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01 / 05
1,066 Good News Stories You Didn’t Click On in 2024

Blog Post | Human Development

1,066 Good News Stories You Didn’t Click On in 2024

Maintaining an accurate perspective on the world takes work—reading this post will help.

Psychologists think that our demeanors are contagious: being around anxious, pessimistic people causes our own moods to tank. Bad news creates a similar phenomenon, with one negative story coloring our perception of other, unrelated events. Good news and cheerful company can have the opposite effect, but the overall battle is tilted toward negativity. As our editor writes, paraphrasing the Harvard University psychologist Steven Pinker:

Ask yourself, how much happier can you imagine yourself feeling? And again, how much more miserable can you imagine yourself to feel? The answer to the latter question is: infinitely. Psychological literature shows that people fear losses more than they look forward to gains; dwell on setbacks more than relishing successes; resent criticism more than being encouraged by praise.

The media amplifies these tendencies. Thanks to humanity’s evolution, which prioritized threats over all other considerations, negative headlines get more clicks—surely one reason why floundering news outlets are producing more and more of them.

It doesn’t help that most good news is not news at all. Everyone knows that thousands of pilots land safely every day, but the next dramatic plane crash will shock us and command our attention. Ironically, progress contributes to this aspect of our negativity bias. Bad things—like disaster deaths, racial intolerance, and, of course, airline accidents—have become more interesting precisely because they have become more unusual.

All this means that, while rational optimism about the world is the more realistic viewpoint to hold, maintaining such a perspective is a constant, uphill struggle. Below is our latest contribution to that valuable endeavor: a list of all the good news we could round up in 2024. And it’s not saccharine stuff, but meaty feats of human ingenuity, heartening trends, and plain good luck. Read and feel your spirits rise!


Agriculture

Farming AI, robots, and drones

1. New Robot Harvests Cotton by Plucking It Like a Lizard’s Tongue
2. AI Spotting Sick Tulips to Reduce Disease in Dutch Bulb Fields
3. Drones and Robots Could Replace Some Field Workers
4. Farmer’s One of First to Use AI Driverless Tractors
5. Rice Farming Gets an AI Upgrade
6. Drones and Driverless Tractors Usher in New Age of Farming
7. AI Could Conquer the Superweeds
8. AI-Powered Weed-Killing Robots Threaten a $37 Billion Market
9. The Kenyan Farmers Deploying AI to Increase Productivity
10. Crop-Spraying Robot Is Designed to Reduce Emissions

Food abundance

11. Coal-Based Feed Uses 1/1000th as Much Land as Farming
12. AI Will Mean Cheaper Food
13. Southern Brazil Reaps Record Soy to Offset Center-West Crop Failure
14. Share of Children Facing Severe Food Poverty Falls in Nigeria
15. Global Food Production Reaching Record Highs
16. Good News from the World’s Farms
17. The “Superfood” Taking over Fields in Northern India
18. Have Swiss Scientists Made a Chocolate Breakthrough?
19. India’s Average Household Food Spending Falls Dramatically
20. More Beef Is Now Farmed with Fewer Cows on Less Land
21. Vegetables Grew Faster than Population over the Last 60 Years

Genetic engineering

22. New Coffee Genetic Map Promises Better Brews
23. Scientists Fine-Tune Iodine and Potassium Levels in Veggies
24. Introducing Meat–Rice: Grain With Added Muscles for Protein
25. Genetically Modified Banana Approved by Regulators
26. Gene-Edited Virus-Resistant Pigs Trot Toward Market
27. Origin Agritech Reveals Corn Yield Breakthrough
28. Rejoice! You Are Living in the Golden Age of Fruit
29. Scientists’ ‘Super Banana’ Could Save Thousands of Lives
30. Company Gets Green Light for GMO Non-browning Apple
31. Genetic Gains Underpinning a Strawberry Green Revolution
32. Why America’s Berries Have Never Tasted So Good
33. In Search of a Healthier Spud
34. Biotech Wants Vegetarians to Eat Its Peas Spliced with Beef DNA
35. Gene-Editing Will Help Us Cope with Climate Change
36. CRISPR Builds a Big Tomato That’s Actually Sweet
37. How Big Data Created the Modern Dairy Cow
38. AI Supercharging Crop Breeding to Protect Farmers from Climate

Pest control

39. Gene Drives May Combat Devastating Screwworms
40. A Seed Treatment to Transform the Agrochemical Market
41. “Murder Hornets” Eradicated in the US, Agriculture Officials Say

Lab-grown produce

42. Israeli Company to Make World’s First Cultivated Beef Steaks
43. From Lab to Plate: No-Kill Dim Sum and Steak Frites
44. Finnish Startup Begins Making Food “From Air and Solar Power”
45. Researchers Find Way to Enhance Taste of Lab-Grown Meat
46. Britain Is First Country in Europe to Approve Lab-Grown Meat
47. Solar Foods Obtains Self-Affirmed GRAS Status for Solein in the United States

Pollination

48. Wait, Does America Suddenly Have a Record Number of Bees?
49. Bee Colonies: Worldwide Population on the Rise

Conservation and Biodiversity

Cats

50. Sighting of Tiger and Cubs Raises Hopes for Species in Thailand
51. Images Raise Hopes of Return of Wild Jaguars to the US
52. Indian Cheetah Family Grows: Kuno Welcomes Five New Cubs
53. Wild Lynx in Spain Is Almost Free of Risk of Extinction
54. One of World’s Rarest Cats No Longer Endangered
55. Wildcats Born outside Captivity in Cairngorms a “Major Milestone”
56. Thai Tiger Numbers Swell as Prey Populations Stabilize
57. Tiger Population Census in Bangladesh Shows Upward Trend

