opinion
Opinions in science, science fiction, and fantasy.
Can We Bring Back the Woolly Mammoth? Scientists Are One Step Closer with Woolly Mice
Imagine walking through the Arctic tundra and spotting a real, living woolly mammoth. It sounds like something straight out of Jurassic Park, but scientists are actually working to make it happen. And their latest breakthrough? Creating "woolly mice", tiny creatures with genetic traits borrowed from the prehistoric giants.
By Bevy Osuosabout a year ago in Futurism
Wasting Money, Resources, Time, Energy 101
The sun sets and we turn on our lights. In our fast-paced lives, we often forget to look up to our starry friends. Does it not fascinate you that some of the stars you look at were once observed by Einstein, Newton, Galileo, Da Vinci, Aristotle, and even dinosaurs? We might not have seen these personalities or creatures, but something far out at a distance appears to have witnessed the story of mankind slowly unfolding.
By Krutarth Trivediabout a year ago in Futurism
The Digital Afterlife: Can Technology Make Us Immortal?
For as long as humans have existed, we have been obsessed with the idea of immortality. Ancient rulers built pyramids to preserve their legacies, alchemists searched for the elixir of life, and philosophers debated the nature of the soul. But what if the key to eternal life isn’t in magic or mythology—but in technology?
By Ahmet Kıvanç Demirkıranabout a year ago in Futurism
From Hieroglyphs to Emojis:
Byline: How symbols, from ancient carvings to digital icons, have shaped—and sometimes shattered—human bonds. Prologue: The First “LOL” In 1999, Japanese designer Shigetaka Kurita created 176 pixelated icons to help users communicate on a clunky mobile internet platform. Among them: a heart, a musical note, and a tiny pile of poop. These were the first emojis. Fast-forward to 2024: Over 3,600 emojis exist, and 92% of online users deploy them daily. But Kurita’s innovation wasn’t new—it was a digital revival of humanity’s oldest instinct: to compress meaning into symbols.
By Pure Crownabout a year ago in Futurism
The Forgotten Genius of Ada Lovelace:
Byline: The 19th-century visionary who saw beauty in numbers and machines in metaphors. Prologue: A Mind Between Two Worlds In 1833, a 17-year-old girl named Ada Byron attended a London salon where guests marveled at a clanking brass contraption: Charles Babbage’s Difference Engine, a mechanical calculator. While others saw gears and numbers, Ada saw something else entirely—a “thinking machine” that could compose music, paint art, and perhaps even dream.
By Pure Crownabout a year ago in Futurism
The Hearts of Nara City
The country of Japan is a country of contradiction. Wooden temples shrouded in the early morning mist border metal Goliaths, office complexes of sprawling webworks of steel and glass. Down the dim alleyways of the bustling city sprouts the idyllic garden, blossoming straight out of a Ghibli feature. A culture that embraces the traditions and roots of its past with as much fervor as it reaches up for the flourishing of the future is that of the verdant landscape, the towering volcano, and the titantic megacity.
By Greg Craigabout a year ago in Futurism
The Quantum Paradox: How Uncertainty Powers Human Creativity
Prologue: The Jazz of the Universe In 1959, physicist Freeman Dyson scribbled a note to his colleague Richard Feynman: “Your diagrams look like jazz—particles dancing to rules they’re inventing mid-air.” Feynman’s Nobel Prize-winning work in quantum electrodynamics revealed a subatomic world where particles exist in multiple places at once, where certainty is a myth, and where creativity isn’t just allowed—it’s mandatory.
By Pure Crownabout a year ago in Futurism
The Science of Sacrifice:
Introduction: The Paradox of Sacrifice In 1965, biologist George Price published a mathematical equation explaining why altruism—a behavior that costs the giver—could evolve in nature. He later gave away all his possessions to homeless alcoholics in London, spiraled into depression, and died by suicide. Price’s story embodies the enigmatic duality of sacrifice: a force that can elevate species and destroy individuals. From vampire bats sharing blood meals to parents working night shifts for their children’s education, sacrifice is wired into life itself. But what does science say about why we give up something precious, and what happens when we do?
By Pure Crownabout a year ago in Futurism
Title: "The Unseen Marathon: . AI-Generated.
The town of Cedar Ridge was a patchwork of winding roads and pine-scented trails, a place where mornings began with the murmur of coffee grinders and the whir of bicycle wheels. For 28-year-old Alex Hartman, cycling wasn’t just a sport—it was a language. Since childhood, he’d translated joy, grief, and ambition into the rhythm of his rides. By 25, he’d podiumed at regional races, his red jersey fluttering like a flag of defiance against the odds. But on a rain-slicked highway one October afternoon, a distracted driver swerved into his lane. The screech of metal, the shatter of carbon fiber, and the searing pain in his leg marked the end of the life he’d known—and the start of a journey he’d never have chosen.
By Pure Crownabout a year ago in Futurism
Keep Dreaming Big: . AI-Generated.
Keep Dreaming Big: Your Ideas Can Light Up 2025 and Beyond Hey, you! Yeah, you—the one with that glimmer in your eye and a mind bubbling with dreams. It’s February 27, 2025, and the world’s practically bursting with wild wonders: sleek robots weaving through crowded parks, picking up trash with a cheerful beep; holograms flickering in classrooms, teaching kids about ancient Rome like they’re strolling the Colosseum; and billboards flashing ads for lunar vacations, promising moon-dust souvenirs. Pretty cool, huh? But here’s the real magic: you’ve got ideas simmering in your head that could shine just as bright—maybe brighter. Don’t let this fast-moving future intimidate you, friend. Your dreams are the fuel for what’s next, and I’m here to cheer you on every step of the way.
By Pure Crownabout a year ago in Futurism



