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U.S. leads the world into a geopolitical Wild West
Here, might makes right, and laws and rules fall away.
sciart0
Jan 51 min read
My Parents’ Secret for Living Well Into Their 90s: Embracing Strangers
I have spent my career studying what makes people live healthier and longer. My mom and dad are proof that the key is staying socially connected.
sciart0
Jan 51 min read
Why Universities Can’t Be Neutral
After the Oct. 7 attacks, campus groups pressured trustees to adopt policies enforcing ‘institutional neutrality’. But it is an elusive and illusory goal. Somewhat related
sciart0
Jan 51 min read
Your Key Survival Skill for 2026: Critical Ignoring
In an age of endless low-quality information, it’s time to fight our instinct to seek out and absorb all we can. It takes practice.
sciart0
Jan 51 min read
Americans Are Looking to the Midwest to Find Affordability
The region offers housing costs below the national median and steady wage growth
sciart0
Jan 51 min read
ALBERT EINSTEIN’S BRILLIANT POLITICS
The physicist fought for the promise of a diverse, meritocratic America. We need his optimism today.
sciart0
Jan 41 min read
What if we became more educated and skilled in "Curvilinear Attention™?" UII w/Claude)
DM How do you define curvilinear? Curvilinear refers to anything that consists of, is bounded by, or characterized by curved lines rather than straight ones. The term combines the Latin roots curvus (meaning "bent" or "curved") and linea (meaning "line"). The concept appears across several domains, each with slightly different emphases: In geometry and mathematics , curvilinear describes shapes, paths, or coordinate systems based on curves. For instance, curvilinear motion
sciart0
Jan 46 min read
George, Donald, Don, Sisyphus and me (UII w/Claude)
DM Good day to you. Did George Bush seek counsel or approval from other branches of our Republic prior, or immediately thereafter, in his Panama invasion and removable of its leader? Good day, Sciart. This is a substantive question about executive war powers and the constitutional tension between branches during the Panama intervention. Let me lay out what happened. The Short Answer President George H.W. Bush did not seek prior Congressional approval before launching Opera
sciart0
Jan 410 min read
It’s One of U.S. Most Successful Experiments, ...and It’s Coming to an End
Immigrants are questioning if they have a place in the U.S.
sciart0
Jan 31 min read
Pondering "familiarity breeds contempt" ... and sometimes related "familiarity-authority paradox" (UII w/Claude)
DM Good morning! First, is there evidence or validation that "familiarity breeds contempt" (such as within social, community, work or family interplay)? Good morning, Sciart! This is a fascinating question that sits at the intersection of folk wisdom and empirical psychology. The "familiarity breeds contempt" hypothesis is particularly interesting because it seems to contradict another well-established phenomenon — the mere exposure effect, which suggests repeated exposure g
sciart0
Jan 318 min read
‘The Nine Lives of Columbus’ Review: An Explorer Rediscovered
Five hundred years later, the legacy of Christopher Columbus remains unsettled.
sciart0
Jan 21 min read
‘Bombshell’ Review: PBS’s Cautionary Tale of Technology
This documentary focuses on the propaganda surrounding the development and deployment of the atomic bomb and the journalism that sought to cut through it, with lessons for our own age of ascendant AI. Excerpt: " But it’s also a cautionary tale. “It has never been the habit of the scientists of this country or the policy of this government to withhold from the world scientific knowledge,” said President Harry S. Truman. That is something “Bombshell” establishes wasn’t true in
sciart0
Jan 21 min read
What is this?
This Question Can Change Your Life Excerpt: "Something I’ve been working on over these past months and years is being able to sit with doubt. And not just doubt — being able to sit in the wonder of uncertainty. Because the first person we believe is ourselves: the stories we tell, the things we think we already know. Maintaining an openness and a curiosity is important politically. It’s also very important in my work as a podcast host. But it is, above all, a spiritual pract
sciart0
Jan 21 min read
Would more people read books if seen as a vice?
Being a reader means cultivating a relationship with the world that, by most standards, can seem pointless and counterproductive. Excerpt : "If we want to keep reading from going extinct, then the best thing we could do is tell young people what so many great writers readily admit: Literature doesn’t make you a better citizen or a more successful person. A passion for reading can even make life more difficult. And you don’t cultivate a passion for the sake of democracy. You d
sciart0
Jan 21 min read
Want to be a kinder, more loving person? Try this type of meditation.
I’m a longtime practitioner and teacher of loving kindness meditation. Here’s what you need to know.
sciart0
Jan 11 min read
Cancel Culture’s Boomerang Effect
How we got to a place where free speech means whatever group wants to say
sciart0
Jan 11 min read
An oasis that's nourishes your mind, hence your life...
Don't forget to drink and reflect at "Hidden Brain" regularly Other noteworthy podcasts you might want to sample
sciart0
Jan 11 min read
The Cult of Costco
Its consistency is its superpower. Somewhat related
sciart0
Jan 11 min read
The “hero’s journey” may not be as universal as you think
Joseph Campbell argued that nearly every myth can be boiled down to a hero’s journey. Was he right?
sciart0
Jan 11 min read
THE MOVIES GOT SMALL, AND SO DID WE
Going to the movies with my dad
sciart0
Dec 31, 20251 min read
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