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IDEAS

Is “Moral Clarity” — Even About Ukraine — Anti-Democratic?

My Russian training prompted a question: How could a situation where everyone was morally bound to agree help overcome a collectivist mindset? Freedom and democracy, after all, depend on legitimate differences of opinion.  - First Things

How Barcelona’s Superblocks Idea Could Be Adopted In Other Cities

As cities become more dense—moving in the direction of the “15-minute city,” where offices and simple errands are a short walk or bike ride away from home—designs like the superblock become more feasible. - Fast Company

Scientists Watch A Memory Being Formed In A Living Brain

From earlier work, they had expected the brain to encode the memory by slightly tweaking its neural architecture. Instead, the researchers were surprised to find a major overhaul in the connections. - Wired

Researchers Are Using AI To Understand Animal Language

Researchers are using AI to parse the “speech” of animals, enabling scientists to create systems that, for example, detect and monitor whale songs to alert nearby ships so they can avoid collisions. - The Wall Street Journal

Demanding Cultural Literacy Isn’t An Inherently Conservative Position

"I wholeheartedly agree with something that the great historical sociologist Orlando Patterson said in a summer teacher seminar:  If you want to critique western culture, you must own the culture and know it from the inside." - Inside Higher Ed

Is Hollywood Souring On Streaming?

Matt Belloni: "The leading minds at media companies (and the consulting firms that nudge them) have convinced the C-suite trigger-pullers that if you spend enough money streaming ... the riches of global scale and pricing power await." Why? "It’s true, because everyone says it’s true." - Puck News

The Psychological History Of How, And Why, We Buy Stuff

Ideas and ways of shopping "fall by the wayside and then return at a later date in new guises or with new names. They often have every appearance of being newly invented. Take fast fashion, for instance" - and its origins in 18th century London. - Fast Company

The Arts’ Digital Problem

Digitalization has affected both the demand and supply for cultural content. Increasingly sophisticated technology and adoption of digital devices to experience things remote because of the pandemic have developed a taste for new ways to “tour” museums, “attend” theatre and participate in book readings. - The Conversation

This Scientist Has Worked Out A Model Of Human History That Suggests Bad Times Ahead

Peter Turchin has been warning for a decade that a few key social and political trends portend an “age of discord,” civil unrest and carnage worse than most Americans have experienced. - The Atlantic

Reconciling Awful People With Wonderful Art

There are a range of moral questions surrounding how we should respond to the immoral acts of artists whose work we love. But, for art lovers, a central aspect of revelations about artists’ behaviour is how it makes us feel. - Psyche

How City Downtowns Will Have To Change

While employers rethink office buildings on the micro scale, cities and regions need to grapple with how to efficiently use their office-dominated downtowns, which are their most central and easy-to-access places.  - The Atlantic

Learning From Outside Your Own Industry (Why It Often Doesn’t Work)

Looking outside your industry for strategy improvements and breakthroughs is a good approach. The core reason why it doesn’t work more often is inertia. - Harvard Business Review

The Things That Do Not Exist

My guess is that there are more nameless things that don’t exist than there are nameless things that do exist. - 3 Quarks Daily

A Close Reading Of That SNL Amazon Sketch And What It Reveals About Our Reality

"The show’s fake commercial for Amazon Go illustrated the disparity that white and Black consumers might experience in a store promoting freedom but mired by surveillance." - The Atlantic

Two Years Into The Coronavirus, We Can’t Stop Thinking Or Reading About The Black Death

"Contemporary Americans are relatively inexperienced with infectious disease compared with our ancestors; in search of explanations, many have reached for what seems closest at hand in popular culture and popular history, where the plague has always loomed large." - Slate

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