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- Americans’ Long Love/Hate Relationship With Work
From the Protestant work ethic to ‘rage quitting,’ American attitudes about their work are driven by its promise of prosperity—and its precarious nature
- Why Companies Are No Longer Hanging On to Employees
The practice of ‘labor hoarding’—holding on to employees for fear of not being able to get them back later—has reached its end
- Palantir Thinks College Might Be a Waste. So It’s Hiring High-School Grads
Tech company offers 22 teens a chance to skip college for its fellowship, which includes a four-week seminar on Western civilization
- OpenAI’s Less-Flashy Rival Might Have a Better Business Model
Anthropic, backed by Amazon and Google, is focusing on corporate customers rather than the mass market
- AUTHOR of a REVOLUTION
Chapter 1: In challenging British rule, Thomas Jefferson would face the contradiction between enslavement and “all men are created equal.”
- Enjoy October's gifts to our eyes and minds
Go to select photos
- A Writer Who Did What "Hillbilly Elegy" Wouldn’t
In her new book, Beth Macy returns to her Trump-voting hometown to find out how America got so divided.
- The Harvard Plan...
Episode 1: And So It Begins. President Trump is compelling universities across the country to adopt a more conservative agenda in exchange for access to federal funds. Episode 2: The Harvard Plan - our collaboration with the Boston Globe, is back! In episode one, we hear what unfolded at Harvard from Donald Trump’s inauguration to convocation 2025. Three main characters, inside Harvard, tell the story from their perspective: politics professor Ryan Enos, genetics professor and cancer researcher Kamila Naxerova and campus conservative Kit Parker, lieutenant colonel in the United States Army Reserve and Professor of Bioengineering and Applied Physics at Harvard. The personal perspectives of our three guides are interwoven with the dramatic timeline and unfolding news.
- The Hidden Markets All Around Us
In an excerpt from his new book, 'Lucky by Design,' Wharton’s Judd Kessler looks at the hidden markets that determine who gets what in everyday life, and the rules that underpin them.
- ‘Captive Gods’ Review: Spirituality and Social Thought
Society and religion were born, the author argues, as ‘twins.’ Though religion as we understand it today arrived late.
- ‘The Library of Lost Maps’ Review: Charting Points Unknown
Mapmakers of the 19th century sought to render both the natural and political worlds with clarity and beauty. Somewhat related
- Large Language Models Get All the Hype, but Small Models Do the Real Work
For many tasks in corporate America, it’s not the biggest and smartest AI models, but the smaller, more simplistic ones that are winning the day