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The Spiritual Materialist

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nautil.us

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Thu, Apr 6, 2023 11:05 AM

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How transcendent feelings arise from the forces of Darwinian natural selection. Plus: to supercharge

How transcendent feelings arise from the forces of Darwinian natural selection. Plus: to supercharge learning, look to play; is there any place for race in medicine?; and more. . [View in browser]( | [Become a member]( April 6, 2023   Did a friend forward this? [Subscribe here](. Good Morning! Here’s the latest stories from Nautilus—and this week’s Facts So Romantic below [READ NAUTILUS](   [HEALTH]( [Is There Any Place for Race in Medicine?]( Medicine uses race to try to provide more equitable care. But that prescription likely does more harm. BY AMITHA KALAICHANDRAN What prescription would you recommend?” my attending physician asked me. [Continue reading →]( Experience the endless possibilities and deep human connections that science offers [SUBSCRIBE TODAY](   [EVOLUTION]( [The Spiritual Materialist]( How transcendent feelings arise from the forces of Darwinian natural selection. BY ALAN LIGHTMAN [Continue reading →]( [PSYCHOLOGY]( [To Supercharge Learning, Look to Play]( Play and art engage all of our senses and enhance attention. BY SUSAN MAGSAMEN & IVY ROSS [Continue reading →]( [HEALTH]( [Exercise Is Great for Our Brains, Too, Right?]( One question for Luis Ciria, a neuroscientist at the University of Granada. BY BRIAN GALLAGHER [Continue reading →](   FACTS SO ROMANTIC The Best Things We Learned Today [Spirituality]( is a spandrel. [Nautilus→](   [Neuroimaging studies]( have found only cultural links to brain appearance, not racial ones. [Nautilus→](   [Once you open up to the idea]( of playful landscapes being everywhere and anywhere, suddenly your surroundings become a world of possibility. [Nautilus→](   [The brain]( is not like a muscle. [Nautilus→](   [It is beginning to look as if space]( is woven out of quantum entanglement in a manner similar to the way quantum engineers weave qubits together to build quantum computers. [Black Holes: The Key to Understanding the Universe→](   [Great Blue Wall Challenge]( Do you have a solution that can help restore marine biodiversity in the Western Indian Ocean? Take part in the [Great Blue Wall Challenge](and submit your idea on Uplink, the open innovation platform of the WEF. The deadline is April 23, 2023. [Submit Now](   [“]()[I always find it ironic that when it comes to biomedical research, there’s a lot of emphasis on precision medicine.]([”]() [Genetic epidemiologist Genevieve Wojick tells Nautilus what’s wrong with accepting the imprecision of race.](   More in Health Can Organoids Take Us into a New Era of Medicine?]( Meet the human cell-based models that are better, faster, cheaper—and more ethical to use—than animals. BY KATHARINE GAMMON [Continue reading →]( [Targeting Cancer’s Achilles Heel]( Biden’s Cancer Moonshot aims to cut annual deaths in half. Scientists have the goal in their sights. BY LINA ZELDOVICH [Continue reading →](   P.S. On this day in 1928, James Watson, the Nobel Prize-winning co-discoverer of DNA’s double helix structure, was born. Kevin Berger wrote about how he was involved in [“one of the most egregious ripoffs in the history of science.”](   Today’s newsletter was written by Brian Gallagher   BECOME A SUBSCRIBER [Plants Are Perceptive]( Issue 48 of [Nautilus]( features “[What Plants Are Saying About Us](.” Amanda Gefter discovers that her houseplants are endowed with feelings and memories, shifting her thoughts on human perception. Also: We are all programmed to die; the void in the universe is alive; and more. [Get Nautilus in Print](   [Facebook]( [Twitter]( [Instagram]( Copyright © 2023 NautilusNext, All rights reserved. You were subscribed to the newsletter from nautil.us. Our mailing address is: NautilusNext 360 W 36th Street, 7S, New York, NY 10018 Don't want to hear from us anymore? Click here to [unsubscribe](.

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