
What If Your Best Friend Is Your Soulmate?
A new book explores deeply platonic friendships.
A new book explores deeply platonic friendships.
The intellectual origins of the movement that self-described “techno-optimists” are advancing is dark—and deeply familiar.
The “Coward of Broward” reexamined
The invention that shaped our consumer appetites
Do photos, social posts, and diaries actually help us remember better?
Her path is narrow but real.
It could help to examine the cosmos.
But here is why you think it is.
There’s a difference between leisure and laziness.
Sharing the first episode of the podcast How to Keep Time
Or at least read the tag
Sometimes workplace culture requires you to leave the rest of your life at the door. What if there are better ways to structure time?
It’s surprisingly easy.
If time is a luxury, why don’t we flaunt it?
An unlikely alliance gets stronger.
In a culture obsessed with productivity, what would it mean to commit to letting it go?
Forty years ago, scientists did the impossible. Why doesn’t anyone remember?
Hint: It doesn’t involve the facts.
How our streaming lives are about to change
Co-hosts Becca Rashid and the Atlantic contributing writer Ian Bogost examine our relationship with time and what we can do to reclaim it.