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.
Ballistic Missiles
Introduction In the modern world, few weapons have captured global attention as much as Ballistic Missile. These powerful weapons are designed to travel long distances at incredible speeds, carrying conventional or nuclear warheads. From the tense years of the Cold War to today's complex geopolitical landscape, ballistic missiles have shaped military strategies and international diplomacy.
By Ashen Asmadalaabout 15 hours ago in Humans
High Vibrational Living
Ever since I was a child I always had an innate sense that the world in which I lived was not all there was, and that many of the things that I had been told throughout my formative years were merely shadows of the world in which we truly live.
By Kaylon Forsythabout 17 hours ago in Humans
My Life with Epileptic Seizures
Epilepsy is a chronic neurological disorder that causes recurrent seizures or convulsions. The cause may be genetic, brain injury, or infection. Common symptoms of epilepsy include seizures, loss of consciousness, breathing problems, anxiety, depression, sweating, headaches, and stiffening of the body, among others.
By Seema Patel2 days ago in Humans
When Institutions Reward the Disordered
The claim that modern society has “gone insane” circulates constantly in political commentary. The phrase is crude. The frustration behind it is real. When citizens watch institutions make decisions that appear detached from ordinary human consequences, people begin searching for explanations. Some assume incompetence. Others assume corruption. A smaller but growing group points to a psychological explanation known as political ponerology.
By Dr. Mozelle Martin3 days ago in Humans
what does true freedom mean in the modern world?
freedom is one of the most powerful ideas humanity has ever imagined. entire civilizations have risen and fallen around it. revolutions have been fought in its name. constitutions have been written to protect it. people have sacrificed comfort, safety, and sometimes their lives so that future generations could experience it.
By Arjun. S. Gaikwad4 days ago in Humans
During profound sleep, breathing and brain signals become disorganised.
Researchers have shown that during the deepest stage of sleep, respiration and brain activity in important movement circuits become out of sync. This division changes how the sleeping brain interprets signals from the body and uncovers a secret deep rest rule.
By Francis Dami4 days ago in Humans
Deep Love Quotes That Will Melt Your Heart
Love is the most profound emotion, capable of transforming hearts and souls. It is the language of the soul, whispered in glances, spoken through touch, and felt deeply in every beat of the heart. Here are some deep love quotes that capture the essence of this timeless emotion, each one crafted to resonate with your heart and stir your soul.
By Ahmed aldeabella4 days ago in Humans
What to Do When Your Loved One Starts Dating a Chatbot
In the early days of AI, most chatbots had a cool, businesslike tone that discouraged personal relationships. However, as the technology became increasingly personalized and sycophantic, users started relying on AI to feed into their delusions, praise their behavior and even roleplay as a romantic partner, leading to a boom of AI relationships that have sparked a global debate about loneliness, sentience and personal freedom.
By Kaitlin Shanks5 days ago in Humans
Practice vs Performance
One of the quiet pressures shaping modern communication is the assumption that anything written should be immediately shareable. Drafts blur into declarations, and exploration is mistaken for conclusion. Under this pressure, writing becomes performative by default. The moment words are placed on a page, they are treated as finished statements rather than steps in a process. This expectation distorts both how writing is produced and how it is received, collapsing practice into performance and leaving little room for genuine development.
By Peter Thwing - Host of the FST Podcast6 days ago in Humans
The "Dirty Dozen" 2026: Why Your Healthy Diet Might Be Secretly Aging You
It is March 2026, and the self-care world is obsessed with a single number: your cellular age. If you have been trading the processed burgers for vibrant salads, buying organic spinach, and snacking on fresh strawberries, you likely feel like a health saint. But according to a major, peer-reviewed study released just this month by the Environmental Working Group (EWG), that "healthy" diet might be loading your system with more dangerous chemical residues than you realize—and it’s accelerating your internal clock.
By Mohammad Hamid7 days ago in Humans








