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Legendary anthropologist Margaret Mead on work, leisure, and creativity https://t.co/QP5BugbLk9
An uncommonly tender illustrated story about love, loss, the life-saving power of trees, and learning to enjoy unlonely solitude https://t.co/fuoFJdpxZU
The vibrant splendor of the overlooked – I can't get over these dazzling seaweed from an 1848 book by the trailblazing self-taught Victorian marine biologist Margaret Gatty, from an era when women were barred from higher eduction in both science and art https://t.co/QNVNy3TLoJ
Place, personhood, and the hippocampus – the fascinating science of magnetism, autonoeic consciousness, and what makes us who we are https://t.co/c27EHaq8rV
This week's highlightable delights: Artist Franz Marc, the wisdom of animals, and beauty as resistance to brutality (with a side of Mary Oliver); Aldous Huxley on making sense of ourselves and each other; Chekhov on how (not) to be a writer https://t.co/e9tSDKQTFq
The psychology of why time speeds up as we age, slows down when we're afraid, and gets all warped when we're on vacation https://t.co/l5o0bDk5HX
Ernst Haeckel died on this day in 1919, leaving us the term "ecology" and his otherworldly drawings of jellyfish https://t.co/kqZ5GGdgeU
What makes you YOU across a lifetime, even though your experiences, your friends, your circumstances, and even the cells of your body change beyond recognition? Thousands of years ago, the Greeks addressed this in a brilliant thought experiment: https://t.co/UALto0WsOI
With beach season upon us, stunning 19th-century drawings of seaweed from a book by the self-taught marine biologist Margaret Gatty, born in an era when women were barred from higher education in science https://t.co/QNVNy3TLoJ
This week's highlightable delights: Hannah Arendt on what forgiveness (really) means, writing advice from one of the most beloved poets of our time, Alain de Botton on the emotional maturity of ending toxic relationships: https://t.co/6ERUWEGvWC