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+15 +5
Does consciousness come from the brain’s electromagnetic field?
Some 2,700 years ago in the ancient city of Sam’al, in what is now modern Turkey, an elderly servant of the king sits in a corner of his house and contemplates the nature of his soul. His name is Katumuwa. He stares at a basalt stele made for him, featuring his own graven portrait together with an inscription in ancient Aramaic. It instructs his family, when he dies, to celebrate ‘a feast at this chamber: a bull for Hadad harpatalli and a ram for Nik-arawas of the hunters and a ram for Shamash, and a ram for Hadad of the vineyards, and a ram for Kubaba, and a ram for my soul that is in this stele.’
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+10 +1
The Strange Science of ASMR - Doctor Goes In Search of Tingles
This is a surprisingly interesting video.
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+4 +1
‘A forest on caffeine’? How coffee can help forests grow faster
Just like us, forests move faster with a little coffee in their system. A recent experiment tested whether coffee pulp, a leftover of the coffee growing process, could help bring Costa Rica’s rainforests back to life. Researchers from the University of Hawai'i at Manoa tested two plots to see how the coffee waste would affect deforested land, covering one parcel of grass with about 20 inches of the pulp and leaving the other untouched.
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+25 +3
Dismantling the anti-vaxx industry
Investigations show that those spreading misinformation that undermines the rollout of vaccines against COVID-19 are well financed, determined and disciplined. To counter their activities, we need to understand them as an industry actively working to sow doubts about the deadliness of COVID-19, vaccines and medical professionals’ integrity.
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+12 +2
How to Escape the Confines of Time and Space According to the CIA
In the ’80s, the spy agency investigated the "Gateway Experience" technique to alter consciousness and ultimately escape spacetime. Here is everything you need to know.
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+21 +4
The Mystery of the Missing North Korean Social Media Star
Her life in South Korea seemed perfect: new friends, a burgeoning career, reality-TV fame. But she was about to become notorious—disappearing without a trace, only to reappear pledging allegiance to North Korea. What happened to Lim Ji-hyun?
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+10 +2
DropTop home workstation folds up into a wall-mounted art piece
One of the many cultural shifts driven by the COVID-19 pandemic is the growing number of people working from home, and English furniture-maker Pith & Stem is looking to tap into this trend with a wall-mounted workstation that you mightn't even know was there. The DropTop fold-down desk is packed…
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+13 +3
Multiple Destroyers Were Swarmed By Mysterious 'Drones' Off California Over Numerous Nights
In July of 2019, a truly bizarre series of events unfolded around California’s Channel Islands. Over a number of days, groups of unidentified aircraft, which the U.S. Navy simply refers to as ‘drones’ or 'UAVs,' pursued that service's vessels, prompting a high-level investigation.
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+21 +5
Stupidity Is Part of Human Nature
“There is more to be said for stupidity than people imagine. Personally I have great admiration for stupidity” – the sentiment behind Oscar Wilde’s bonmot is strangely fashionable these days. For a good reason.
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+4 +1
Healing Our Pain Pandemic (w/Dr. Rachel Zoffness)
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+12 +1
People Say They've Seen Bigfoot — Can We Really Rule Out That Possibility?
The film is mostly three-and-a-half minutes of grainy fall foliage, men riding horses, and jerky pans. The famous footage—used for decades afterward in every documentary about whether Bigfoot is real or fake—comes across as just someone having fun with their new camera. But, about two minutes in, the lens of a rented 16mm Cine Kodak camera catches something strange.
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+21 +3
Would you buy this $200 set of electronic dice?
The experience of playing Dungeons & Dragons could be getting an upgrade early next year with a brand new kind of die. Pixels Dice claim to be the first mass-market RPG dice fully integrated with a wireless radio. That means they can talk to your Bluetooth-enabled devices in real time, and will even be compatible with virtual tabletops like Roll20 and toolsets like D&D Beyond. Full sets with seven dice will start at $199.
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+5 +1
Instant Pot Corned Beef and Cabbage - Easy Corned Beef and Cabbage Instant Pot Recipe
Thos of you with an instant pot might appreciate this. I sure like mine.
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+16 +3
The Mass Humiliation Of Piers Morgan
For years, Piers Morgan has managed to fuel his media career by provoking public anger; the man is pretty skilled at riling people up, and drawing attention to himself through outrage. I’m not sure whether Morgan’s public persona is deliberately unpleasant, or if he is simply being himself, but attracting outrage can be an incredibly lucrative strategy nowadays; social media algorithms value engagement above all else, making angry comments and clicks far more valuable than passive appreciation.
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+4 +1
How a Huguenot Philosopher Realized That Atheists Could Be Virtuous
Christians long held a monopoly on virtue—until Pierre Bayle made the case for moral atheists, using comets and aliens.
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+19 +4
Researchers take aim at the evolution of traditional technologies
In the last 60,000 years, humans have emerged as an ecologically dominant species and have successfully colonized every terrestrial habitat. Our evolutionary success has been facilitated by a heavy reliance on an ever-advancing technology. Understanding how human technology evolves is crucial to understanding why humans have enjoyed such unprecedented evolutionary success.
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+9 +2
The Strange Story of DC's Lost AM Radio Station Still Transmitting Inauguration Road Closures From 2013
Not everyone pays the most attention to AM radio. To some, talk is talk and fuzzy signals are exactly that. Still, it'd be odd if the same broadcast looped continuously for eight years without anyone noticing—but it's not impossible.
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+14 +1
It Turns Out You Can Bullshit A Bullshitter After All
You can’t bullshit a bullshitter. Well, that’s the saying — but is it true? Shane Littrell and colleagues at the University of Waterloo, Canada, set out to investigate. And in a new paper in the British Journal of Social Psychology they report that, in fact, people who bullshit more often in a bid to impress or persuade others are also more susceptible to bullshit themselves. The reason for this — also uncovered by the team — is truly fascinating.
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+20 +5
How ‘Lolita’ Escaped Obscenity Laws and Cancel Culture
My father, John Mortimer, brought me up to believe that you can be a good person and kill someone and a perfectly awful person who never gets so much as a parking ticket your whole life. It’s an education I’m proud of. He was an author and a criminal defense barrister — in his words, “the only playwright ever to have defended a murderer in the central criminal court at the Old Bailey” — and his prowess in both professions rode on his ability to see past easy morality and to respect the fact that the truth is never one-sided and therefore art should not be, either.
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+14 +2
‘I Can See Dead People’: Many People Believe in Ghosts For a Reason.
Hаllоween seems аn аррrорriаte time оf yeаr tо shаre the stоry оf the Сhаffin fаmily аnd hоw а ghоst helрed deсide а disрute оver аn inheritаnсe. Jаmes L Сhаffin оf Mоnksville, Nоrth Саrоlinа, died аfter аn ассident in 1921, leаving his estаte in full tо his fаvоurite sоn Mаrshаll аnd nоthing tо his wife аnd three оther сhildren. А yeаr lаter Mаrshаll died, sо the hоuse аnd 120 асres оf lаnd went tо Mаrshаll’s widоw аnd sоn.
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