ArtsJournal: Arts, Culture, Ideas

IDEAS

How A Grad Student Found A Hidden Mayan City From His Computer

“I just started poking around on the internet and eventually got the right combination of search terms and number of Google pages results in and found this data set. As soon as I opened it up I was delighted, surprised, and amazed.” - Wired

The Internet Has Fractured Culture So Much, The Cultural References Don’t Work For Everyone

Considering the way that many recent novels reference recent, niche cultural fragments most relevant to an incestuous class of urban media professionals, future generations would need a comically thick companion book. - The Walrus

Story-Telling Is Integral To The Success Of Doing Science

Eventually, I would learn that stories are not just a way of communicating science; they are intrinsic to science, actually part of doing science. - Aeon

Just What Is “Common Sense”?

A philosophical theory can either go against common sense or it can support or justify common sense. Supporting common sense seems pointless. After all, what you are trying to prove is, by definition, already commonly recognized as the sensible view. - 3 Quarks Daily

Blogging Platform Medium Is Flooded With AI Postings

Medium CEO Tony Stubblebine and other executives at the company have described the platform as “a home for human writing.” But there is evidence that robot bloggers are increasingly flocking to the platform, too. - Wired

Steampunk’s Lessons For How To Manage The Technology Age

The distance between a mechanical watch and a modern smartphone seems to embody the divide between the pre-digital and digital worlds. We imagine that people used to live among eccentric, fiddly, physical gizmos, whereas now we navigate a network of infallible devices animated by code. But the digital age is often more fiddly. - The New Yorker

Is Understanding Math The Key To Democracy?

In civic life, decisions are increasingly driven by data, by algorithms, by statistics. Without the ability to understand or even grapple with the numbers and their implications, people are easily disenfranchised and manipulated. - The New York Times

Have We Lost Our Ability To Think Through Ideas?

Thinking through—rather than just thinking—is important. A thought or an idea is never that precious. People have thoughts and ideas all the time, many of them preliminary. Sometimes people mistake their feelings for thoughts and ideas, which are in turn mistaken for absolute truths. - Harper's

What The Universe Looks Like: A Second Copernican Revolution Is Here

Just as Copernicus reimagined the architecture of our solar system five centuries ago, we are once again in a revolution that pivots on planets. A new science called astrobiology has changed the night sky. - Noema

Facebook, But For The Dead

And possibly even creepier, on a privacy scale, than FB: “It is jarring when you just had a loved one pass away and you go and you find out that their information, and not just their information, but also their photos, are available online.” - Slate

Navigating The Internet In 2024

Can a theory of “dark forests” (and how we can’t reside in them forever) help all of us? - Hyperallergic

The Case Against The Idea That Computers Will Ever Be Able To Think

It is one thing to appreciate the ways we make and remake ourselves through the cultural transformation of our worlds via tool use and technology, and another to mystify dumb matter put to work by us. - Aeon

When The Stories We Tell Ourselves Hold Us Back

In some cases, narratives can hold us back by limiting our thinking. In other cases, they may diminish our ability to live freely. They also give us the illusion that the world is ordered, logical, and difficult to change, reducing the real complexity of life. - Psyche

Why The Notion Of “Zero” Is Difficult To Grasp

It takes children longer to understand and use zero than other numbers, and it takes adults longer to read it than other small numbers. That’s because to understand zero, our mind must create something out of nothing. It must recognize absence as a mathematical object. - Quanta

Seeking Wisdom — But What Is It?

Our findings revealed that, when people make judgments about wisdom, they are essentially linking wisdom to two key dimensions that we call reflective orientation and socio-emotional awareness. - Psyche

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