Opinion
The Washington Post on MSNOpinion
I asked a machine how to be more human. It was dehumanizing.
In an age in which machines have intellectual capacities superior to our own, we no longer have the market cornered on thinking. Feeling, though, is a different story.
When retail therapy calls but your wallet demands restraint, remember that Mary’s Swap Meet awaits—where $40, a discerning eye, and the willingness to dig a little can fill your entire car with ...
The moment you step through the doors of Cobb Antique Mall in Marietta, you realize your afternoon plans just expanded to “all day” and your car trunk suddenly feels woefully inadequate for what lies ...
Scientists from the Yale School of the Environment discovered that forests in the Everglades bounce back quickly after fires, ...
A group of man-made chemicals are accumulating across the River of Grass—raising questions about potential impacts to water ...
They turn galleries into edible forests, throw multidimensional feasts, and put food on literal pedestals—meet the new guard ...
Developmental vulnerability among CALD and non-CALD children. A population-based study of nearly 60,000 children in Western Australia revealed that those from CALD backgrounds faced higher ...
The Daily Galaxy on MSN
Scientists Just Found a Way to Detect Pregnancy in Skeletons Buried 1,000 Years Ago
Pregnancy has long remained one of the most elusive aspects of human life to trace in the archaeological record, especially ...
Geochemistry in the critical zone plays a pivotal role in influencing soil and groundwater quality, where contaminants ...
A 'super vaccine' could give people immunity against cancer before the disease grows and spreads. Scientists in Massachusetts say their experimental jab prevents several aggressive cancers. This ...
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