Society

Society

A collage of overlapping browser windows displays various images—symbols, people, gold bars, and abstract patterns—all connected by dashed red lines, evoking the tangled web of conspiracy theories.
Long-debunked conspiracies don’t disappear—they evolve and thrive in the age of algorithms.
A woman with flowers in her hair holds a white mask near her face and smiles, wearing a ruffled pink collar.
3mins
Toxic positivity isn’t optimism. It’s denial. Historian Kate Bowler explains why our obsession with “good vibes only” is making it harder to cope.
A section of a map labeled "West McKinley Town Site" with surrounding property names and numbers in blue and orange text.
A century ago, an American colony named after Trump's favorite president was thriving on the Isle of Pines. Then came hurricanes and geopolitical reality.
The Golden Gate Bridge is shown in a halftone style, with its left side tinted red and right side tinted blue, against a light background with hills.
Tech leaders may have backed Trump in 2024, but the majority of the community still leans left -- and has a big opportunity ahead.
A woman displays stoicism as she grimaces, unfazed by a pancake landing on her head while holding a frying pan in a kitchen setting.
Ryan Holiday on why wisdom depends on failure, experimentation, and the courage to admit when we’re wrong.
A raised hand with bracelets is shown in focus against a blurred background of people indoors.
Nearly 30 would be "nones" — an amorphous group that spans from zealous atheists to the vaguely spiritual.
A close-up of two hands carving a feathered arrow shaft with a knife against a dark background.
2mins
Free speech may be messy, but censorship is deadly. Founder of The Future of Free Speech Jacob Mchangama explains.
Marble bust of a bearded man with eyes closed and mouth covered by a strip of black tape, set against a black background.
20mins
“Even if there are beliefs that we hold that are true, if we prevent people challenging those beliefs, we will lose our understanding of why they're true.”
Illustrated bell curve depicting IQ distribution with meme characters at various IQ levels: 70, 100, and 130, representing different intellectual stereotypes.
A study on the “moral circles” of liberals and conservatives gets drafted into the culture wars — with mixed results.
5mins
“If we didn't find helping other people pleasurable, we wouldn’t be altruistic.”
A historical painting depicts a seated woman handing a round shield to a standing man in ancient attire, with architectural pillars in the background.
In ancient Sparta, it was accepted practice for more women to marry and have children by more than one man.
A mosaic of 36 square tiles, each showing a different fragment of various human faces, combined to create a composite image of diverse facial features.
12mins
Is “identity synthesis” the remedy for racial injustice? This political scientist says no.
A diptych image: left side shows a row of shopping carts lined up, right side depicts a single shopping cart abandoned in a puddle, serving as a litmus test for societal behavior.
The "Shopping Cart Litmus Test" is a popular meme about morality. What does it really reveal about one's character?
24mins
Mating, monogamy, and maximizing your sexual potential explained by 3 sex experts.
Black cave-painting style drawing of a person shooting arrows at a deer with antlers on a red-orange background.
8mins
James Suzman lived with a tribe of hunter-gatherers to witness how an ancient culture survives one of the most brutal climates on Earth. His learnings may surprise you.
A cluster of vibrant houses perched on a mountainside, offering a sense of life satisfaction.
Some of the world's most satisfied societies are poor, small, and remote.
A collage featuring two images of Mr William Crompton, the oldest knocker-upper in Bolton in 1939.
Meet the people paid to rouse the workers of industrial Britain.
Five new book covers of various genres on a colorful background.
From "The Castle of Otranto" to "The Lord of the Rings" trilogy, these books changed the literary landscape.
A painting of a group of people in the Tikal cave.
Tikal, one of the biggest cities the Maya ever built, was home to a vast and flourishing society.
A drawing of a man with a beard and a pot.
Alchemy had its golden age in the 17th century, when it counted Isaac Newton and Robert Boyle among its adherents.
John Templeton Foundation
a painting of people sitting at a bar.
How humans came to feel comfortable among strangers, like those in a café, is an under-explored mystery.
John Templeton Foundation
a drawing of a man with a mustache and hat.
Some authors never saw their books score widespread acclaim—or even get published at all.
a statue of a person sitting in front of flowers.
Modern robotics are creating a kind of cultural paradox, where the best religion is the one that eventually involves no humans at all.
Queen Calafia seems like she could have sprung from the pages of a modern fantasy novel.
Democratic freedom, rapturous religion, and newspapers created a hotbed for social experimentation in 19th-century America.
There is a strong case to be made that the China has moved too slowly to reverse the effects of its one-child policy.
Illustration of a volcanic eruption with thick clouds of smoke, ash, and flowing lava rising from the volcano’s crater.
6mins
Pessimism sounds smart. Optimism sounds dumb. Don’t fall for it, says Wired’s Kevin Kelly.
John Templeton Foundation
Mahāyāna is the most popular type of Buddhism in the world today.