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Technology
Elon Musk is Sending His Garbage Into Space (with All the Other Trash)
Iris Gottlieb Warns Us Against Treating the Galaxy Like a Trash Can
By
Iris Gottlieb
| August 19, 2024
Can Computers Create? A Short History of Mechanized Artistic Ambition
Mark Graham, Callum Cant and James Muldoon Consider the Creative Possibilities and Limits of Artificial Intelligence
By
Mark Graham, Callum Cant and James Muldoon
| August 12, 2024
Climate Change, AI, and Technological Surveillance: Reading About the Very Near Future
Helen Phillips Recommends Octavia Butler, Jessamine Chan, Arthur I. Miller, and More
By
Helen Phillips
| August 7, 2024
Why Methane Removal Might Be Our Best Bet to Stop Rising Global Temperatures
Rob Jackson Suggests Ways Businesses, Scientists and Governments Can Work Together to Clean the Atmosphere
By
Rob Jackson
| August 5, 2024
Atomic Fallacy: Why Nuclear Power Won’t Solve the Climate Crisis
M.V. Ramana Debunks Some Common Arguments About Energy In an Era of Ecological Emergency
By
M.V. Ramana
| July 29, 2024
What the All-American Delusion of the Polygraph Says About Our Relationship to Fact and Fiction
Justin St. Germain Considers the Blurry Borders Between Memory, Memoir and Myth
By
Justin St. Germain
| July 15, 2024
Best Reviewed
Books of the Week
What the Decentralized Nature of Anonymous Tells Us About Its Power
By
Barrett Brown
| July 12, 2024
A USC study finds that (some people think) AI is as funny as the average person.
By
James Folta
| July 8, 2024
What the Rise of Techno-Humanitarianism Means For Crisis-Hit Communities Across the Globe
By
Jean-Martin Bauer
| June 26, 2024
How Vulnerable Low-Wage Workers Power AI Algorithms
Madhumita Murgia on the Precarious Labor Behind the Digital Revolution
By
Madhumita Murgia
| June 21, 2024
City of One Million Trees: How New York Inspired Other Cities to Go Green
Nadina Galle on Ecological Urban Renewal in the United States and Around the World
By
Nadina Galle
| June 21, 2024
New literary podcasts to add to your queue.
By
Brittany Allen
| June 11, 2024
Publishers are already using way too much AI.
By
James Folta
| May 24, 2024
What the Toxic Morality of Crowdfunded Healthcare Says About American Society
Nora Kenworthy on 21st-Century Patchwork Solutions to Persistent Social Inequality
By
Nora Kenworthy
| May 24, 2024
What the NFT Phenomenon Tells Us About the Monetary and Creative Value of Art
Zachary Small Explores the Intersection of New Technologies, Financial Speculation and Artistic Creation
By
Zachary Small
| May 22, 2024
A bunch of fake Kathleen Hanna biographies were released on the same day as her new memoir.
By
Brittany Allen
| May 15, 2024
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Page 13 of 57
2026: The Year of Corvidae
February 27, 2026
by
Molly Odintz
Jennifer Sklias-Gahan On Gothic Literature and the Magic of Storytelling
February 27, 2026
by
Jennifer Sklias-Gahan
What to Watch This Weekend: February 28, 2026
February 27, 2026
by
Dwyer Murphy
The Best Reviewed Books of the Week
"This is informed accessible literary analysis that demonstrates that Morrison s true genius was as…"