Birds

58. Architects Want to Save Birds from Death by Buildings
59. Kiwi Birds Born in New Zealand’s Capital for First Time in Over a Century
60. The Ulūlu Is No Longer Listed as Critically Endangered
61. How AI Is Helping Us Learn about Birds
62. The Guam Kingfisher Could Soon Return to the Wild
63. AI Analyses Bird Sounds for Somerset Conservation Project
64. Population of UK’s Tallest Bird Hits Record-Breaking High
65. Finches Reintroduced to Galapagos Islands
66. Bearded Vultures Continue Comeback in Southeast France
67. The Incredible Comeback of Britain’s Barn Owls
68. Record Cinereous and Griffon Vulture Pairs Observed in Bulgaria
69. The British Birds Saved from the Brink of Extinction
70. Rare Birds Return Home Due to Unique Conservation Efforts
71. Conservationists Spot Eagle Species after 500-Year Absence
72. The Resurgence of the Florida Grasshopper Sparrow
73. Record Number of Breeding Puffins on Island in Gulf of Maine
74. New Zealand Rushes Vaccination of Endangered Birds
75. This Bird Species Was Extinct in Europe. Now It’s Back
76. Habitat Restoration Leads to Black Grouse Population Increase
77. Hope for North America’s Most Endangered Bird
78. First White-Tailed Eagles Breed in 150 Years
79. “Extinct” Guam Kingfisher Takes Flight Again After Nearly 40 Years
80. Rare Birds Discovered in Western Australia Desert
81. Northern Bald Ibis: Back from the Brink
82. A Wasp Helps Save One of World’s Rarest Birds from Extinction
83. Red-Cockaded Woodpeckers Recover in Southeast US
84. Indian Experts Hail Breakthrough in Bid to Save Huge Native Bird
85. Hawaiian Crows Return to Wild for First Time in More than 20 Years

Turtles

86. In Bangladesh, Olive Ridley Turtles Have Huge Egg Increase
87. The Seagrass Species That Is Not So Slowly Taking over the World
88. After Water Quality Improves, Sea Turtles in Brazil Get Healthier
89. Sea Turtle Nests in Greece Reach Record Numbers
90. Sea Turtles Aren’t Vanishing. In Fact They’re Thriving

Whales

91. A Surprising Success Story for Humpback Whales
92. Scientists Confirm Cetacean’s Presence off New England
93. Gray Whale Die-off Is Officially Declared Over
94. Listen to World’s First “Chat” between Humans and Whales
95. Researchers Hear Whale Songs That Hint at Antarctic Resurgence
96. Scientists Are Learning the Basics of Sperm Whale Language
97. Fin Whales Making Strong Comeback in the Southern Ocean
98. A Whale Makes a Comeback 100 Years after Vanishing
99. Large Number of Whale Sightings off New England
100. The Sperm Whale ‘Phonetic Alphabet’ Revealed by AI
101. North Atlantic Right Whale Seen off Ireland for First Time in 114 Years
102. Canada Authorities Find Narwhals No Longer at Risk
103. Humpback Whales Increasing in Icelandic Waters
104. Whales Are Doing So Well They No Longer Need The International Whaling Commission, Says Former Head
105. Recognizing Whale Vocalizations with AI

Other comebacks

106. African Elephant Populations Stabilise in Southern Heartlands
107. Seagrass Resurgence Offers Hope for Florida’s Manatees
108. Scimitar-Horned Oryx Brought Back from Extinction
109. Coyotes Stage Comeback in Florida
110. Rethinking Monarchs: Does the Beloved Butterfly Need Our Help?
111. Wild Panda Population Nearly Doubles
112. Florida Manatees Rebound to Record-Breaking Winter Numbers
113. From Edge of Extinction to Australia’s Croc “Paradise”
114. Mexican Gray Wolves Boost Their Numbers
115. Giant Redwoods: World’s Largest Trees “Thriving in UK”
116. Near-Extinct Crocodiles Make Comeback in Cambodia
117. Numbers of Rare Sticky Plant Triple in Scottish Hills
118. Good News for Some Threatened Species in Australia
119. Gray Wolves Making Historic Comeback in California
120. Southern Bluefin Tuna Delisted as a Threatened Species
121. India’s One-Horned Rhino Numbers Charging Ahead
122. Gorilla Population Recovery in Rwanda
123. “Green-Listed” Scimitar Oryx Bounces Back
124. Endangered Sierra Nevada Yellow-Legged Frogs Are Making a Comeback

Forests

125. In Brazil, Drones Take Flight in Rio in High-Tech Reforestation Push
126. The World’s Forests Are Doing Much Better than We Think
127. Pakistan Bucks Global Trend with 30-Year Mangrove Expansion
128. India’s Forest Cover Has Increased Consistently over Last 15 Years
129. Uzbekistan Plants a Forest Where a Sea Once Lay
130. Colombia Deforestation Fell to 23-Year Low in 2023
131. Things Are Looking up for Africa’s Upside-down Baobab Trees
132. China’s Desertified Land Shrinks by 4.3 Million Hectares Since 2012
133. China Completes Huge Green Belt Around Its Biggest Desert
134. Cutting-Edge Tech Is Guiding Nature Restoration in UK Forests

Reefs

135. Largest Deep-Sea Coral Reef to Date Is Mapped by Scientists
136. Mapping Corals Reveals More Reefs Than Previously Known
137. How Much Sediment Is Supplied to Coral Islands From the Reef System?
138. A Reef in Cambodia That Filled Scientists with Hope
139. The Australian Oyster Reef Revival
140. New Method Can Help Grow Coral Larvae
141. Could a Multivitamin Help Save Coral Reefs?

