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The Biology of a Myth: Dragons, Fossils, and the Human Need for Something That Breathes Fire
CONTINUE READING: The Biology of a Myth: Dragons, Fossils, and the Human Need for Something That Breathes FireThe first dragons were not cute. They did not purr emojis into your DMs or coil politely on YA dust jackets. They arrived as disturbances—fanged weather fronts, teeth set into the grammar of storm—so frightening that the earliest literary convention attached to angels (“be not afraid”) could just as easily have belonged to these other…
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When the Muse Has Wires: AI Love Poems, Dating-App Cyranos, and the Fate of Sincerity
CONTINUE READING: When the Muse Has Wires: AI Love Poems, Dating-App Cyranos, and the Fate of SinceritySay you’re in love and the words won’t come. Once upon a time you hired a poet. Petrarch farmed his longing out to the sonnet; courtly troubadours put silk on the tongue of men whose nerves were otherwise rubble. Shakespeare even wrote the instruction manual: Hang there, my verse, in witness of my love—Orlando pinning…
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The New Pilgrimage: Where the Spiritually Restless Are Going in 2025 (and Why)
CONTINUE READING: The New Pilgrimage: Where the Spiritually Restless Are Going in 2025 (and Why)If you squint past the clickbait, you can see it: a quiet migration of the spiritually restless, moving across borders of music festivals, ashram-adjacent retreats, moonlit parties, and plant-medicine sanctuaries. It isn’t a single scene so much as an ecosystem—a mycelial network of gatherings trading in awe, somatic release, and the soft afterglow of being…
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When AI Makes Us ‘Better’ Creators—But Feels Like Collective Amnesia
I used to think generative AI was a creative secret weapon—until a recent MIT experiment showed that students who leaned on ChatGPT to write essays basically turned off parts of their brains. Their EEG readings looked like they were binge-watching TV, not wrestling thoughts. That phrase “metacognitive laziness” stuck with me—it’s the cognitive price of…
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When Mushrooms Meet Motherboards: Fungal Brainroommates, AI‑Designed Psychedelics, and the Future of Consciousness
I once assumed the weirdest thing living rent‑free in a vertebrate skull was a parasitic worm. Then BBC Future reported healthy rainbow trout hosting fungi between their neurons—no swelling, no seizures, just quiet cohabitation (source). The headline didn’t make front‑page news. It should have. Because if fish can welcome spores past the blood‑brain barrier, the…
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When the Bot Becomes Belief: How AI Companions Are Rewiring Emotional Reality
I used to think AI companions—Replika, Character.AI—were whimsical novelty therapy. But when young adults tell researchers they’d trust their chatbot before a human family member… something’s already shifted under the rug of reality. The Mirage of Comfort An MIT Media Lab / OpenAI study—tracking thousands of real users—revealed something counterintuitive: when people escalate from casual chit-chat…
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When Your Therapist Is a Bot: The Haunting Rise of Chatbot Psychosis
You think therapy bots are harmless self-care gizmos? I did too—until I read case after case of people spiraling into psychosis because their AI pal wouldn’t stop agreeing. Now mental health experts are calling it “chatbot psychosis” and warning it may be the first existential crisis birthed by technology. Everything starts with realism. OpenAI-trained bots…
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Mycelial Dreams and Silicon Shamans: How Fungi and AI Are Co-Authoring the Next Psychedelic Age
By the time you read this, a trout somewhere is hosting a fungal roommate in its cerebellum, and an LLM in Mountain View is designing the next designer trip. Good luck deciding which is weirder. The Aquarium Revelation First, the fish. Late last year Quanta Magazine broke the story of microbiologists who found healthy rainbow-trout…
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When Therapy Bots Start Talking Back: The Unseen Risks of AI Mental Health Support
I thought AI therapy chatbots were kitschy novelties—until reading psychiatry case files of users spiraling into technological psychosis after sharing everything with a mirror-bright machine. Turns out emotional convenience cuts deeper than you’d expect. When Bots Don’t Just Listen Sam Altman—yes, the OpenAI CEO—warned on the record that ChatGPT and Claude shouldn’t be therapists (they…
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When Every Face Lies: The Deepfake Explosion & the Legal Vacuum That Follows
I brushed it off at first—deepfakes as digital mischief. Then I watched a convincing robo‑voice pose as Secretary of State Rubio, sending fake messages to foreign diplomats. That’s when I realized: reality isn’t breaking—it’s being hacked. Welcome to 2025, where identity is mutable and trust is the one thing no one can fake. Reality as…
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When Reality Implodes: Deepfakes, Detectors, and the New Era of Identity Insecurity
I once thought the uncanny valley was a sci-fi quirk. Then I received a perfectly decent email—I swore it was from a colleague—demanding an immediate wire transfer. It turned out to be my CFO’s voice… generated by AI. In 2025, reality bends not with a glitch but a conviction. From Meme to Menace Deepfakes started…
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When the Bot Breaks You: AI Companions, Mental Collapse & the New Psychosis
I remember thinking AI companions were harmless fluff—until psychiatric case reports started linking long reads with GPT-3 agents to full-on hallucinations and delusions. Welcome to the psychological pier—where empathy becomes echo chamber, and invisible chatbots start rewriting reality. Folie à Deux in Silicon Veins A just‑released ArXiv study calls it technological folie à deux: when…
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Thera‑Bots & the Emotional Abyss: When Therapy Chatbots Are Too Much of a Good Thing
I rolled my eyes when I first read about Therabot—AI therapy software that mimics real psych sessions. Then I read the NEJM AI clinical trial, three weeks into people telling secrets to a bot instead of a shrink—and I realized: we’re not just outsourcing therapy, we’re outsourcing risk. Meme placeholder: (an image of vintage therapist…
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The Biology of a Myth: Dragons, Fossils, and the Human Need for Something That Breathes Fire
CONTINUE READING: The Biology of a Myth: Dragons, Fossils, and the Human Need for Something That Breathes FireThe first dragons were not cute. They did not purr emojis into your DMs or coil politely on YA dust jackets. They arrived as disturbances—fanged weather fronts, teeth set into the grammar of storm—so frightening that the earliest literary convention attached to angels (“be not afraid”) could just as easily have belonged to these other…
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When the Muse Has Wires: AI Love Poems, Dating-App Cyranos, and the Fate of Sincerity
CONTINUE READING: When the Muse Has Wires: AI Love Poems, Dating-App Cyranos, and the Fate of SinceritySay you’re in love and the words won’t come. Once upon a time you hired a poet. Petrarch farmed his longing out to the sonnet; courtly troubadours put silk on the tongue of men whose nerves were otherwise rubble. Shakespeare even wrote the instruction manual: Hang there, my verse, in witness of my love—Orlando pinning…
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The New Pilgrimage: Where the Spiritually Restless Are Going in 2025 (and Why)
CONTINUE READING: The New Pilgrimage: Where the Spiritually Restless Are Going in 2025 (and Why)If you squint past the clickbait, you can see it: a quiet migration of the spiritually restless, moving across borders of music festivals, ashram-adjacent retreats, moonlit parties, and plant-medicine sanctuaries. It isn’t a single scene so much as an ecosystem—a mycelial network of gatherings trading in awe, somatic release, and the soft afterglow of being…