video
Neuroscience
Dog vision is a trendy topic, but what can we really know about how they see?
11 minutes
essay
Evolution
What is intelligent life?
Our human minds hold us back from truly understanding the many brilliant ways that other creatures solve their problems
Abigail Desmond & Michael Haslam
essay
Neuroscience
How to make a map of smell
We can split light by a prism, sounds by tones, but surely the world of odour is too complex and personal? Strangely, no
Jason Castro
video
Cognition and intelligence
What’s this buzz about bees having culture? Inside a groundbreaking experiment
8 minutes
essay
Philosophy of mind
What colour do you see?
New research is uncovering the hidden differences in how people experience the world. The consequences are unsettling
Gary Lupyan
essay
Cognition and intelligence
Are you an artistic genius?
Maybe not, but if that’s the threshold you use for creativity in your life, you are coming at the problem all wrong
James C Kaufman
essay
Consciousness and altered states
Déjà vu
Have you been here before? The eerie sensation is the shadow of your mind searching inward for clues to its own survival
Anne Cleary
essay
Stories and literature
The sonnet machine
A sonnet contains an emotional drama of illusion and deception, crisis and resolution, crafted to make us think and feel
Timothy Hampton
essay
Biology
Octopus time
We humans are forward-facing, gravity-bound plodders. Can the liquid motion of the octopus radicalise our ideas about time?
David Borkenhagen
essay
Computing and artificial intelligence
What has feelings?
As the power of AI grows, we need to have evidence of its sentience. That is why we must return to the minds of animals
Kristin Andrews & Jonathan Birch
essay
Philosophy of mind
Super-cooperators
Clear and direct telepathic communication is unlikely to be developed. But brain-to-brain links still hold great promise
Gary Lupyan & Andy Clark
video
Computing and artificial intelligence
Teaching an AI to beat video games still takes human imagination
5 minutes
essay
Knowledge
A sliver of reality
Science and mathematics may never fully capture the physical universe. Are there hard limits to human intelligence?
David H Wolpert
essay
Evolution
Connected-up-brains
Bat friends, monkeys sharing, and humans holding hands: the brains of social animals synchronise and expand one another
Sofia Quaglia
essay
Knowledge
Imaginology
We need a new kind of approach to learning that shifts imagination from the periphery to the foundation of all knowledge
Stephen T Asma
essay
Cognition and intelligence
Modular cognition
Powerful tricks from computer science and cybernetics show how evolution ‘hacked’ its way to intelligence from the bottom up
Michael Levin & Rafael Yuste
video
Philosophy of mind
Embodied cognition seems intuitive, but philosophy can push it to some strange places
14 minutes
essay
Stories and literature
The art of the plot twist
Some twists infuriate; others are brilliant. But they both use the surprise story as a self-exploding confidence game
Vera Tobin
essay
Human evolution
Homo imaginatus
Imagination isn’t just a spillover from our problem-solving prowess. It might be the core of what human brains evolved to do
Philip Ball
essay
Cognition and intelligence
On the origin of minds
Cognition did not appear out of nowhere in ‘higher’ animals but goes back millions, perhaps billions, of years
Pamela Lyon
video
Film and visual culture
A Palme d’Or-winning animation toys with the way our eyes perceive light
5 minutes
video
Knowledge
What can a Kurosawa classic tell us about reality, knowledge and truth?
5 minutes
essay
Biology
Enduring memory
How can animals whose brains have been drastically remodelled still recall their kin, their traumas and their skills?
Thomas R Verny
essay
Cognition and intelligence
A theory of my own mind
Knowing the content of one’s own mind might seem straightforward but in fact it’s much more like mindreading other people
Stephen M Fleming