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  • 21 Rules for Living from Miyamoto Musashi, Japan’s Samurai Philosopher (1584–1645)
    by Colin Marshall on August 20, 2025 at 9:00 am

    Browse the ever-vaster selection of self-help books, videos, podcasts, and social-media accounts on offer today, and you’ll find no shortage of prescriptions for how to live. Much of what the gurus of the twenty-twenties have to say sounds awfully similar, and almost as much may seem contradictory. As in so many fields of human endeavor,

  • 75 Post-Punk and Hardcore Concerts from the 1980s Have Been Digitized & Put Online: Fugazi, GWAR, Lemonheads, Dain Bramage (with Dave Grohl) & More
    by OC on August 20, 2025 at 8:00 am

    Between 1985 and 1988, a teenager by the name of Sohrab Habibion was attending punk and post-punk shows around the Washington, DC area. What set him apart was the bulky video camera he’d bring to the show and let roll, documenting entire gigs in all their low-rez, lo-fi glory. Just a kid trying to document

  • Yuval Noah Harari Explains How to Protect Your Mind in the Age of AI
    by Colin Marshall on August 19, 2025 at 9:00 am

    You could say that we live in the age of artificial intelligence, although it feels truer about no aspect of our lives than it does of advertising. “If you want to sell something to people today, you call it AI,” says Yuval Noah Harari in the new Big Think video above, even if the product

  • The Oldest Unopened Bottle of Wine in the World (Circa 350 AD)
    by OC on August 19, 2025 at 8:00 am

    Image by Immanuel Giel, via Wikimedia Commons It’s an old TV and movie trope: the man of wealth and taste, often but not always a supervillain, offers his distinguished guest a bottle of wine, his finest, an ancient vintage from one of the most venerable vineyards. We might follow the motif back at least to

  • Discover the World’s Oldest Surviving Cookbook, De Re Coquinaria, from Ancient Rome
    by OC on August 18, 2025 at 9:00 am

    Western scholarship has had “a bias against studying sensual experience,” writes Reina Gattuso at Atlas Obscura, “the relic of an Enlightenment-era hierarchy that considered taste, touch, and flavor taboo topics for sober academic inquiry.” This does not mean, however, that cooking has been ignored by historians. Many a scholar has taken European cooking seriously, before

  • Why Knights Fought Snails in Medieval Illuminated Manuscripts
    by OC on August 18, 2025 at 8:00 am

    The snail may leave a trail of slime behind him, but a little slime will do a man no harm… whilst if you dance with dragons, you must expect to burn. - George R. R. Martin, The Mystery Knight As any Game of Thrones fan knows, being a knight has its downsides. It isn’t all

  • Watch Joan Baez Endearingly Imitate Bob Dylan (1972)
    by OC on August 15, 2025 at 9:00 am

    Joan Baez was already heralded as the “Queen of Folk” by the time Robert Zimmerman aka Bob Dylan arrived in New York City. Many things brought him to the burgeoning folk scene there, but Baez was the siren who called to a young Dylan through his television set long before he met her. He was

  • What Is Kabbalah? An Introduction to the Jewish Mystical Tradition
    by Colin Marshall on August 15, 2025 at 8:00 am

    Though the pop-cultural moment that gave rise to the association has passed, when many of us hear about Kabbalah, we still think of Madonna. Her study of that Jewish-mystic school of thought in the nineteen-nineties has been credited, at least in part, with the sonic transformation that led to her hit album Ray of Light. 

  • 2,178 Occult Books Now Digitized & Put Online, Thanks to the Ritman Library and Da Vinci Code Author Dan Brown
    by OC on August 14, 2025 at 9:00 am

    In 2018 we brought you some exciting news. Thanks to a generous donation from Da Vinci Code author Dan Brown, Amsterdam’s Ritman Library—a sizable collection of pre-1900 books on alchemy, astrology, magic, and other occult subjects—has been digitizing thousands of its rare texts under a digital education project cheekily called “Hermetically Open.” We are now

  • The Stunt That Ended Buster Keaton’s Brilliant Career
    by Colin Marshall on August 14, 2025 at 8:00 am

    Buster Keaton’s penchant and skill for comedic stunts made him one of the biggest stars of the silent-film era.  Nobody at the time imagined that he would still be engaging in dangerous-looking pratfalls 40 years later in his seventies, especially since his career seemed to have come to an end in 1926. That was the


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