Can Nature Lie?
The lying that we humans do requires a more sophisticated kind of cognition than a bird, flower, or fungus can muster.
The lying that we humans do requires a more sophisticated kind of cognition than a bird, flower, or fungus can muster.
Evangelicals can have revival or nostalgia—but not both.
These books may tempt you to take up a new pursuit and enlarge your sense of your own capabilities.
In agreeing to guardrails, industry leaders are nodding to the possible risks of their creations without pausing their aggressive competition.
The identification company Clear allows travelers to pay to cut in line. But you can’t buy your way out of inconvenience at America’s airports.
Their saliva is a secret weapon.
The OpenAI CEO’s ambitious, ingenious, terrifying quest to create a new form of intelligence
Change them, and you change America.
The response to Luke Combs’s cover of “Fast Car” raises questions about the relevance of race to certain news stories.
A short guide to help you get into the game
A poem for Sunday
Why scientists froze an orange half a mile underwater
Twenty years ago, corporate-presentation software was called “the end of reason.” Why?
Residents of rich blue towns talk about inclusion, but their laws do the opposite.
The movie is everywhere—including in our subconscious mind.
Where many artists downplay their early work, he kept “Because of You,” his first hit, close to his heart.
Stories of adapting and finding satisfaction later in life
Survival of the Thickest stars the comedian Michelle Buteau as a brokenhearted stylist intent on making “beautiful thickums” feel good about themselves.
Why a good economy feels so bad
And what we can do to prevent it