I know most of the links this week are from The Atlantic; this is only because I follow the magazine on Twitter, and every day they have a ton of articles that catch my interest, and I end up clicking on them all, and pretty soon my browser is crammed with tabs from this one website. Which I find kinda embarrassing, even though it's not a big deal at all. I should go on a bigger variety of sites regardless. :P
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Yes, Money Does Buy Happiness: 6 Lessons From the Newest Research on Income and Well-Being--
The "Most Significant" Photo Recently Taken From Space--
Why We Get Prune Fingers--
Hollywood's Real Bias Is Conservative (But Not in the Way Liberals Often Say)--
The Fact-Free Political Alarmism of Naomi Wolf (this does a good job of pinpointing what bothers me about left-wing activist writers like Wolf, Glenn Greenwald, Michael Moore, etc. -- they're too extreme and addicted to attention for most people to believe anything they have to say, and whatever good points they make are undermined by their poor research and lack of nuance)
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There's More to Life Than Being Happy--
A GIF Guide to the Most Bannable Semi-Automatic Weapons--
Russian test uncovers strain of space travel (with all the buzz surrounding the
Mars One project, this is important to keep in mind)
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Actually, Don't Write Like You're Dead (on bad writing advice, and how it's impossible not to be a product of your times)
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Sympathy For the Nice Guys of OKCupid (HIGHLY RECOMMENDED -- not because Nice Guys deserve that much pity [they don't], but it's an interesting perspective that's worth thinking about)
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Censoring Pirate Sites Doesn't Work, Researchers Find--
Astronomers Discover a Planet Almost Identical to Earth--
New battery converts physical motion to chemical energy in a single step--
Galaxy's center tastes of raspberries and smells of rum, say astronomers--
What If NASA Could Figure Out the Math of a Workable Warp Drive? (I'm pretty sure I shared this on Twitter before, but it's worth sharing again)
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Winners of the National Geographic Photo Contest 2012--
A Stunning, Sparkling Beehive Caught By Accident (on globular clusters and distant galaxies)
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Tongue and Tech: The Many Emotions For Which English Has No Words--
Pondering Our Cyborg Future in a Documentary About the Singularity--
Climate Change Doesn't Have to Mean the End of the World (HIGHLY RECOMMENDED this partly explains why I've become so burned out on even thinking about environmentalism and climate change activism; at this point, adaptation is the only thing we can do about global warming)
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Short animated film: "R'ha" by Kaleb Lechowski (I'm only sharing this because a.) the animation and CGI is AMAZING, and b.) the guy who made this is a year younger than me, and I feel woefully inadequate because of it D: )
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