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IDEAS

The Slow Death Of French Restaurant Criticism

“Paris, the centre of French gastronomy, has never been in more need of a great restaurant critic. Today, the Parisian food media scene has become a never-ending circle of new restaurants hyped for a couple of weeks before the next ones come in.” - Vittles

The Things That Follow You Around Once You First Notice Them

The Baader-Meinhof phenomenon, also known as the frequency illusion, is a type of cognitive bias where, once you learn about something – such as a word, person or concept – you start to notice it more frequently. - Psyche

Does AI Defeat The Purpose Of a Humanities Education?

While the two of us disagree on whether there are any valid uses of AI in the research process, using AI to “improve” one’s writing or “read” one’s readings fundamentally misunderstands what a humanities education is about. - Harvard Crimson

For The First Time, Scientists Have Recorded A Human Brain Making Decisions

Thanks to the image obtained, the researchers were able to confirm an already theorized architecture of thought: that there is no single region exclusively in charge of decision-making and instead it is a coordinated process among multiple brain areas. - Wired

Is Writing Really Thinking?

Strangely, it means you’re not thinking when you’re reading. Does anyone believe that? - 3 Quarks Daily

How To Break Free Of Your Digital Prison? Try A Little Boredom

What digital platforms take away is more than just our attention being “continuously partial” — they also limit the deeper kind of reflection that allows us to engage with life and ourselves fully. They make us lose the capacity to inhabit silence and confront the unfilled moment. - The Conversation

Why Did Public Trust In Universities Decline?

It is rooted in the widespread perception that they have become ideological monoliths, barely tolerating the expression of any conservative opinions on campus. It has to do with the rapidly growing endowments of the largest universities, which now command a degree of tax-exempt wealth that seems to many people out of all proportion. - Persuasion

What Are Intellectuals To Do In A Time Of Fascism?

For the last couple of decades, we’ve seen a growing assault on critical inquiry, academic freedom, and safety, alongside the casualization of labor, rising tuitions, severe budget cuts to humanities and other non-STEM fields, and the financialization of higher education. - Boston Review

In France, AI Money Is Going Directly To Journalists

Could that ever happen in the US? What about novelists? - Nieman Lab

There’s A New Game That May Crush People’s Bookshop Ownership Dreams

The game might be a little too realistic: Retail life isn’t easy, and giving book recommendations? Good luck! - Vulture

We Need To Talk About Ms. Rachel And Media Literacy

Ms. Rachel is best known “for her enthusiastic and approachable ditties on key subjects, like potty training.” But recently, she’s been using her big YouTube platform to advocate, strongly, for child welfare in Gaza. - LitHub

Scientific Objectivity Is A Myth. Here’s Why

Scientist Ludwik Fleck is credited with first describing science as a cultural practice in the 1930s. Since then, understanding has continued to build that scientific knowledge is always consistent with the cultural norms of its time. - The Conversation

Why We Struggle To Define Excellence

Excellence is not a neutral concept. Its not a fixed standard hovering above culture, waiting to be discovered. It's a construct. When we pretend otherwise, when we speak of excellence as if it were objective and settled, we obscure the real question. - Emil Kang

The Ethics Of Building Better Humans

Our rage for hormone therapies, supplements, beauty procedures, and longevity interventions suggest we’re all competing in the Enhanced Games now. - Daniel Kunitz

We Need A Better Way To Develop AI

The current strategy of merely making A.I. bigger is deeply flawed — scientifically, economically and politically. Many things from regulation to research strategy must be rethought. One of the keys to this may be training and developing A.I. in ways inspired by the cognitive sciences. - The New York Times

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