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 Friendly Machine
It was a rainy Tuesday morning when Lila first met Miko. She wasn’t looking for a new friend—she barely had the time for the old ones—but something about the little AI robot caught her eye. It rolled gently down the sidewalk in the small park near her apartment, a smooth metallic surface reflecting the muted gray of the clouds, a pair of glowing eyes blinking softly like it was alive.
By hazrat ali27 days ago in Humans
AI Has a Mind — But No Soul
Artificial intelligence is everywhere now. It writes, analyzes, predicts, recommends, and responds with an ease that feels almost natural. In many ways, AI appears to possess a “mind” — it can process information, learn from experience, and solve complex problems faster than any human ever could.
By Mind Meets Machine27 days ago in Humans
Speaking to Time Instead of the Room
Much of modern communication is oriented toward immediacy. Writing is framed as something meant to be consumed quickly, reacted to instantly, and replaced just as fast by whatever comes next. Under this model, the value of a piece is measured almost entirely by its initial reception. If it does not land immediately, it is treated as a failure. This assumption narrows the purpose of writing and misunderstands how meaning actually travels through time.
By Peter Thwing - Host of the FST Podcast28 days ago in Humans
Ai The New Gym Coach
Walking into a gym without a plan can feel like stepping into a maze. Rows of machines, endless workout advice online, and conflicting fitness trends make it hard to know where to start—or whether what you’re doing is actually helping. One of the biggest problems with traditional workout programs is that they assume everyone’s body responds the same way. In reality, your age, height, and weight dramatically influence how you should train. This is where artificial intelligence is redefining fitness.
By AnthonyBTV28 days ago in Humans
Why the First Philosophers Still Matter.
When we think of philosophy, we usually think of its original founders as three great figures: Socrates, Plato and Aristotle - in that exact order. They were indeed major players, and without them the game wouldn’t be the same. Their combined influence shaped Western culture and determined much of the direction philosophy would take.
By Eva Smitte29 days ago in Humans
Are We Letting AI Think for Us — or Teaching It to Think Like Us?
Not long ago, thinking was considered the last truly human frontier. Machines could calculate faster than us, store more information than us, and repeat tasks endlessly—but thinking? That was ours. Messy, emotional, biased, creative, flawed. Human.
By Mind Meets Machine30 days ago in Humans
Cabin Fever Because of Snow, Sleet, and Freezing Rain That Turned to Icy Roads. Top Story - February 2026.
What Is Cabin Fever? The short answer is that cabin fever is restlessness from being in a confined area. Cabin fever is the distressing irritability or restlessness experienced when a person or group is stuck at an isolated location or in confined quarters for an extended time. Research shows that prolonged cold, gray skies, and being stuck indoors can trigger mood shifts similar to “winter blues.”
By Margaret Minnicksabout a month ago in Humans
Talking to AI Taught Me More About My Own Mind Than Any Therapist
I didn’t start talking to artificial intelligence because I needed answers. I started because I needed to think. At first, the interaction was transactional—questions in, responses out. A tool, nothing more. But over time, something unexpected emerged. The machine wasn’t revealing new insights about the world. It was revealing patterns in me.
By Mind Meets Machineabout a month ago in Humans