Rivers and lakes

142. These Robot Boats Are Cleaning up Asia’s Waterways
143. Han River Shows Recovery After Seoul’s Restoration Initiatives
144. An Endangered Bird Arrival Shows What’s Possible for the LA River

Surveillance and discovery

145. Scientists Photograph Never-Before-Seen Deep Sea Species
146. Scientists Discover 100 New Marine Species in New Zealand
147. Longest Creature Ever Seen Found on Undersea Peaks off South America
148. Meet Two “Lost” Species Rediscovered 50+ Years Later
149. Giant Pangolin Spotted in Senegal after Nearly 24 Years
150. New Tech Aims to Keep Polar Bears and People Apart
151. Giant Millipede Lost to Science Rediscovered in Madagascar
152. AI Is Trying to Keep Swimmers Safe from Sharks
153. AI Technology Keeps 6,000 Deer from Rail Routes
154. App to Reduce Deaths by Elephants Launched in India
155. Rare Moth Found 50 Years after Becoming “Extinct” in Britain
156. 750 New Species Recognized in Australia
157. Rare Frog Rediscovered in Ecuador’s Andes After 100 Years
158. Giant Fish Thought to Be Extinct Is Spotted in the Mekong River
159. New “Ghost Shark” Discovered in New Zealand Waters
160. Marine Biologists Discover New Sea Slug Species off Pacific Coast
161. Scientists Discover World’s Largest Coral—Visible from Space

Rewilding and conservation

162. Colorado Reintroduces Five Gray Wolves
163. Comeback in the Cards for Asian Antelope in Bangladesh
164. How AI Is Being Used to Prevent Illegal Fishing
165. Conservation Slowing Biodiversity Loss, Scientists Say
166. Number of Fish on US Overfishing List Reaches All-Time Low
167. Billionaire-Backed Nonprofit Begins Relocating Key Rhino Herd
168. AI Helping Find “World’s Loneliest Plant” a Partner
169. Macquarie Island Remains Pest Free 10 Years after Eradication
170. Wild Horses Return to Kazakhstan Steppes after Two Centuries
171. Conservation: Rare Caribbean Wildlife Species Saved from Extinction
172. Atlantic Salmon to Return to Heart of the UK
173. After a Century Away, Sturgeons Return to Swedish Waters
174. First Asian Elephant Vaccinated in Fight against Deadly Herpes Virus
175. Beaver Kits Back in the Cairngorms
176. First Baby Beavers Born in Urban London for 400 Years
177. This Cameroon Park Is a Beacon of Hope for the Lion in Central Africa
178. Endangered Species Restored in Yunnan Province
179. Conservation Success in China’s National Parks
180. First Baby Beavers Born in Hampshire for 400 Years
181. Rhino Poaching Plunges in South Africa
182. Pine Martens Return to Dartmoor After 150-Year Absence
183. How Farmers Are Protecting One of the World’s Rarest Reptiles
184. The Global War on Island Rats
185. Canis Aureus Makes Sudden Tracks Into Western Europe
186. Atlantic Sturgeon Reintroduced in Sweden
187. Colorado Slashes Wildlife-Involved Crashes Using Wildlife Crossings

De-extinction and genetic engineering

188. How Bison Herds Came Back from the Brink
189. Svalbard’s Doomsday Vault Gets Record Batch of Crop Seeds
190. Startup Getting Close to Bringing Back the Woolly Mammoth
191. The Plan to Genetically Engineer Endangered Northern Quoll
192. Researchers Reconstruct Mammoth’s Genetic Code in Unprecedented Detail
193. Biblical Tree Resurrected from Mystery Seed in Judean Desert
194. Herd of Tauros to Be Released Into Highlands to Replicate Extinct Aurochs
195. Tasmanian Tiger Genome Pieced Together from 110-Year-Old Pickled Head
196. The Doomsday Plant Vault Gets Thousands of New Seeds
197. A Cloned Ferret Has Given Birth for the First Time in History
198. Engineering Immunity in Frogs to Fight Fungal Disease

Culture and tolerance

Gender equality

199. Turk Women Can Now Use Solely Own Surnames after Marriage
200. Zambia Passes Legislation Setting Marriageable Age at 18
201. Women’s Financial Inclusion Boosted in Sub-Saharan Africa
202. Sierra Leone Outlaws Child Marriage in New Legislation
203. Gambia Upholds Its Ban on Female Genital Cutting
204. Colombia Outlaws Child Marriage After 17-Year Campaign
205. Young Bihari Women Are India’s Brave New Coders

LGBT

206. Estonia’s Marriage Equality Law Takes Effect
207. Greece’s Government Set to Legalize Same-Sex Marriage
208. Greece Legalises Same-Sex Marriage
209. Liechtenstein Legalizes Same-Sex Marriage in Near-Unanimous Vote
210. Study: Same-Sex Marriage in 20 Years Had No Negative Effects on Marriage Rates
211. Namibia Strikes Down Law against Same-Sex Relationships
212. Namibia Court Decriminalizes Consensual Same-Sex Conduct
213. Thai King Signs Same-Sex Marriage Bill Into Law
214. Countries Increasingly Supportive of Same-Sex Relationships

Treatment of animals

215. McDonald’s Eggs in the US Now All Come from Cage-Free Hens
216. Dog Cancer Vaccine Increases Survival Rates in Clinical Trial
217. AI Decodes Oinks and Grunts to Keep Pigs Happy

