That’s the compelling argument made by Caleb Scharf—author and senior scientist for astrobiology at NASA Ames Research in ...
Can sea slugs form abstract thoughts? Do we dare to see any "purpose" in evolution? Is the subjective just a complicated form ...
Six new books by Berkshire authors explore connection, love, loss and community, from memoirs and romance to mysteries and ...
A collection of non-fiction that captures the world’s complexity through insight, depth, and perspective without reducing ...
Jordan believed poetry had the power to teach and educate, and she did not shy away from difficult word choices to appease ...
She was a Muslim missionary by 13 and a creationist determined to disprove Darwin at 18. So how did she become TV's favourite ...
In “Capturing Kahanamoku,” the historian Michael Rossi argues that an ugly pseudoscientific movement had its roots in a ...
A former Southern District of New York judge, Katherine B. Forrest has been drawing on her courtroom experience as a legal ...
Alex is said to have mastered 100 words and even asked questions – something that’s almost unheard of in non-human animals.
Joseph Henrich, a professor of human evolutionary biology at Harvard University, whose research and writings span anthropology, biology, and economics, has followed an unconventional academic and ...
Explore 10 brilliant non-fiction books that explain the world’s complexities with depth and clarity—no oversimplification, just powerful insight.
Opinion
The National Interest on MSNOpinion

Humanity’s Best Hope: Love, Virtue, and Survival in the Age of AI

Humanity’s embrace of AI companions—once imagined in Her—reveals a crossroads: whether technology will deepen our capacity for love or quietly replace it, eroding what makes us human.