science
The Science Behind Relationships; Humans Media explores the basis of our attraction, contempt, why we do what we do and to whom we do it.
The Age of Invisible Technology: How Silence Became the Most Powerful Feature
Technology used to announce itself loudly. New devices arrived with dramatic launches, glowing screens, and long lists of features designed to impress. Faster processors, bigger storage, sharper displays—progress was measured by how much more we could pack into a single machine. The louder the innovation, the better it seemed.
By Yasir khan3 months ago in Humans
7 Deadly Sins of the Bible in Detail
The Bible teaches us that sin is not simply wrongdoing but a separation between humanity and God. Sin corrupts both spirit and society, distorting the divine image within us. Among the many forms of sin described in Scripture, seven have traditionally been recognized as especially destructive to the soul. These are known as the Seven Deadly Sins. They represent the root causes of moral decay and vices that distort character, fuel rebellion against God, and destroy relationships with others.
By The Big Bad 3 months ago in Humans
Why Winter Brings Back the Love You Thought You’d Healed From
Winter has a way of reviving old love, forgotten heartbreaks, and emotions you thought you’d healed from. This deeply human article explores why cold seasons trigger emotional relapses, loneliness, and soul-level memories… through psychology, neuroscience, nostalgia, and the quiet honesty of winter itself.
By F. M. Rayaan3 months ago in Humans
Why Humans Romanticize the Past During Uncertain Times?
When the world feels unstable, many people notice the same quiet habit forming. Their thoughts drift backward. Old memories feel warmer. Familiar moments feel safer. Even difficult times from the past start to look peaceful in comparison to the present.
By Zeenat Chauhan3 months ago in Humans
The World Through Different Eyes
We often believe that reality is fixed, that the world exists exactly as we perceive it. But the truth is, reality is much more flexible than we realize. It’s shaped by our thoughts, our experiences, and the lens through which we choose to view life.
By Yasir khan3 months ago in Humans
The Foundation for Order in a Collapsing Culture
This is a systems-level framework, not a polemic or a list of opinions. It lays out a sequence of foundational truths about how societies maintain order, how that order erodes, and why collapse follows when truth, accountability, and consequence are selectively suspended. Each point builds on the last, tracing a logical path from epistemology and moral agency to politics, institutions, and cultural outcomes.
By Peter Thwing - Host of the FST Podcast3 months ago in Humans
The Invisible Siege: An Interactive Story about Microplastics in the Brain. AI-Generated.
The Bio-Glitch: When Plastic Becomes Part of Our Neural Hardware Welcome to the wetware. Your neural architecture, once the pinnacle of organic evolution, is facing an unsanctioned breach. We are witnessing the first generation of biological hardware forced to operate on corrupted firmware. Microscopic polymers—the synthetic debris of the Anthropocene—have bypassed the blood-brain barrier. They are no longer external pollutants; they are integrating into our biological circuitry. This is the bio-glitch: a silent override where synthetic matter fuses with synaptic pathways, rewriting the fundamental code of human cognition. As these non-biodegradable particles embed themselves within the prefrontal cortex, the distinction between organic life and synthetic logic begins to dissolve. The breach is no longer a forecast; it is live, embedded, and proliferating through the mainframe of the mind.
By Mohammad Hammash3 months ago in Humans








