Soil and the Soul of World Order

Culture wars have now entered geopolitics. | Continue reading


@noemamag.com | 1 year ago

The Disappearing Art of Maintenance

The noble but undervalued craft of maintenance could help preserve modernity’s finest achievements, from public transit systems to power grids, and serve as a useful framework for addressing climate change and other pressing planetary constraints. | Continue reading


@noemamag.com | 1 year ago

Deep Learning Alone Isn’t Getting Us to Human-Like AI

Artificial intelligence has mostly been focusing on a technique called deep learning. It might be time to reconsider. | Continue reading


@noemamag.com | 1 year ago

A messiah won't save us

The messianic idea that permeates Western political thinking — that a person or technology will deliver us from the tribulations of the present — distracts us from the hard work that must be done to build a better world. | Continue reading


@noemamag.com | 1 year ago

How We Can Encode Human Rights in the Blockchain

The same crypto tools presently being used to bypass the international order could instead become the means of architecting a better one. | Continue reading


@noemamag.com | 1 year ago

The Resurgence of Tesla Syndrome: Disruption as a Virtue

Why has disruption been elevated as a virtue to the point where it’s become orthodox to be heterodox? It’s a symptom of the erosion of trust in institutions. | Continue reading


@noemamag.com | 1 year ago

The Centuries-Long Quest for the Scent of God

The precise odor of the divine has eluded humans for millennia, but that hasn’t stopped us from seeking it in the oddest places. | Continue reading


@noemamag.com | 1 year ago

The New Nomos of the Planet

A geo-civilizational order can’t survive without cooperation. | Continue reading


@noemamag.com | 1 year ago

The Perils of Smashing the Past

Recalling the Italian futurists’ embrace of aggressive disruption. | Continue reading


@noemamag.com | 1 year ago

What AI can tell us about intelligence

Can deep learning systems learn to manipulate symbols? The answers might change our understanding of how intelligence works and what makes humans unique. | Continue reading


@noemamag.com | 1 year ago

The Digital Is Political

Putting community back into communication requires the checks and balances of republics. | Continue reading


@noemamag.com | 1 year ago

Digital Technology Demands a New Political Philosophy

Elon Musk’s takeover bid for Twitter raises important questions about whether social media platforms are political technologies that must be governed by democratic norms and principles. | Continue reading


@noemamag.com | 1 year ago

Are Insects Conscious?

Insects appear to be more intelligent and emotionally complex than we give them credit for. Perhaps, new research suggests, they are even conscious.  | Continue reading


@noemamag.com | 2 years ago

A Remedy for FOMO

The conception of free will as the continual creation of unpredictable novelty can lead us away from social-media-driven anxieties that often cripple our decision-making. | Continue reading


@noemamag.com | 2 years ago

An Antidote to Digital Disconnectivity

Community requires ritual and narrative. | Continue reading


@noemamag.com | 2 years ago

Finding Heroes in a Messy Digital World

Thinking differently about how to design the digital platforms that structure our lives can help lead us on a journey to improve society and become better versions of ourselves. | Continue reading


@noemamag.com | 2 years ago

Keeping Time into the Great Beyond

The 10,000-year clock is neither a ‘frightening’ ‘distraction,’ as its critics scorn, nor the ‘admirable objective’ its fans claim. It’s something else — a monument to long-term thinking that can unlock a deeper and more thoughtful spirit of interpretive patience. | Continue reading


@noemamag.com | 2 years ago

If The Desert Was Green: Mass tree-planting in the desert cause lasting damage

Mass tree-planting programs in the desert often cause lasting damage to the ecosystems they are purportedly trying to repair. | Continue reading


@noemamag.com | 2 years ago

Line Go Up

Of course, art has always been toy money for the rich to play with. We just made it more ubiquitous, more efficient, more technologically mediated. We made it faster. | Continue reading


@noemamag.com | 2 years ago

The Myth of Tech Exceptionalism

How tech uses the promise of endless innovation to ward off regulating even its present-day harms. | Continue reading


@noemamag.com | 2 years ago

The Conscious Universe

The radical idea that everything has elements of consciousness is reemerging and breathing new life into a cold and mechanical cosmos. | Continue reading


@noemamag.com | 2 years ago

The price of individualism has proved to be the loss of privacy

“The price of individualism has proved to be the loss of privacy.” | Continue reading


@noemamag.com | 2 years ago

The last of the Marsh Arabs

What happens to a community and ecosystem at the nexus of geopolitical tensions and climate change? And can 6,000 years of history save them? | Continue reading


@noemamag.com | 2 years ago

Rents Are Skyrocketing. Let’s Buy Back the Land

Landlords have made a fortune on climbing land values. What if land was held by the public instead? | Continue reading