Energy and natural resources

Fission

218. NRC Approves First Non-water-Cooled Reactor in over 50 Years
219. UK Government Plans Further Nuclear Power Expansion
220. Nuclear Power Generation to Reach Record High Next Year
221. Welding Method Cuts Time to Make Mini Nuclear Reactors
222. The Nuclear Project Aimed at Revolutionizing Power Generation
223. Constellation Energy Looks to Restart Three Mile Island
224. Chinese Nuclear Reactor Is Completely Meltdown-Proof
225. Swiss Plan to Allow Construction of New Nuclear Plants
226. Three Mile Island Nuclear Plant to Help Power Data-Centers
227. Molten Salt Nuclear Reactor Gains Historic Permit from US Agency
228. Major Global Banks to Show Support for Nuclear Power
229. Nuclear Plant Finalizes Loan to Support First US Reactor Restart
230. Big Tech Has Cozied up to Nuclear Energy
231. Amazon to Invest $500 Million to Develop Small Modular Reactors
232. Google Backs Buildout of Small Nuclear Reactors in Kairos Deal
233. Small Reactors Coming to Virginia, Says Appalachian Power
234. Kenya Moves Forward with Its First Nuclear Power Plant
235. Meta Joins the Nuclear-Powered AI Fray

Fusion

236. Scientists Just Set a Nuclear Fusion Record
237. Scientists Say They Can Use AI to Solve Key Fusion Energy Problem
238. Fusion Energy Project Sited at Former TVA Coal-Fired Power Plant
239. Nuclear Fusion Experiment Overcomes Two Key Hurdles
240. Fusion Tech Finds Geothermal Energy Application
241. Fusion Power Might Be 30 Years Away but Will Benefit Us Sooner
242. Nuclear Fusion Start-up Claims Reactor Milestone
243. Fusion Start-Up Plans to Build Its First Power Plant in Virginia

Fossil fuels

244. Electricity and Air Converted into Synthetic Natural Gas
245. Oil Was Written Off. Now It’s the Most Productive US Industry

Geothermal

246. Iceland Will Tunnel into a Volcano to Tap Into Geothermal Power
247. New Results Show Rapid Geothermal Advancement
248. Frackers Are Now Drilling for Clean Power
249. BLM Expedites Geothermal Energy Permitting
250. The Untapped Potential of Geothermal Energy
251. The World’s Biggest Geothermal Power Purchase Agreement
252. Texas’s Geothermal Deal Puts Clean-Energy Battery on Coal Facility Land
253. Facebook Looks to a New Type of Geothermal Clean Energy
254. Fervo Energy Showcases Rapid Scale Up of Enhanced Geothermal
255. Geothermal Energy Could Outperform Nuclear Power
256. BLM Approves Geothermal Project, Moves to Ease Permitting

Solar

257. Turning Skyscrapers into Power Generators
258. “World-Changing” Solar Tech Could Mean the Death of Batteries
259. Solar Is Going to Be Huge
260. A Solar Microgrid Will Directly Power an Industrial Plant
261. Solar Panels Could Be “Ink-Jetted” onto Your Phone for Cheap Clean Energy
262. Meet the AI That’s Helping Build Amazon-Backed Solar Farms
263. Solar Power Is Shattering Global Records
264. Solar Power Is Bringing Light – And TV – To Amazon Villages

Batteries

265. What If You Never Had to Charge Your Gadgets Again?
266. Lithium-Free Sodium Batteries Enter US Production
267. China Switches on First Large-Scale Sodium-Ion Battery
268. Apple Supplier TDK Claims Solid-State Battery Breakthrough
269. Solid-State Batteries Enter Pilot Production

Recycling and resource efficiency

270. This Enzyme Can Recycle Single-Use Plastics within 24 Hours
271. “Super Gut” Made from Superworm’s Microbiome Devours Problem Plastics
272. California Startup Creates Key Electric Vehicle Battery Material from Methane
273. Scientists Genetically Engineer Fly Species to Eat More Waste
274. Strange Compound Can Extract Metals at 99 Percent Efficiency
275. Japan Is Recycling Food Waste Back into Food with Fermentation

Resource abundance

276. Startup Discovers Large-Scale Copper Deposit in Zambia
277. A Startup Wants to Harvest Lithium from the Great Salt Lake
278. Wyoming Hits the Rare-Earth Mother Lode
279. The Largest Flow of Natural Hydrogen Gas Ever Found
280. New Helium Discovery May Be Biggest Ever in North America
281. A Vast Source of Lithium Has Just Been Found in the US
282. Lab-Grown Gemstones Revolutionize Diamond Industry
283. Deposit of Rare Earth Elements Discovered in Norwegian Volcano
284. AI Helped Find Vast Source of the Copper That AI Needs to Thrive
285. Massive Helium Reservoir in Minnesota Is Even More ‘Mind-Boggling’ Than We Thought, New Data Suggest
286. Fertilizer Prices Edge Lower amid Lower Input Costs and Improved Production Prospects
287. New Reactor Could More than Triple the Yield of Highly Valuable Chemical
288. Massive Helium Reservoir in Minnesota Could Solve US Shortage
289. Arkansas May Have Vast Lithium Reserves, Researchers Say
290. AI Helps Uncover Metals in Australia Critical for Clean Energy

Water and desalination

291. How Our Drinking Water Could Come from Thin Air
292. The GCC’s Journey Towards Water Security
293. Taiwan to Build Large-Scale Municipal Desalination Plant
294. Namibia Initiates Construction of Second Desalination Plant amid Severe Drought
295. Acciona Starts Work on Africa’s Biggest Desalination Plant
296. Making Water from Air Could Be a Key Climate Tool: Green Daily
297. Solar-Powered Desalination System Requires No Extra Batteries
298. Algeria Has $5.4 Billion Plan to Make Drinking Water from Sea

Environment and pollution

Climate change

299. Global Land Area Growing Despite Sea Level Rise
300. Trees Stalling Effects of Global Heating in Eastern US
301. US Emissions Fell 17 Percent from 2005 Levels
302. China’s Falling Emissions Signal Peak Carbon
303. Study Finds Earth Warming, but No Evidence of Climate Change Accelerating
304. Climeworks Captures Double the CO2 for Half the Energy
305. The Vanishing Islands That Failed to Vanish
306. New Tech Will Trap CO2 from Cargo Ships and Store It in the Ocean
307. Rate of Global Warming Projected to Decline under Current Policy
308. Thwaites Glacier Won’t Collapse Like Dominoes as Feared
309. Plants Are Absorbing More CO2 than Previously Thought
310. Per Capita CO2 Emissions Have Peaked Globally

