PHILOSOPHY

May 31 2026SPORTS

The Silent Winner Who Punched His Way Up

Zhang Wenming didn’t win fights with speeches. While others made big claims before stepping into the ring, he let his fists do the talking. Out of twenty matches, he walked away victorious nineteen times, often ending fights before the final bell. One sharp lesson in Macau showed him something impor

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May 22 2026SCIENCE

Sometimes Playing Safe Stops Real Breakthroughs

Back in the 1600s, science hit a wall because most researchers only trusted what their eyes and hands told them. They might say a fire feels warm because it’s warm, but they didn’t dig deeper into why the warmth itself mattered. This approach worked for objects but left human feelings—like why a sun

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May 13 2026RELIGION

Rebooting Muslim Bioethics: A Call for Thoughtful Debate

Islamic bioethics is a new field that still has many gaps. Most scholars rely on strict legal rules, but they rarely ask deeper moral questions or consider social realities. This approach leaves the discipline without strong ethical principles and makes its conclusions weak. The paper urges a retur

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May 08 2026LIFESTYLE

What Does Being Rich Really Look Like?

A husband-and-wife team once decided that real wealth doesn’t show up in bank statements. After launching a clothing brand, they quickly turned that belief into a brand worth millions. Their products—hoodies, hats, and similar items—are just the surface. The deeper message is about noticing what peo

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May 07 2026HEALTH

Golden Fixes and Beauty Realities

The art of mending broken pottery with gold, called kintsugi, shows a new way to think about cosmetic surgery. Instead of hiding cracks, the technique highlights them with precious metal. It turns damage into a story that adds value to the piece. Japanese philosophy also values wabi‑sabi, which pra

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Apr 15 2026HEALTH

Rethinking Medicine: Old Ideas for New Health Solutions

Some health practices have been around for centuries, yet modern science often ignores them. Many of these methods come from older medical traditions that looked at health differently. Instead of focusing only on tests and lab results, they considered the entire person—mind, body, and even lifestyle

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Apr 02 2026OPINION

Do we really rank above a lion or below a diamond? The outdated idea that still shapes our world

For centuries, many cultures believed in a strict ladder of life where everything had its fixed spot. At the top sat the divine, followed by humans, animals, plants, and even rocks. Humans weren't just ranked above animals—they were split further by social class and morality. The idea suggested some

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Feb 27 2026RELIGION

Seeing Suffering as a Lesson

Suffering is something we all face, but how we think about it can change its weight. Some modern doctors and psychologists focus on fighting pain or keeping stress low, yet another idea has been part of human thought for ages: acceptance. Instead of pretending pain doesn’t exist, acceptance me

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Feb 08 2026ENTERTAINMENT

Rust Cohle’s “Flat Circle” and the Loop of Time

The line that has become a meme in crime‑thriller circles comes from the first season of a popular detective series. A quiet, philosophical officer says, “Time is a flat circle. ” The phrase feels like a simple observation about cycles, yet it carries deeper philosophical baggage that the show gradu

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Jan 21 2026SCIENCE

Unraveling the Mystery of the Mind

The brain is a complex organ, yet it's responsible for something even more intricate: consciousness. This awareness of ourselves and our surroundings is what allows us to experience pain, pleasure, and emotions. But how does the brain create this sense of self? Scientists have been studying this que

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