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2 votes
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What drives the priest behind those controversial church signs: Father Rod Bower is famous for the thought-provoking signs outside his church at Gosford, on the New South Wales Central Coast.
7 votes -
How the English language became such a mess
11 votes -
Latest study reveals sharp rise in essay cheating globally, with millions of students involved
13 votes -
Jehovah’s Witness girl could receive blood against her will during childbirth
8 votes -
Siddhartha discussion
12 votes -
The mystery of people who speak dozens of languages
15 votes -
How two thieves stole thousands of prints from university libraries
5 votes -
What does a nuclear bomb explosion feel like?
6 votes -
Hunter S. Thompson in Chicago, 1968: The battle for the Democratic Party’s soul
12 votes -
Human language may have evolved to help our ancestors make tools
3 votes -
Victoria Woodhull: The first American woman to run for President — 150 years ago
10 votes -
A growing share of Americans say it’s not necessary to believe in God to be moral
37 votes -
Neoliberalism – the ideology at the root of all our problems
34 votes -
Subverting the narrative | Holocaust denial and the lost cause
3 votes -
Skim reading is the new normal. The effect on society is profound
25 votes -
Do colorless ideas sleep furiously?
13 votes -
The humanities are in crisis - Students are abandoning humanities majors, turning to degrees they think yield far better job prospects. But they’re wrong.
15 votes -
Mummy yields earliest known Egyptian embalming recipe
Summary The article describes the investigation of a 5,600-year-old mummy from Egypt, how it predates known mummification by 1,500 years, but uses ingredients still used thousands of years later....
Summary
The article describes the investigation of a 5,600-year-old mummy from Egypt, how it predates known mummification by 1,500 years, but uses ingredients still used thousands of years later.
Extract
Dating to some 5,600 years ago, the prehistoric mummy at first seemed to have been created by chance, roasted to a decay-resistant crisp in the desert. But new evidence suggests that the Turin mummy was no accident—and now researchers have assembled a detailed recipe for its embalmment.
The ingredient list represents the earliest known Egyptian embalming salve, predating the peak mummification in the region by some 2,500 years. But this early recipe is remarkably similar to the later embalming salves used in extensive rituals to help nobles like King Tut pass into the afterlife.
Link
https://www.nationalgeographic.com/science/2018/08/news-egyptian-prehistoric-mummy-embalming-recipe/
5 votes -
How did Americans lose their British accents
24 votes -
Red, yellow, pink and green: How the world’s languages name the rainbow
8 votes -
After a year of rising tensions, protesters tear down Confederate statue on UNC campus
27 votes -
Theses on libertarian municipalism
6 votes -
Who are the Sikhs and what are their beliefs?
9 votes -
Why the left is so afraid of Jordan Peterson
8 votes -
It’s hard to have an unusual name in China
12 votes -
The city born in a day: The origin story of Oklahoma City
5 votes -
Axes of evil. Four days, two murders, and one poplar tree that almost ignited World War III.
4 votes -
Mass authentic
5 votes -
‘You don’t belong to my country either.’ How two Noongar boys spoke up, a world away from home.
7 votes -
Reading the right - The Bell Curve pt 1
8 votes -
Pastafarianism is not a religion, Dutch court rules: Church of the Flying Spaghetti Monster follower denied right to wear colander in ID photos.
13 votes -
Barracking, sheilas and shouts: How the Irish influenced Australian English
3 votes -
Punctuation that failed to make its mark
18 votes -
The Iroquois confederacy
3 votes -
Purpose and existence in a post-scarcity civilization
6 votes -
Robert McKim on religious diversity
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3 votes -
China's rebel generation and the rise of 'hot words'
8 votes -
Why America’s ‘nones’ don’t identify with a religion
6 votes -
How 'counter-monuments' can solve the debate over controversial historical statues
3 votes -
What is the Semantic Apocalypse?
11 votes -
A debate over the word for ‘grandmother’ in China exposes a linguistic and political rift
8 votes -
The first Japanese man in America: A teenager shipwrecked on a Pacific atoll helped transform relations between Japan and the United States
5 votes -
What is the future of English in the US?
8 votes -
Boris Johnson's burka jibe: Why do some Muslim women wear the veil?
4 votes -
Looted Iraqi antiquities return home after UK experts crack cold case
3 votes -
We use sports terms all the time. But where do they come from?
7 votes -
Fighting for Judaism in the Jewish State
8 votes -
Walrus bones provide clues to fate of lost Viking colony
4 votes -
Slice of PIE: A linguistic common ancestor
3 votes