Emissions reduction, climate adaptation, and geoengineering

311. How Electricity Could Help Tackle a Surprising Climate Villain
312. Clean Jet Fuel Startup Fires up New CO2 Converter
313. A Carbon Removal Startup Powered by Sunlight and Seawater
314. Google Joins Mission to Map Methane from Space
315. Australia Is Using AI to Breed Climate-Resistant Kelp
316. The Startup Building a Plant to Zap Seawater and Grab CO2
317. Lab Grown Algae Could Be Pivotal in Reducing Global Emissions
318. Tiny Organism Can Reduce Greenhouse Gas in Farm Fields
319. Nonprofits Are Fund-Raising to Cap Abandoned Oil Wells
320. New Technology Aims to Rev up Oceans’ Power to Cool the World
321. Anti-methane Vaccine Could Reduce Impact of Cow Burps
322. This Startup Will Sell Methane-Eating Microbes to Whole Foods
323. The Breakthrough That Could Unlock Ocean Carbon Removal
324. The Startup Using Balloons to Cool the Planet
325. Frontier Buyers Sign Carbon Removal Deal with CarbonRun
326. Changing the DNA of Living Things to Fight Climate Change
327. Scientists Found a New Ally in the Fight to Clean Up CO2 Emissions

Weather and disaster resilience

328. Watching Beavers from Space Can Protect against Droughts
329. Floods Have Become Less Deadly: An Analysis of Flood Fatalities
330. Weather Forecasts Have Become Much More Accurate
331. “Digital Twin” of Earth Could Make Super Fast Weather Predictions
332. Plants Signal NASA Satellites with Waning ‘Glow’ Ahead of Drought
333. Mozambique’s Cyclone Warning Network to Protect Millions
334. Microsoft AI Is First to Predict Air Pollution for the Whole World
335. AI and Satellite Imager Can Spot Fires 500x Faster than On-Ground
336. AI Takes to the High Seas to Battle Walls of Water
337. An AI Breakthrough in Weather and Climate Forecasting
338. Artificial Intelligence Gives Weather Forecasters a New Edge
339. Google Backs Privately Funded Satellites for Wildfire Detection
340. The Fight to Save Sri Lanka’s Natural Flood Buffers
341. More People Are Surviving Avalanches than Decades Ago
342. How New Technology Will Help Save Earth from Asteroids
343. Hurricane Helene Just Made the Case for Electric Trucks
344. Why Scientists Are Drilling into Volcanos
345. Hurricane Forecasting to Get Major Machine Learning Upgrade
346. Google AI Weather Model Beats Most Reliable Forecast System

Air pollution

347. Air Pollution Levels Have Improved in Europe over 20 Years
348. Toxic Chemical Releases Declined 21 Percent in 10 Years in USA
349. The World Has (Probably) Passed Peak Pollution
350. Decline in Nitrogen Oxides Emissions from Human Activities in China
351. The Last Ozone-Layer Damaging Chemicals Are Finally Falling
352. Child Air Pollution Deaths Down 53 Percent since 2000
353. Delhi Wants Artificial Rain to Tackle Worsening Air Pollution

Water pollution

354. Oil Spills from Tankers Have Fallen by More than 90% since the 1970s
355. Plastic-Choked Rivers in Ecuador Are Being Cleared with Conveyor Belts
356. The Plastic-Eating Fungi That Could Help Clean up Oceans
357. Great Pacific Garbage Patch Could Be Eliminated in 10 Years

Growth and development

Education

358. Could Elite Colleges Embrace the SAT Again?
359. Transforming the Lives of Girls in Eastern and Southern Africa
360. How Machine Learning Is Helping Us Learn to Read
361. Morehouse to Use AI Teaching Assistants This Fall
362. Children Not in School Declined Nearly 40 Percent since 2000
363. Two Centuries Ago, Only 1 in 10 Adults Could Read. Today, It’s Almost 9 in 10
364. Schools Have Grown Less Violent since COVID
365. AI Tutors Are Already Changing Higher Ed
366. College Is Actually Getting More Affordable
367. AI Tutors for Every Student: Here’s How It Works at an Indiana School
368. Developing Regions Are Far More Schooled than 20 Years Ago

Wealth

369. Income Growth Over Five Generations of Americans
370. Generation Z Is Unprecedentedly Rich
371. It Turns Out despite Avocado Toast, Millennial Wealth Is Booming
372. The State of the American Middle Class from 1970 to 2023
373. The Dramatic Turnaround in Millennials’ Finances

Poverty

374. Long-Run Decline in US Poverty Continued in Recent Years
375. India Eliminates Extreme Poverty
376. PHL Could Hit Single-Digit Poverty Years Ahead of Schedule
377. Number of Poor in Indonesia Down 3.06 Million in the Last 10 Years
378. The World’s Poor Get Richer
379. Poverty Is Falling in Latin America
380. The Philippines Makes Significant Progress in Poverty Reduction
381. Global Poverty Update: Revised Estimates up to 2024
382. Poverty in Latin America Has Fallen to Historic Low

Productivity and economic growth

383. African Nations Dominate Top 10 Economic Growth Spots in 2024
384. Productivity Surge Helps Explain US Economy’s Resilience
385. America Is in the Midst of an Extraordinary Startup Boom
386. Economic Growth Expected to Increase through 2025
387. US Productivity Surges 2.3 Percent, Beating Forecasts
388. Victory in Sight—but the War on Global Inflation Isn’t Won Yet
389. How AI Can Help Start Small Businesses
390. India Is the Next Great Cheese Frontier
391. Can AI Help Africa Close the Development Gap?

