106 | Stuart Bartlett on What “Life” Means
Someday, most likely, we will encounter life that is not as we know it. We might find it elsewhere in […]
106 | Stuart Bartlett on What “Life” Means Read More
Someday, most likely, we will encounter life that is not as we know it. We might find it elsewhere in […]
106 | Stuart Bartlett on What “Life” Means Read More
We gather empirical evidence about the nature of the world through our senses, and use that evidence to construct an
105 | Ann-Sophie Barwich on the Science and Philosophy of Smell Read More
Creativity is one of those things that we all admire but struggle to define or make concrete. Music provides a
104 | David Rosen and Scott Miles on the Neuroscience of Music and Creativity Read More
Cooking is art, but it’s also very much science — mostly chemistry, but with important contributions from physics and biology.
103 | J. Kenji López-Alt on Cooking As and With Science Read More
The best chess and Go players in the world aren’t human beings any more; they’re artificially-intelligent computer programs. But the
102 | Maria Konnikova on Poker, Psychology, and Reason Read More
I recently saw an estimate that if you took all the novel coronaviruses in the world (the actual viruses, not
101 | David Baltimore on the Mysteries of Viruses Read More
A podcast only hits the century mark once! And for Mindscape, this is it. There have been holiday messages and
100 | Solo: On Life and Its Meaning Read More
There are some problems for which it’s very hard to find the answer, but very easy to check the answer
99 | Scott Aaronson on Complexity, Computation, and Quantum Gravity Read More
Each of us is different, in some way or another, from every other person. But some are more different than
98 | Olga Khazan on Living and Flourishing While Being Weird Read More
Humans build machines, in part, to relieve themselves from the burden of work on difficult, repetitive tasks. And yet, despite
97 | John Danaher on Our Coming Automated Utopia Read More