@noemamag.com | 2 years ago

Networked Planetary Governance

To tackle planetary problems like the climate crisis and pandemics, we have to tear down old hierarchies and build new, fluid networks of people, cities and organizations. | Continue reading


@noemamag.com | 2 years ago

How AI Will Advance in the Next Two Decades

Kai-Fu Lee explains how intelligent machines will master context, enable precision medicine — and use vast amounts of energy for computation. | Continue reading


@noemamag.com | 2 years ago

Tales of Technology and Faith

Sci-fi enables us to think about science and religion as mutually supportive elements of what it means to be human. | Continue reading


@noemamag.com | 2 years ago

AI May Be Smarter Than We Think

As with evolution, mindless learning drives intelligent machines. | Continue reading


@noemamag.com | 2 years ago

The Other Invisible Hand

Why all life limits certain kinds of selfishness. | Continue reading


@noemamag.com | 2 years ago

Productive Bubbles

Occasionally, financial speculation fastens onto transformational technologies that have the potential to create a genuinely new economy. | Continue reading


@noemamag.com | 2 years ago

The One-Earth Balance Sheet

Getting the whole spectrum of governments, academia and civil society to track “natural capital” would help create shared efforts toward solving shared problems like the climate crisis. | Continue reading


@noemamag.com | 2 years ago

Making Common Sense

Like every kind of intelligence, AI will develop appropriate representations of the world to accomplish what it needs for its various tasks. | Continue reading


@noemamag.com | 2 years ago

The Intelligent Forest

Recognizing that forest ecosystems, like societies, have elements of intelligence would help us leave behind the old notion that they are inert and predictable. | Continue reading


@noemamag.com | 2 years ago

In Pursuit of Post-National Politics

Effectively addressing planetary problems requires working through intermediaries like nation-states and corporations, not simply bypassing them. | Continue reading


@noemamag.com | 2 years ago

Vaclav Smil view on managing the biosphere

To save the biosphere, curb upstream consumption — not just downstream emissions. | Continue reading


@noemamag.com | 2 years ago

The Tyranny of Time

The clock is a useful social tool, but it is also deeply political. It benefits some, marginalizes others and blinds us from a true understanding of our own bodies and the world around us. | Continue reading


@noemamag.com | 2 years ago

The Tyranny of Time

The clock is a useful social tool, but it is also deeply political: It benefits some, marginalizes others and blinds us from a true understanding of our own bodies and the world around us. | Continue reading


@noemamag.com | 2 years ago

Singularity vs. Daoist Robots

Is there another path than accelerated Western modernization? | Continue reading


@noemamag.com | 2 years ago

The Ancient Imagination Behind China’s AI Ambition

Political, religious and science fiction stories hundreds of years old form the basis of China’s rapid growth in artificial intelligence technology. | Continue reading


@noemamag.com | 3 years ago

The age of the cyber romantics is coming to an end

Continue reading


@noemamag.com | 3 years ago

The Thoughts the Civilized Keep

The hype around a new AI language generator reveals the sterility of mainstream thinking on AI today — and indeed on how we think about thinking itself. | Continue reading


@noemamag.com | 3 years ago

China’s Radical New Vision of Globalization

President Xi’s vision of “dual circulation” is a darkly pessimistic economic strategy, fit for a new Cold War. | Continue reading


@noemamag.com | 3 years ago

The Eternal Silence of Infinite Space

If we manage to find intelligent life somewhere in the cosmos, then, strange as it may be, at least it will provide evidence that we are not alone in bearing the burden of consciousness. | Continue reading


@noemamag.com | 3 years ago

A Tale of Two Pandemics, the Nordic Response

“I actually feel pretty comfortable in New York. I get scared, like, in Sweden,” mumbled Lou Reed, the legendary frontman of the Velvet Underground, while playing the disheveled city-dweller in the 1995 movie “Blue in... | Continue reading


@noemamag.com | 3 years ago

Welcome to the Turbulent Twenties

We predicted political upheaval in America in the 2020s. This is why it’s here and what we can do to temper it. | Continue reading


@noemamag.com | 3 years ago

Exit to Community

Grafting the lessons of old cooperatively owned companies to the online economy. | Continue reading


@noemamag.com | 3 years ago

From the Anthropocene to the Microbiocene

“The scandal is not, as the term Anthropocene implies, that the boundaries between the human and nature get blurred. Rather, the scandal is that we humans still have not learned to think about ourselves in terms of the microbial — the viral — world of which we are a part.” | Continue reading


@noemamag.com | 3 years ago

Catering to a Contracting Middle Class

The idea of a home-owning middle class is broken. | Continue reading


@noemamag.com | 3 years ago