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Cognitive psychologist and poet Keith Holyoak explores whether artificial intelligence could ever achieve poetic authenticity.
He is only out-sold by William Shakespeare and Lao Tzu.
Dante’s epic journey through hell and heaven reveal how the poet felt about his own country.
The answer may lie in the power to see far, far beyond yourself.
Is the dumpster in the alley worthy of a poem?
This collection of learning and development quotes serves as a reminder of the meaning and purpose behind this important work.
Because Dylan “samples and digests” songs from the past, he has been accused of plagiarism. But imitatio isn’t the same.
Six authors, six monumental legacies, and a unique thread connecting them: a solitary novel that shines brightly.
Try writing a novel without using the letter “e.”
Book Club
Renowned business expert Roger Martin shares the key essentials for effective management with a focus on strategy, culture, execution, talent and data.
The world’s “most produced living playwright” wins out over other contestants, including Salman Rushdie and Margaret Atwood.
Unlock the full potential of your creativity with holistic detachment. This is the way of the editor.
Six hundred years in the history of trousers.
His crime was so great, he was not only sentenced to death but his name was to be erased from memory.
“Block. It puts some writers down for months. It puts some writers down for life.”
Millennia ago, philosophers like Anaximander grasped that nature is the ultimate recycler.
After Albert Einstein’s death in 1955, a pathologist—searching for the secret of genius—removed, dissected, and ultimately stole the mathematician’s brain.
Despite the vast number of planets in the Universe, Earth’s specific evolutionary history guarantees that its life forms — including humans — are utterly unique.
Using peach and eggplant emojis as shorthand for sex may seem like a new thing, but Renaissance artists were experts at using produce to imply intercourse.
Probability, lacking solid theoretical foundations and burdened with paradoxes, was jokingly called the “theory of misfortune.”
For J.R.R. Tolkien, the single most important element of a fairy tale was the dramatic reversal of misfortune in the story’s ending.
Beer before wine and you’ll feel fine? Well, it depends.
These clocks burn powdered incense along a pre-measured paths, each representing a different amount of time.
Humiliating powerful people was not a key to success.
Data scientists first gained prominence by making us click on ads — now the profession spans a multiverse.
For the clarity of a “beginner’s mind” and a path to true and lasting wisdom, one must fully embrace “not-knowing.”
The author of Frankenstein had an obsession with the cemetery and saw love and death as connected.
NASA will use energy from Earth’s gravity to launch the Lucy spacecraft in October of this year.
It’s time to bring “friendship love” back.