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.
The Man Who Forgot He Was Alive
The Man Who Forgot He Was Alive He couldn’t remember where he’d put his keys. That was how it started. A small thing. He stood at the doorway, hand frozen over the knob, a blank space in his mind where knowledge used to be. He checked the table, his coat pocket, the kitchen counter—nothing. Eventually, he found them in the fridge, resting beside a carton of milk he didn’t remember buying.
By Huzaifa Dzine6 months ago in Humans
Why Do We Keep Asking: What Is Love?
What is love? It's a question older than language itself, woven into ancient myths, whispered in sacred temples, etched into poetry, and searched a billion times on the internet today. Love shapes our deepest decisions, our highest joys, and our most painful losses. It is both universal and deeply personal, mystifying and familiar. But in an age where technology mediates connection and commitment is often feared more than desired, the question feels more urgent than ever: What is love today?
By F. M. Rayaan6 months ago in Humans
5 Deep Questions Everyone Asks Themselves- And What Modern Life, Psychology,and Faith Say About them. AI-Generated.
Across continents, cultures, and generations, there are certain questions that visit the mind of every person. They appear during quiet nights, after heartbreak, in the middle of success, or when life feels uncertain. These are not silly doubts—they're the core questions of being human.
By Nowshad Ahmad6 months ago in Humans
Putting End to Stereotyping, But Bringing Awareness About Mental Health
People with mental health issues aren't crazy at all. Negative perceptions and incorrect assumptions about mental illness may be as harmful as the disorder itself. Countless barriers are created by the stigma associated with major mental illness.
By Neel Smith7 months ago in Humans
Notes to My Future Self
The first note was dated five years ago. It wasn’t written with elegant handwriting or on scented paper. Just a crumpled sticky note tucked between the pages of an old journal I hadn’t opened in years. The ink had bled slightly, probably from tears I didn’t remember crying.
By Shah Nawaz7 months ago in Humans
The Art of Slowing Down
We live in a world that rewards speed. Faster results. Quicker replies. Instant updates. We rush through our mornings, skim through meals, multitask our way through work, and collapse into bed with one eye on tomorrow’s to-do list. Success is often measured in how much we can get done, how quickly we can reply, and how far ahead we can stay.
By Junaid Ali (Official)7 months ago in Humans
The Man Who Fixed Radios, But Broke His Silence
My father wasn’t a talkative man. He fixed old radios for a living in a dusty corner shop squeezed between a tire repair stand and a tea stall. Every morning, he’d leave before sunrise, lunchbox in hand, grease already on his fingers. Every evening, he’d return smelling like wires and solder, his silence louder than any conversation.
By waseem khan7 months ago in Humans
In defense of ontological naturalism
People arrive at atheism from different directions and different starting places, taking different paths, for different reasons. For some atheists, atheism is understood to be a conclusion about how the universe operates. More specifically, atheism can be one component of the more general conclusion that the universe operates within the constraints of ontological naturalism. That is my perspective.
By Mathew Goldstein7 months ago in Humans










