The Elite College Students Who Can’t Read Books
To read a book in college, it helps to have read a book in high school.
To read a book in college, it helps to have read a book in high school.
Terence Tao, the world’s greatest living mathematician, has a vision for AI.
A former FEMA director describes the devastation in western North Carolina and what comes next.
In Texas and elsewhere, new laws and policies have encouraged neighbors to report neighbors to the government.
Around the anniversary of October 7, a conversation about Israel, pain, and peace with the author of Sapiens
Understand AI for what it is, not what it might become.
Thirty years after the genocide in Rwanda, survivors and perpetrators live side by side.
The Joker sequel has nothing interesting to say about the challenge of fame.
Many of America’s corporate executives have had enough of the remote-work experiment.
In many domains, the conventional wisdom among progressives is mistaken, oversimplified, or based on wishful thinking. The economics of immigration is not one of them.
The mass-rape trial in France exposes a case that’s both wholly unprecedented and dully familiar.
When one party tries to claim the concept for itself, will the other party’s voters reflexively oppose it?
Longevity enthusiasts are microdosing a 19th-century cure-all. Are they onto something?
Jack Smith’s new filing shows why January 6 should hurt Trump. But don’t expect a major public reaction.
Ever feel like your life is determined by powerful forces beyond your reach? HBO has a show for that.
They believe that right-wing speech should be sacrosanct, and liberal speech officially disfavored.
The company is in trouble, and anyone who has spit into one of the company’s test tubes should be concerned.
The biggest threat from tropical cyclones is no longer storm surge but rains like those dumped by Helene on North Carolina.
The senator from Ohio conspicuously refused to repeat his running mate’s biggest lie.
New data on the end times