History and Society

History and Society

millennials
Millennials are reversing a 40-year decline in stroke deaths.
Despite being called the "dismal science," economics impacts our lives every day. Here, we look at seven of the greatest economists in history.
love
A new study of global love finds that Americans have some of the most loving relationships, while Chinese and Germans have some of the least.
A conversation with an advanced alien species is likely to be simple and to take 1,000 years. It might also be dangerous.
8mins
Strategy advisor Roger Martin explains how 2,000 year old military thinking is useful in modern business strategy.
"Once quantum mechanics is applied to the entire cosmos, it uncovers a three-thousand-year-old idea."
Pathogenic, self-propagating proteins called prions found in the brains of people with Alzheimer's are also found in Down syndrome patients.
6mins
How do we deal with information overload and unlock creativity? Build a second brain.
From COVID and cancer vaccines to a steady drop in the number of people living in extreme poverty, there are reasons for optimism in 2023.
Laser-guided lightning systems could someday offer much greater protection than lightning rods.
Find it easier to sort out your friends' problems than your own? This paradox is for you.
Most popular songs are about love and heartache. But some great songs — albeit underrated and perhaps a bit weird — are about the cities we love.
Roman Republic banquet
Studying the display of personal wealth across time can help us better understand the history of socioeconomic inequality.
Pederasty
In many city-states, it was perfectly acceptable for older men to have sexual relationships with young boys.
life io
On Earth, microbial growth is common in lava tubes no matter the location and climate, whether it’s ice-volcano interactions in Iceland or hot, sand-floored lava tubes in Saudi Arabia.
Although it’s often described as the Amazon of China, Alibaba has a radically different business model that does not rely on inventory management.
Hinduism emphasizes the journey, whichever path that takes. And it holds us responsible for our own self-improvement.
atoms
Quantum superposition challenges our notions of what is real.
The “money taboo” is not a single taboo, but rather an amalgamation of several smaller taboos tied to gender and socioeconomic class.
Million Stories
maps stamps
When maps meet stamps, you get a love child called "cartophilately."
If comedies do get made today, they usually bypass the big screen and go straight to streaming platforms.
Why would the Earth suddenly start vomiting forth huge quantities of mud?
Wealth concentration among elites was common in ancient nations, but the scale on which it took place in Egypt’s 18th Dynasty was unprecedented.
Statue of Liberty against an orange background with a horizontal torn bar obscuring the middle section of the statue.
5mins
“There’s a sense of crisis today that we did not have in the 1980’s or 90’s” — economist Tyler Cowen on progress in America.
John Templeton Foundation
Most of us have heard that the Sun is an ordinary, typical, unremarkable star. But science shows we're actually anything but average.
5mins
How to defeat debaters who deal in distractions, according to a two-time world debate champion.
The new documentary “Make People Better” leans toward a different narrative about gene-editing than we've heard before.
7mins
Is it better to be rational or optimistic? Steven Pinker explains.
The Athenian rich paid their taxes because they craved the social success of being perceived as "useful."