Housing, infrastructure, and urbanization

392. US Cities Are Changing Zoning Rules to Allow More Housing
393. How AI Is Helping to Prevent Future Power Cuts
394. Kenya’s Substantial Progress in Providing Access to Electricity
395. US DOE Finalizes Rules to Speed Transmission Permitting
396. Argentina Scrapped Rent Controls. The Market Is Thriving
397. Barcelona Is Turning Subway Trains Into Power Stations
398. Chinese Safe Water Access Skyrocketed Since 2000
399. Electricity Access Continues to Improve in 2024
400. New York Clears the Way for 80,000 Homes

Labor and employment

401. Chart: Wage Growth Is Beating Inflation
402. Remote Work Is Here to Stay, Mostly for the Better
403. Average Worker Now Logs off at 4 p.m. On Fridays
404. There Are Fewer Low-Wage Workers in the US Now
405. Working Hours in Wealthy Countries Declined by Half over Last 150 Years
406. The Typical US Worker Out-Earned Inflation by $1,400 a Year
407. US Incomes Climbed Last Year, Census Bureau Says
408. Amazon Warehouses Benefit Local Economies, Study Finds

Health

Brain cancer

409. New Blood Test for Brain Cancer May Increase Survival Rates
410. World First: 13-Year-Old Child Cured of a Deadly Brain Cancer
411. A New Strategy to Attack Aggressive Brain Cancer
412. New Vaccine Triggers Immune Response to Fight Brain Tumor
413. AI Tool Speeds up Brain Tumor Classification
414. Immunotherapy Is Changing Cancer Treatment Forever
415. Researchers Develop Promising Potential Glioblastoma Therapy

Breast cancer

416. Breast Cancer Death Rate Dropped 58 Percent over 44 Years in US
417. NHS AI Test Spots Tiny Cancers Missed by Doctors
418. AI Could Spot Breast Cancer Earlier
419. Scientists Make Potential Breast Cancer Breakthrough
420. Breast Cancer Mortality Continues Three Decade Decline

Cervical cancer

421. An Alternative to the Pap Smear Is Here, No Speculum Required
422. New Cervical Cancer Treatment Cuts Risk of Dying from Disease by 40 Percent
423. Major Progress Made Against Cervical Cancer in Last Four Years
424. Mali Rolls Out Cancer-Blocking Jab

Colon cancer

425. A Blood Test for Colon Cancer Performed Well in a New Study
426. Colon Cancer Test Could Move a Step Closer to FDA Approval
427. FDA Approves Blood Test to Screen for Colon Cancer

Lung cancer

428. AstraZeneca Unveils Successes in Treatment of Lung Cancer
429. Trial Results for New Lung Cancer Drug Are “Off the Charts”
430. AstraZeneca’s Tagrisso Greatly Slows Cancer for Some People
431. Lung Cancer Vaccine Trials Launched across Seven Countries
432. A Drug Combination Stops Lung Cancer Advancing for Longer

Prostate cancer

433. Scientists Develop Cheap and Quick Test for Prostate Cancer
434. AI Outperforms Radiologists in Detecting Prostate Cancer on MRI

Skin cancer

435. Moderna’s mRNA Cancer Vaccine Works Even Better than Thought
436. Melanoma Jab Trial Results “Extremely Impressive”
437. Advanced Melanoma Patients Benefit from Double Treatment
438. Skin Cancer Incidence in Young Adults Declines in Sweden

Other cancers

439. Exciting New Cancer Drug Kinder than Chemotherapy
440. Scientists May Have Discovered a “Kill Switch” for Cancer
441. Drug Offers Breakthrough in Cancer Treatment
442. Long Term Decrease in Age-Adjusted Rate of Cancer Deaths
443. UK Cancer Study Shows Big Fall In Death Rates Since Early 1990s
444. New Car-T Cancer Therapy Is Now Made At One-Tenth the Cost
445. Cancer Signs Could Now Be Spotted Years before Symptoms
446. Moderna Inches Nearer to Successful Cancer Vaccine
447. Blood Test Hailed as ‘Incredibly Exciting’ Cancer Breakthrough
448. Cancer-Fighting Antibodies Inject Chemo Directly into Tumor Cells
449. Weight-Loss Drugs Cut Cancer Risk by a Fifth, Research Shows
450. How Cancer Vaccines Could Keep Tumors from Coming Back
451. Ozempic and Similar Drugs Lower Cancer Risks, Study Suggests
452. 11 New Breakthroughs in the Fight against Cancer
453. Weight-Loss Drugs Like Wegovy May Help Stave off Some Cancers
454. “New Era” in War on Cancer: 29.2% Drop In Death Rates since 1999
455. Lab-Grown Stem Cells Could Be a Breakthrough for Cancer Treatment
456. Treating Aggressive Cancers by Zapping Rogue DNA
457. Pancreatic Cancer Surge May Be Less Worrisome than It Seemed
458. Americans Far Safer from Cancer at Same Ages as in 1990

Brain implants

459. Musk Says First Neuralink Patient Received Implant in Brain
460. Neuralink Patient Can Move Computer Mouse by Thinking
461. Doctors Test a Revolutionary Brain-Computer Implant
462. Brain Implant Translates Thoughts to Computer Command
463. ALS Patient’s Brain Implant Translates Thoughts to Computer Commands
464. A Profile of Neuralink’s First Patient
465. Brain-Reading Device Is Best Yet at Decoding “Internal Speech”
466. Neuralink to Test Brain Implant on Second Patient
467. Bilingual AI Brain Implant Helps Stroke Survivor Communicate
468. Elon Musk’s Neuralink Device Is Implanted in a Second Patient
469. Brain Implants to Treat Epilepsy, Arthritis, or Even Incontinence?
470. Brain-Computer Interface Allows Man with ALS to “Speak”
471. Patient in Trial for Neuralink Uses Design Software, Videogames
472. This Brain Implant Lets People Control Alexa with Their Minds
473. Musk’s Neuralink Gets FDA’s Breakthrough Device Tag
474. PRIMA Implant Restores Vision in Preliminary Clinical Trial Results
475. Neuralink to Test Whether Brain Implant Can Control a Robot Arm

