Korean culture is characterised by an untranslatably profound sorrow and regret. Or is that just another stereotype? - by Minsoo Kang Read at Aeon | Continue reading
How the Dorze people in southern Ethiopia build ‘beehive’ houses from bamboo that can last their residents a lifetime - by Aeon Video Watch at Aeon | Continue reading
To truly see black people in ancient art we need to look beyond the historically recent trope of ‘Blackness = inferiority’ - by Sarah Derbew Read at Aeon | Continue reading
Social progress, high-speed transport and electricity everywhere – how the Victorians invented the future | Continue reading
‘We had to do something’: Rabbit and fellow protesters move from an eco-village to the vacant home of corrupt politicians - by Aeon Video Watch at Aeon | Continue reading
We’re not the only beings that dream. What visions might sleep bring to a cell, an insect, a mollusk, an ape? - by Sidarta Ribeiro Read at Aeon | Continue reading
From ‘chandeliers’ to entangled qubits – an animated explainer of quantum computing and its revolutionary potential - by Aeon Video Watch at Aeon | Continue reading
Kalila and Dimna’s ancient parables on power delight as much as they instruct. But their moral maxims are ethically murky - by Kevin Blankinship Read at Aeon | Continue reading
Laws of nature are impossible to break, and nearly as difficult to define. Just what kind of necessity do they possess? | Continue reading
A thought-provoking, experimental animation on what it means for a supposedly ‘objective’ AI to predict an early death | Continue reading
Take a guided stroll around a digitally reconstructed ancient Rome in the 4th century CE, from the Colosseum to the Forum - by Aeon Video Watch at Aeon | Continue reading
Laws of nature are impossible to break, and nearly as difficult to define. Just what kind of necessity do they possess? - by Marc Lange Read at Aeon | Continue reading
A poetic ode to Hubble celebrates humanity’s yearning to know the cosmos, and a daughter’s love for her scientist-father | Continue reading
Powerful tricks from computer science and cybernetics show how evolution ‘hacked’ its way to intelligence from the bottom up | Continue reading
From a victim of the police to its officer: what happened when a gay Black man joined a racist, homophobic institution | Continue reading
Academic philosophy can indeed make sense of our interdependent world. But only if it transforms by becoming truly diverse | Continue reading
The Cold War roots of psychiatric brainwashing are a warning for users of wellness apps and future therapy innovations | Continue reading
When parents cast a child into the role of mediator, friend and carer, the wounds are profound. But recovery is possible | Continue reading
How a $1,000 scholarly bet between a biologist and an economist shifted the way the world understood population growth | Continue reading
D H Lawrence’s restless travels in Sardinia were a quest for self-knowledge. The real island slipped beneath his notice | Continue reading
A meditative window into the world of the sculptor Mark Firth whose life is dedicated to creating precision in metal forms | Continue reading
A meditative window into the world of the sculptor Mark Firth whose life is dedicated to creating precision in metal forms | Continue reading
We will never truly advance our ethical relationship with other animals until we stop treating them as chattels for use | Continue reading
We will never truly advance our ethical relationship with other animals until we stop treating them as chattels for use | Continue reading
The evolutionary benefits of an undercover life: meet the stick insect that disguises itself as a seed, an ant and a leaf | Continue reading
The evolutionary benefits of an undercover life: meet the stick insect that disguises itself as a seed, an ant and a leaf | Continue reading
Energy flow between brain and environment drives the non-equilibrium that sustains life. Could turbulence help us thrive? | Continue reading
Meet the world’s only full-time cruiser, ‘Super Mario’ Salcedo, who has spent more than two decades living on cruise ships | Continue reading
If your hometown were beset with toxic dust, like Australia’s Broken Hill, would you feel any less connected to it? | Continue reading
Far more potent than oil or gold, water is a stream of geopolitical force that runs deep, feeding crops and building nations | Continue reading
His grandfather’s role in the Algerian War of Independence is a mystery that sets Bastien’s imagination in search of the truth | Continue reading
We are suspended between the inescapable facts of our lives and what we do to contest them, nowhere more than in prison | Continue reading
‘Horn OK please’: a postcard from Mumbai, a city of 20 million, where there’s poetry in simply getting from A to B | Continue reading
Neither psychology nor anthropology fully understand love: only history sees that it’s all about the time and the telling | Continue reading
The official definition of corruption – the abuse of public office for private gain – does little to capture the reality | Continue reading
A radical sex-ed class, aimed at normalising the vulva, reveals what many must learn and unlearn in order to love their bodies | Continue reading
From kinship systems to environmental lore, Indigenous philosophy could help reprogram the cultural code of AI | Continue reading
The principle of indifference has an unresolved paradox at its core that goes right to the heart of scientific objectivity | Continue reading
The principle of indifference has an unresolved paradox at its core that goes right to the heart of scientific objectivity | Continue reading
Far more potent than oil or gold, water is a stream of geopolitical force that runs deep, feeding crops and building nations | Continue reading
‘Please act normal and wash your armpit’: dating pet peeves that 20something art students won’t overlook (but will animate) | Continue reading
A bioethicist at the heart of the Italian coronavirus crisis asks: why won’t we talk about the tradeoffs of the lockdown? | Continue reading
Believe in the Loch Ness monster and you’re more likely to believe the Apollo missions were fake. How do weird beliefs work? | Continue reading
The dropout was not just a hippy-trippy hedonist but a paranoid soul, who feared brainwashing and societal control | Continue reading
What shaped the thought of E P Thompson, the great historian of ordinary working people and champion of their significance? | Continue reading
A professor of physics explains how mind-bending quantum experiments are blurring the line between past, present and future | Continue reading
Believe in the Loch Ness monster and you’re more likely to believe the Apollo missions were fake. How do weird beliefs work? | Continue reading
A historic peek behind the scenes at museums in New York, Harvard and Washington shows what it takes to bring exhibits to life | Continue reading