First Comes the Breakup, Then Comes the ‘Thrive Post’
Living well is the best revenge, they say. But in the age of social media, an even better revenge is publicizing how well we’re living.
Living well is the best revenge, they say. But in the age of social media, an even better revenge is publicizing how well we’re living.
The creators of Yale’s Civil War Memorial were more concerned with honoring “both sides” than with the true meaning of the war.
A decade-old interview shows he has long sounded unhinged.
What happens if AI becomes even less intelligible?
Watching both men in office reveals a sharp distinction.
An ancient town-wide football match in England, sumo wrestling for youngsters in Japan, the Super Bowl halftime show in Las Vegas, a destructive wildfire in New Zealand, and much more
There’s plenty to worry about here on Earth.
OpenAI, Google, and Microsoft are dying to help plan your next trip.
Atlantic writers have long meditated on these two fates of all living things.
An unlikely coalition of urban professionals and Indigenous people has pulled off something extraordinary in Guatemala.
At Harvard and elsewhere, an old falsehood is capturing new minds.
Developmental psychology is notoriously reliant on certain demographics of children. A new tool is changing that.
For two weeks in 1984, I made Ronald Reagan look old.
Long live the street grid.
To think otherwise threatens the entire idea of a constitutional republic.
A new book explores deeply platonic friendships.
Reports that the leucistic raven was spotted at a McDonald’s—and then later at a Wendy’s—drew large crowds.
Sex sells. Brands are banking on the idea that heartbreak does too.
Not even the president can bend the internet to his will.
Airplanes aren’t made for this much luggage.