Other disability treatments and assistive technologies

476. New App Could Reduce Debilitating Impact of Tinnitus
477. Your iPhone Will Soon Be Able to Quickly Replicate Your Voice
478. Experimental Gene Therapy Allows Kids with Inherited Deafness to Hear
479. The “Mind-Bending” Bionic Arm Powered by AI
480. Neuralink Shows Brain-Chip Patient Playing Online Chess
481. Blood Plasma Donations Help Man Walk Again
482. Gene Therapy Restores Vision in Patients with Inherited Blindness
483. Spinal Cord Implant Helps Parkinson’s Patient Walk in New Study
484. UK Toddler Has Hearing Restored in World First Gene Therapy Trial
485. Illness Took Away Her Voice. AI Created a Replica
486. AI Is Teaching Bionic Limbs How to Learn
487. Neuralink Rival Sets Brain-Chip Record with 4,096 Electrodes
488. Gene Therapy Trial Gives Deaf Children Hearing in Both Ears
489. World First Epilepsy Device Fitted in UK Boy’s Skull
490. Bionic Leg Allows Amputees to Walk Naturally
491. A Rare Voice Box Transplant Helped a Cancer Patient Speak
492. Brain Stimulation May Give More Relief from Parkinson’s Symptoms
493. Apple Has a Hot New Product. It’s a Hearing Aid.
494. The Quest to Build Bionic Limbs That Feel Like the Real Thing
495. World-First Stem-Cell Treatment Restores Vision in People

Dementia and Alzheimer’s

496. Test Could Detect Alzheimer’s 15 Years before Symptoms Emerge
497. Early Dementia Diagnosis: Blood Proteins Reveal At-Risk People
498. The New, More-Hopeful Face of Alzheimer’s Disease
499. Ten-Minute Brain Scan Could Detect Dementia Early, Study Suggests
500. FDA Approves Eli Lilly’s Treatment for Early Alzheimer’s Disease
501. A 90 Percent Accurate Way of Testing for Alzheimer’s
502. Drugs Like Ozempic Could Slow the Effects of Alzheimer’s Disease

Diabetes

503. First Cow to Produce Human Insulin in Its Milk Created in Brazil
504. New Technique to Measure Blood Glucose Using Smartphone
505. “Smart” Insulin Responds to Changing Blood Sugar Levels
506. Lilly’s Zepbound Cut Risk of Diabetes in Obese People
507. Diabetes Took over Her Life, until a Stem Cell Therapy Freed Her
508. Stem Cells Reverse Woman’s Diabetes — A World First
509. Could AI Help Prevent Diabetes-Related Sight Loss?

Heart disease and stroke

510. New Procedure Allows Heart Repairs to Grow with Children
511. FDA Approves Wegovy to Reduce Heart Attack and Stroke Risk
512. US Improvements in Cholesterol Screening and Lipid Levels
513. Rate of Deadly STEMI Heart Attack Falls among Americans
514. “Space Hairdryer” Regenerates Heart Tissue in Study
515. Eli Lilly’s Tirzepatide Cuts Heart Failure Risks, Company Says
516. Drug Inspired by Spider Venom to Reverse Heart Attack Damage
517. Science Is Finding Ways to Regenerate Your Heart

Other non-communicable diseases

518. “Gamechanging” Drug to Prevent Hot Flushes Wins Approval in UK
519. FDA Clears First CRISPR Treatment for Beta Thalassemia
520. Angiodema: Gene Therapy Blocks Painful Hereditary Disorder
521. The Cystic-Fibrosis Breakthrough That Changed Everything
522. FDA Approves Merck’s Drug for Rare, Deadly Lung Condition
523. Paralyzed Stem Cell Treatment Patients Could Regain Movement
524. Seeing a Path to Nerve Regeneration
525. mRNA Drug Offers Hope Against a Devastating Childhood Disease
526. Diabetes Drug May Slow Progression of Parkinson’s
527. “Game Changer” UTI Vaccine Stops Infection for Nine Years
528. Newest Experimental Epilepsy Treatment: Brain-Cell Transplants
529. Patient Begins Newly Approved Sickle Cell Gene Therapy
530. Major Cause of Inflammatory Bowel Disease Found
531. Deaths from Tetanus Have Been Reduced Massively
532. New Blood Test May Detect Parkinson’s Years before Onset
533. Polycystic Ovary Syndrome Could Be Treated with a Malaria Drug
534. Scientists Say They Have Identified a Root Cause of Lupus
535. Scientists Uncover Genetic Disorder That May Affect Thousands around World
536. Cell Therapy Offers Hope to Autoimmune Disease Patients
537. Breakthrough Parkinson’s Treatment Enters Human Trials
538. Guinea Celebrates the Elimination of Maternal and Neonatal Tetanus
539. The Next Frontier for mRNA Could Be Healing Damaged Organs
540. The Mysteries of Inflammatory Bowel Disease Are Being Cracked
541. New Therapies Give Hope Against Duchenne Muscular Dystrophy
542. First Day of a “New Life” for a Boy with Sickle Cell
543. New Therapy Sends Autoimmune Diseases Into Remission
544. Lupus Was Considered Incurable. New Breakthroughs Fuel Hope.
545. Advanced Genome-Editing Therapies Head for the Clinic

