ghosts

Running images through an AI feedback loop generates a trippy wave of visuals unbound from the world of human aesthetics - by Aeon Video Watch at Aeon | Continue reading


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Why we crave

The neuroscientific picture of addiction overlooks the psychological and social factors that make cravings so hard to resist - by Zoey Lavallee Read at Aeon | Continue reading


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Life as a Victorian teenager

Two 90-year-old women remember the clothes, manners and copious mud of Victorian London when they were teenagers - by Aeon Video Watch at Aeon | Continue reading


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Democracy or apocalypse

Eric Voegelin and Hans Kelsen fled the Nazis. In the US, they clashed over the nature of modernity and government - by David Dyzenhaus Read at Aeon | Continue reading


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They

‘It’s a celebration of gender’: when a couple sets out to raise their baby gender-neutral, there are joys and complications - by Aeon Video Watch at Aeon | Continue reading


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Care from afar

For over a century telemedicine has promised healthcare for all. But will it ever replace seeing a human being in person? - by Jeremy A Greene Read at Aeon | Continue reading


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Happy the person

She has deep emotions, complex social needs and a large, elephant brain. Her legal personhood should be recognised too - by Lori Marino Read at Aeon | Continue reading


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60 cycles

Follow the mesmerising movements of the peloton on a ride through the Canadian countryside, via this stylish 1965 classic - by Aeon Video Watch at Aeon | Continue reading


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Sisters in dharma

In Indonesia, the world’s largest Muslim nation, Parwati Soepangat pioneered a Buddhist feminist theology with deep roots - by Jack Meng-Tat Chia Read at Aeon | Continue reading


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Great art explained: Rothko’s Seagram Murals

Through his painting, Rothko sought meaning in a disenchanted world. A lucrative commission challenged his artistic ideals - by Aeon Video Watch at Aeon | Continue reading


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Collective wrongs

Even when individual perpetrators and victims are dead, states and institutions have a responsibility to make restitutions - by Joshua Stein Read at Aeon | Continue reading


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Why whale song is like pop music

Humpback whale songs spread through the oceans like pop music, raising deeper questions about whale cultural evolution - by Aeon Video Watch at Aeon | Continue reading


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The Calvinist conquest

In the 17th century, Dutch proselytisers set out for Asia, Africa and the Americas. The legacy of their travels endures - by Charles H Parker Read at Aeon | Continue reading


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What was the first transit map?

Unravelling the mysteries of the only known map of the Roman world – spanning from Spain to India – surviving from antiquity - by Aeon Video Watch at Aeon | Continue reading


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A touch of moss

Inside a rainforest or on the city pavement, moss asks so little yet offers so much: a tactile encounter with time itself - by Nikita Arora Read at Aeon | Continue reading


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Mother and baby

‘If you got pregnant, that was a crime’: uncovering the Catholic zealotry and cruelty of Ireland’s ‘mother and baby homes’ - by Aeon Video Watch at Aeon | Continue reading


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Freedom from liquor

Ken Burns’s account of prohibition tells a popular story of booze in America. The historical record is far more sobering - by Mark Lawrence Schrad Read at Aeon | Continue reading


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Peter Singer on Hegel and Marx

How Hegel’s ‘notoriously obscure’ philosophy of history revolutionised the world via Marx, as explained by Peter Singer - by Aeon Video Watch at Aeon | Continue reading


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A sliver of reality

Science and mathematics may never fully capture the physical universe. Are there hard limits to human intelligence? - by David H Wolpert Read at Aeon | Continue reading


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History by Numbers

Is history a matter of individual agency and action, or of finding and quantifying underpinning structures and patterns? | Continue reading


@aeon.co | 2 years ago

History by numbers

Is history a matter of individual agency and action, or of finding and quantifying underpinning structures and patterns? - by Claire Lemercier & Claire Zalc Read at Aeon | Continue reading


@aeon.co | 2 years ago

If you love this planet

‘You are all children of the atomic age’: an award-winning 1982 documentary shows the horrors of full-scale nuclear war - by Aeon Video Watch at Aeon | Continue reading


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Here’s to the aquapolis

Unkempt, beguiling and lacking conventional geometry, wetlands bring a roguish, raffish wildness to the city - by Tom Blass Read at Aeon | Continue reading


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Einstein’s twin paradox

Trek light years into deep space to explore time dilation and the ‘twin paradox’ at the centre of special relativity - by Aeon Video Watch at Aeon | Continue reading


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What on earth is a xenobot?

The more we understand how cells produce shape and form, the more inadequate the idea of a genomic blueprint looks - by Philip Ball Read at Aeon | Continue reading


@aeon.co | 2 years ago