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  • Remote Viewing: History & How-To Guide

    Can you really spy on someone using just your mind? This question sounds like something out of a pulp sci-fi novel, yet during the Cold War both the United States and the Soviet Union invested serious time and money searching for an answer. In one notorious 1970 experiment, a Soviet housewife named Nina Kulagina allegedly…

    Read more: Remote Viewing: History & How-To Guide
  • Egregores, Tulpas, and the Power of Collective Thought

    Do Our Beliefs Take on a Life of Their Own? We’ve all heard the phrase “the power of belief,” but what if belief itself could sprout a kind of imaginary friend? What if an idea, fed by many minds, could take on a life of its own? In occult parlance, such a creature is called…

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  • The Future & Earth Ships

    A history of sustainable living

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  • Why Do Humans Dream?

    and What Do Our Dreams Mean?

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  • Flesh-Eating Bees & Our Fear of Nature

    What if the honey on your morning toast came not from flowers, but from rotting flesh? It sounds like a horror-movie premise, yet in the rainforests of Central and South America, there are bees that do exactly this. These so-called “vulture bees” forego flowers and feast on carrion, turning putrefying meat into an edible substance…

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  • The Horror of Liminal Spaces

    What “Backrooms” Says About Our Loneliness

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  • Versailles, Mr. Beast, and The Twilight Zone

    Why do so many people play along in power games and why do we enjoy watching suffering?

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  • Rhythm of Life: A History of Drums

    Let’s travel back before Spotify playlists and stadium concerts – about 7,000 years. A group of early humans gather around a fire… one of them starts hitting a hollow log covered with reptile skin. To our modern eyes it might look like a casual weekend at Burning Man, but to them it was serious business.…

    Read more: Rhythm of Life: A History of Drums
  • How the Men's Right Movement Harms Men

    Why “divorced online dads” should redirect their anger

    Read more: How the Men's Right Movement Harms Men
  • Can We Learn to Speak Dolphin?

    The journey toward inter-species communication

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  • The Invincible Art: Indonesia’s Debus and the Power of Pain

    In a dusty village square in Banten, a man in a black headband stands calmly as another strikes his back with a rattan rod. The crowd gasps—he doesn’t flinch. Moments later, he’s rolling over a bed of thorny cactus and grinning as if it were a plush mattress. A chorus of drums and chants builds,…

    Read more: The Invincible Art: Indonesia’s Debus and the Power of Pain
  • Stonehenge: A Social and Technical Achievement

    What research tells us about its construction

    Read more: Stonehenge: A Social and Technical Achievement
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Tesla’s Pigeon: A Genius, His Friend, and the Myth of the “Bird Brain”

Holidays without Christmas: A Collection of Winter Festivals from Around the World

Egregores, Tulpas, and the Power of Collective Thought

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