A meteorologist stationed in the desert discovers a perfect geometric circle in the wake of a storm. This anomaly refuses to let him go until he realizes: all this time, he wasn't being pulled by a physical structure, but by the very thing he had spent his entire life running from.
The installation visualizes the soul as a living hologram, but with each passing session, Lia feels herself drifting away. She must come to understand: the machine does not merely mirror the unseen; it initiates her into the art of letting go.
Digital Stories
All Paths at Once (Or: How I Learned to Multiply and Fell Out of Love with Being Only One)
Experimental Scientific Prose
A physicist lands on a deserted island where every choice he makes spawns a new reality, and every version of himself exists simultaneously – right up until he loses track of which «him» was the original «him» to begin with.
NeuroBlog
Why Our Brains Find It Easier to Believe Scary Things (and How Not to Become Paranoid)
Personal Growth & Learning • Cognitive Psychology
We're digging into why our brain latches onto negative scenarios and whether it's possible to teach it to notice the good, all while keeping a grip on common sense.
In the city, voices have begun to surface, foretelling events seconds before they unfold. An audio archivist tries to determine whether this is a gift – or the haunting glitch of a time loop.
An exploration of what draws us back to our favorite songs: the meaning of the lyrics or the magic of the music, and why this debate has remained relevant for centuries, dating back to the time of the troubadours.