science
The Science Behind Relationships; Humans Media explores the basis of our attraction, contempt, why we do what we do and to whom we do it.
Stanislav Kondrashov Oligarch Series: When Oligarchy Meets Particle Physics
In public debate, oligarchy is usually discussed in terms of wealth concentration, political leverage, and industrial empires. Particle physics, by contrast, seems to belong to a completely different universe—one of accelerators, quantum fields, and subatomic particles moving at nearly the speed of light. Yet in the Stanislav Kondrashov Oligarch Series, these two worlds intersect in ways that are rarely examined.
By Stanislav Kondrashov5 days ago in Humans
Heat Therapy Is a Game-Changer for Your Health
For centuries, cultures around the world have embraced the power of heat. From traditional Finnish saunas to modern infrared rooms, heat therapy has long been associated with relaxation, cleansing, and overall well-being. Today, saunas are more than just a luxury at spas—they’re becoming a staple in health routines for athletes, entrepreneurs, and wellness enthusiasts alike.
By AnthonyBTV5 days ago in Humans
Low Testosterone and Sex Drive: Symptoms, NHS Guidelines, Benefits and Risks of TRT
Back in the ’90s, Alan Reeves was on stage all the time—he was one of “The Dreamboys,” taking his clothes off in front of massive crowds. People loved him so much that he and his fellow dancers even landed a spot in the Spice Girls’ movie, Spice World.
By Real content6 days ago in Humans
The Wave and the Particle
“There it is. I see it now. Come here, you little.. Hold still, this is going to be tricky.” Like I could disobey? My head and torso might as well be locked in vise grips, and the meds held me even more immobile. What muscle twitch? They might as well have used Botox. Maybe they did.
By Meredith Harmon6 days ago in Humans
The Silence is Not Health: The Structural Cost of Moralised Pain
I. Executive Summary I would like to present theoretical and empirical synthesis concerning the systemic failure of modern pain management. It argues that chronic physical pain is a biological fact that cannot be thought away through cognitive reframing. By utilising a framework of Regulation Architecture, I demonstrate how current medical demands for acceptance force subjects into a state of resignation and learned helplessness. This silence is not health. It is a trauma response that masks a total collapse of structural integrity. By integrating neuroimaging data and allostatic load theory, this paper calls for a shift from policing emotional reactions to providing functional, biologically grounded relief.
By Claire McAllen8 days ago in Humans
Will AI Replace Me? Why “Augmentation” Is the Word We Should All Use
“Will AI replace me?” It’s the quiet question behind office small talk, late-night scrolling, and career-planning anxiety. Whether you’re a designer experimenting with generative tools, a teacher adapting lesson plans, a developer integrating APIs, or a writer watching algorithms produce paragraphs in seconds, the fear feels personal.
By Mind Meets Machine8 days ago in Humans
Roots and Fruit
Roots and Fruit Photo by Lukáš Kulla on Unsplash Most people evaluate life by what shows. Results, behavior, success, failure, growth, collapse. Fruit is easier to measure than roots, so it becomes the focus almost by default. When something goes wrong, attention rushes to what is visible and immediate. When something goes right, credit is assigned to the most recent action. But this way of seeing consistently misreads causality. Fruit is never the beginning of the story. It is the result of something that has been growing quietly, often unnoticed, for a long time.
By Peter Thwing - Host of the FST Podcast8 days ago in Humans
A Baby's First Smile
That feeling you get when your newborn baby, beams that gummy smile at you is pretty special. It is a feeling a parent gets that is so fleeting, that you forget it a minute right after and don’t ever think about it or truly remember it again. There will be millions of smiles in life. But the first smile is like the first spring rain and vice versa. Spring in general, gives you that feeling of the first time, for something. It’s renewal, a refreshment of the spirit, after the doldrums of winter.
By Alexandra Grant10 days ago in Humans








