The "Crying Horse" plushy toy has become a runaway hit with young adults in China. It's not just Americans who are really grumpy these days.This Paleolithic teenager might have been mauled to death by a cave bear. But we got them in the end.
Meta-study finds that sperm counts are not declining. (Twitter/X)
Scott Siskind explores Moltbook, a social network for AI agents, very strange.
A lengthy argument that the NIH should fund trials of un-patentable medications, since the drug companies will not. The NIH has done this at least once, showing that an old, off-patent drug was better than the new, expensive alternative, and this saved the government billions.
The Syrian government reaches agreement with the country's largest Kurdish faction, reducing the chance of civil war. (NY Times, Reuters)
A post from 2017 that is highly relevant, "Opening Fire."
And another from 2012: Fear of Outsiders and American Mass Murder. I find that everything I want to say about America right now I have said before. The warning signs have been there for 15 years.
Past and future: fusing AI and traditional Chinese medicine. Via Marginal Revolution.
The life and teachings of Ramakrishna (1836-1886), an illiterate mystic who became one of nineteenth-century India's most important relgious figures. In his visions he experienced the identity of various schools of Hinduism as well as Buddhism, Islam, and Christianity. "God is infinite, and the paths to God are infinite." 45-minute video, interesting post.
Summary of a new bipartisan bill for energy permitting reform. (TwitterX)
Developing a Christian AI, because the existing AIs can't get Christianity right. (Twitter/X, via Scott Siskind's monthly links post) Presumably AI gets Christianity wrong because it is learning from self-proclaimed Christians on the internet who also get all the theology wrong.
De-transitioner Fox Varian wins $2 million verdict against the psychologist and surgeon who, she says, encouraged her to have a double mastectomy at 16. This whole case is about mental health, both then and now. People should be more careful about encouraging clearly messed-up young people to make major decisions. (NY Post, NY Times)
The "unknown language" created by medieval mystic/abbess/composer Hildegard of Bingen: 25-minute video, short article, long article. And a recording of the only surviving work she composed in this language, 4 minutes.
Conserving a gilded copy of the Egyptian Book of the Dead, 17-minute video.
Music of the medieval troubadors, based on some of the oldest surviving scores for secular music, hour-long performance but if you like you can listen to just the first few minutes and get the flavor. Much more droning and Arab-sounding than you probably imagine.
Three people whose first encounters with America may have had profound consequences: Sayyid Qutb, Wang Huning, Boris Yeltsin.
Lawsuit filed against Cornell for raced-based hiring of professors (Twitter/X; Cornell Sun; The Hill). I've been waiting for this, given how blatantly some universities have favored minority hires over the past two decades; I gather that the main problem has been finding potential plaintiffs with a plausible claim to having been harmed. And this suit may fail for that reason, since the plaintiff never even applied for a job at Cornell. The point may just be to shine a light on Cornell's practices, including their spreadsheet of "favorable" qualities.
Can AIs hire humans? (Twitter/X)
Decline of the "mass market" book. Not that book sales are declining, they are just shifting into genres like Romantasy and thrillers. Another sign that there is now no more "common center"of culture, just various subcultures with their own fans.
White people on Twitter/X openly complaining that Asians are anti-American because they work too hard in school.
Moves against social media are spreading: "Spain will ban social media for under-16s and require platforms to employ strict age verification tools, joining Australia, France and Denmark in moves to curb the influence of digital platforms on children."
Nate Silver, "Don't Discount American Democracy."
According to Wired, "In 2024, the total installed electricity capacity of the planet—every coal, gas, hydro, and nuclear plant and all of the renewables—was about 10 terawatts. The Chinese solar supply chain can now pump out 1 terawatt of panels every year."
Paper arguing that the genes for lactose tolerance arrived in Portugal with Indo-European migrants, in the Bronze Age. Perhaps this was another factor accounting for their genetic success.
Carl Jung on the four pillars of a worthwhile old age: individuation, integrating the shadow, meaning after achievement (doing to being), reconciliation with mortality. (9-minute video) The basic idea is that older people should forget about youthful stuff like "accomplishments" or "recognition", which require networking and fitting in, and focus more intensely on their true selves. I find that on the contrary I grow more social the older I get.
The mass demolition of row houses in Baltimore, 12-minute video.
Gen. David Petraeus is bullish on Ukraine's chances, 28-minute interview.
Ukrainian blogger Andrew Perpetua ponders America: "I've been rewatching the Sopranos and thinking about the show. I feel like Americans watched this show, internalized it, and gradually shifted their belief systems to match it."