浏览所有The New Yorker摘要
Tom Vanderbilt
Cheap and simple medical devices could improve performance and lower health-care costs, but first they have to overcome deeply rooted biases.
David Remnick
He’s in his eighties. How does he keep it fresh?
Robin Wright
As the caliphate crumbles, rival movements struggle for the soul of Sunni jihadism.
Nick Romeo
The Russian novelist believed that the dismal science was inescapably suffused with morality and politics.
Jill Lepore
Probably, but don’t count yourself out.
Joshua Rothman
Why assessing the state of the world is harder than it sounds.
As a diagnosis, it’s too vague to be helpful – but its rise tells us a lot about the way we work.
Elizabeth Kolbert
CO2 could soon reach levels that, it’s widely agreed, will lead to catastrophe.
Clare Malone
With Big Tech cracking down on COVID-19 and election misinformation, sites with more permissive posting rules are courting prominent figures on the right.
John Cassidy
The critique of economic growth, once a fringe position, is gaining widespread attention in the face of the climate crisis.
Ted Chiang
OpenAl’s chatbot offers paraphrases, whereas Google offers quotes. Which do we prefer?
Jiayang Fan
Meitu’s apps are changing what it means to be beautiful in the most populous country on Earth.
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