
Rise of the science sleuths
Science today is plagued by fake papers, profit incentives and unreliable studies. Meet the science sleuths bringing the truth to light
A quarterly journal of ideas, science and culture from Humanists UK
Stories shape our world. A cognitive scientist explains how to understand our narrative brain and regain some agency
By J. B. Smith

Science today is plagued by fake papers, profit incentives and unreliable studies. Meet the science sleuths bringing the truth to light

We're always hearing about the "elite", but what does the data tell us about who runs Britain?

Morgan Talty's debut novel is a powerful story of blood ties, and asks what it means to be Native American

Are you constantly monitoring your body? Two books explore the peculiar world of health anxiety

Country music has long shed its Bible-bashing image. Today, bluegrass is helping to heal America’s deep divides

How should we represent humankind to aliens? In the 1970s, Nasa fell short. Next time, we must do better

Two memoirs, from Basra and Ukraine, chronicle the lives of ordinary men pulled into war

A new book reminds us that progress on abortion rights has never been linear

Lord Kinnock has spent half a century as a Labour politician. Now he is calling on the party to reclaim its humanist principles

In an age of conflict and climate change, we must listen to the people of Fukushima and Hiroshima

How can we protect space so that it benefits all of humanity? We asked five experts for their perspectives

A new film celebrates grandmothers’ cooking. Why do these dishes have such unique power to comfort us?

Several killings have been linked to a movement that calls itself “rationalist”. But what do they really believe?
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