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8 votes
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Why West Africa’s pidgins deserve full recognition as official languages
7 votes -
Why is Canadian English unique?
19 votes -
Australia's Catholic priests are pushing for optional celibacy, married priests, with a plan to take the issues to the Vatican
11 votes -
"What does anger mean for the immigrant?" - What we're talking about when we talk about "political correctness", inclusion, and social justice, Part 1
19 votes -
“I now know what it’s like to have A 110-story building come down on my head.”
9 votes -
Don't talk to the police
28 votes -
The ethics of sex with conjoined twins
13 votes -
What's next after Liberal Democracy
5 votes -
Occitan, the language the French forbade
10 votes -
Earliest known drawing found on rock in South African cave. Researchers believe the pattern on the fragment of rock is 73,000 years old, but are perplexed as to what it might represent
6 votes -
What does it mean to die well?
3 votes -
Allende’s last speech
7 votes -
George Orwell: Why socialists don't believe in fun
6 votes -
I'm having a hard time reading the Myth of Sisyphus, is there a more accessible intro to absurdism?
I read some things about the philosophy and I'd really like to go deeper into it, but the book is so hard for me to read! I can't make sense of much of what I'm reading, maybe it's the vocabulary...
I read some things about the philosophy and I'd really like to go deeper into it, but the book is so hard for me to read! I can't make sense of much of what I'm reading, maybe it's the vocabulary I'm not sure... Is there a more accessible book about absurdism?
7 votes -
The big squeeze: Sicily’s mafia sprang from the growing global market for lemons – a tale with sour parallels for consumers today
8 votes -
Why Tibetan Buddhism is facing up to its own abuse scandal
9 votes -
The mysterious origins of punctuation
15 votes -
Tact filters
9 votes -
1600s Native American fort is one of the most important Northeast finds
4 votes -
The other political correctness: America's elite universities are censoring themselves on China
11 votes -
A band of Polish mathematicians figured out much about how German Enigma encoding machines operated, years before Alan Turing did
6 votes -
WW2 Eastern Front animated: 1942
6 votes -
How to change the course of human history
7 votes -
Friedrich Nietzsche and the alt right
13 votes -
I survived the Warsaw ghetto. Here are the lessons I’d like to pass on
10 votes -
How Petrus Gonsalvus made it into the French royal court and married Lady Catherine to live out the real Beauty and the Beast story.
2 votes -
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 -
The Tunisian-Libyan border: Security aspirations and socioeconomic realities
6 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