For the first time, researchers have identified the remains of a sailor from the doomed 1845 Franklin expedition of the fabled Northwest Passage ~humanities.history Article 1014 words 10 votes
The US has never taken responsibility for spraying Agent Orange over Laos during the Vietnam War. Generations of ethnic minorities have endured the consequences. ~humanities.history Article 12 votes
American special operations forces have become a major military player - and maybe a substitute for strategic thinking ~humanities.history Article 5074 words 7 votes
I don't trust police testimony. Is it ethical for me to lie to get on a jury? philosophy ethics Article 20 votes
New technique reveals centuries of secrets in locked letters ~humanities.history Article 1039 words, published Mar 2 2021 4 votes
Disney brought its streaming service to Iceland last year – the country's education minister has sent a letter of complaint over the lack of Icelandic dubbing and subtitling ~humanities.languages Article 1085 words 5 votes
Napoleon’s brother lived in New Jersey. Here’s what happened to the estate. ~humanities.history Article 1478 words 8 votes
How the Wolf of Wall Street created the internet ~humanities.history Article 1097 words, published Jan 7 2014 8 votes
The last handoff: How the Obama-Trump Presidential transition led to chaos ~humanities.history Article 8581 words 7 votes
How New York City vaccinated six million people in less than a month ~humanities.history Article 2222 words 8 votes
Janine de Greef, Belgian who helped smuggle downed Allied airmen to safety during World War II, dies at 95 ~humanities.history Article 1253 words 7 votes
The world's most important body of water: The history of the South China Sea and four men who helped shape it ~humanities.history Article 4084 words 6 votes
The Skeleton Lake - Genetic analysis of human remains found in the Himalayas has raised baffling questions about who these people were and why they were there anthropology Article 6105 words 11 votes
Atheists are sometimes more religious than Christians religion Article 478 words, published May 31 2018 11 votes
Extraordinary number of arrows dating from the Stone Age to the medieval period have melted out of a single ice patch in Norway in recent years ~humanities.history Article 411 words 8 votes
The curse of the buried treasure - Two metal-detector enthusiasts discovered a Viking hoard. It was worth a fortune—but it became a nightmare. ~humanities.history Article 8055 words 5 votes
The next decade could be even worse: A historian believes he has discovered iron laws that predict the rise and fall of societies. He has bad news. ~humanities.history Article 5121 words 24 votes
Every year, millions of pilgrims descend on the central Iraqi city of Karbala to commemorate the Shiite holiday of Arbaeen, one of the largest organized gatherings in the world religion Article 381 words 6 votes
How the ballpoint pen killed cursive ~humanities.history Article 535 words, published Aug 28 2015 17 votes
The Million Man March: Powerful images of Black men and brotherhood twenty-five years ago ~humanities.history Article 571 words 9 votes
A libertarian walks into a bear: The utopian plot to liberate an American town (and some bears) Article 3262 words 11 votes
How we lie to ourselves about history: The You're Wrong About podcast debunks the stories of the past, but its real subject isn't so much facts as the process by which we absorb them ~humanities.history Article 1649 words 11 votes
Nobels that some felt weren't so dynamite (1999) ~humanities.history Article 1305 words, published Oct 17 1999 8 votes
What Jim Crow taught the Nazis: In the 1930s, the Nazi regime were fascinated by the global leader in codified race law — the United States ~humanities.history Article 1541 words, published Oct 3 2017 9 votes
Why are we in the West so weird? A theory ~humanities.history Article 1884 words, published Sep 12 2020 6 votes
Is the University of Edinburgh right to rename its David Hume Tower? philosophy education.higher Article 1106 words 9 votes
From its origins airing the banter of bored firefighters to its robust classical programming today, Dallas’s WRR-FM has filled an unusual niche on the airwaves for nearly a century ~humanities.history Article 1832 words 4 votes
Academics are really, really worried about their freedom education linguistics Article 476 words 27 votes
The Bush-Gore recount is an omen for 2020: An oral history of the craziest presidential election in modern US history ~humanities.history Article 10 883 words 16 votes
The hard problem of breakfast — How does it emerge from bacon and eggs? philosophy Article 1367 words, published Aug 5 2020 3 votes
What the problem of moral luck can teach us about lockdown rule-breakers philosophy Article 1514 words 4 votes