Dengue

546. New Single-Dose Dengue Vaccine Shows 80 Percent Protection
547. Brazil to Release Millions of Anti-dengue Mosquitoes
548. WHO Prequalifies New Dengue Vaccine
549. Novel Way to Beat Dengue: Deaf Mosquitoes Stop Having Sex

HIV/AIDS

550. HIV Among Pregnant South Africans at Lowest Since 2002
551. Long-Acting Drugs May Revolutionize HIV Prevention and Treatment
552. More Caribbean Countries Eliminate Mother-to-Child HIV
553. HIV Vaccine Triggers Rare and Elusive Antibodies in Humans
554. Zimbabwe Turns Tide on HIV
555. Gilead’s Shot to Prevent HIV Succeeds in Late-Stage Trial
556. New HIV Prevention Drug Shows 100 Percent Efficacy in Clinical Trial
557. Engineered Virus Steals Proteins from HIV, Pointing to New Therapy
558. HIV Progress Raises Life Expectancy in Africa – UN
559. HIV Antiretroviral Therapy Saves over a Million Lives Each Year
560. Gilead Agrees to Allow Generic Version of HIV Shot in Poor Countries
561. India Sees Huge Drop in AIDS Deaths, HIV Infections Since 2010

Malaria

562. Cape Verde Reaches Malaria-Free Milestone
563. Cameroon Starts World-First Malaria Mass Vaccine Rollout
564. Cambodia on Track to Eradicate Malaria by 2025
565. Malaria Vaccine Rollout in Africa Expands Dramatically
566. New Mosquito Nets Prevented 13 Million Malaria Cases in Pilot Programs
567. Major Step in Malaria Prevention in Three West African Countries
568. Newest Malaria Vaccine Shipment Marks Child Survival Milestone
569. New Fronts Are Opening in the War against Malaria
570. Mosquito-Fighting Drone Takes Flight in Broward
571. GMO Mosquitoes Released in Djibouti to Fight Malaria
572. Ivory Coast Receives First Malaria Vaccines
573. Children Receive First Doses of New Malaria Vaccine
574. Bangladesh Is Gunning for Zero Malaria Deaths by 2027
575. Mozambique Introduces Malaria Vaccines into Routine Immunization
576. Africa: Malaria Vaccine Breakthrough for Pregnant Women
577. Zipline Drones Wing Vaccines to Malaria-Prone Western Kenya
578. Egypt Declared Malaria-Free After 100-Year Effort

Polio

579. Novel Type 2 Oral Polio Vaccine Secures WHO Prequalification
580. Wild Poliovirus Transmission Halted in Southern Africa
581. WHO Exceeds Target for Gaza Polio Vaccinations
582. Cross-Border Polio Vaccination Reaches 6.5 Million Children

Trachoma

583. Zimbabwe Strides Towards Elimination of Trachoma
584. Trachoma Eliminated as a Public Health Problem in Pakistan
585. Elimination of Trachoma as a Public Health Problem in India
586. Vietnam Eliminates Trachoma as a Public Health Problem

Tuberculosis

587. Guyana Reports Decline in Filaria, Leprosy and TB Cases
588. Rate of TB Diagnosis, Treatment in Africa Increasing
589. Cambodia Sees Significant Drop in TB Deaths in Last Two Decades
590. Tuberculosis in Ethiopia: A Drastic Decline
591. Global Tuberculosis Deaths Fall Below Pre-Pandemic Level
592. WHO Recognizes India’s “Remarkable” Progress Against TB
593. Several African Countries have Significantly Reduced TB-Related Deaths

Other communicable diseases

594. Scientists Hail New Antibiotic That Can Kill Drug-Resistant Bacteria
595. Treatment for Acute Sleeping Sickness Was Brutal — Until Now
596. India on the Verge of Eliminating “Black Fever” Kala-Azar
597. “Potent” Antibiotic Drug Boosts Fight Against Superbugs
598. Hepatitis C Cases Dropped in the US in 2022
599. Chlamydia Vaccine Shows Promise in Early Trial
600. WHO Approves Updated Cholera Vaccine to Combat Surge in Cases
601. Nigeria Becomes First Country to Roll out New Meningitis Vaccine
602. EU Approves New Antibiotic to Tackle Rise of Superbugs
603. Visceral Leishmaniasis Drug Enters Phase II Trial in Ethiopia
604. “Smart” Antibiotic Kills Bacteria While Sparing the Microbiome
605. Chad Ends Sleeping Sickness as a Public Health Problem
606. How Does Bird Flu Spread in Cows? “Good News” Revealed
607. Scientists to Launch Human Tests of Marburg Virus Vaccine
608. Flu Jab: Single-Shot Vaccine Could Stop Future Pandemic
609. Reports Show Threefold Drop in Annual Diarrheal Cases in Nepal
610. Merck Ebola Vaccine Shown to Offer Substantial Protection
611. First 100,000 Doses of Mpox Vaccine Reach DRC
612. Researchers Discover Cheap Way to Shorten Children’s Colds
613. Jordan Receives WHO Verification for Eliminating Leprosy
614. Brazil Eliminates Lymphatic Filariasis as a Public Health Problem
615. Elimination of Lymphatic Filariasis as a Public Health Problem in Timor-Leste
616. Doctors Trial mRNA Vaccine Against Vomiting Bug Norovirus
617. An “Unprecedented” Good News Story About a Marburg Outbreak
618. Measles Vaccines Saved over 90 Million Lives in the Last 50 Years
619. India’s “Blockbuster” Drugs to Take On Deadly Superbugs

Maternal care

620. “Rising US Maternal Mortality Rates” Are Due to Flawed Data
621. Saving More Mothers and Babies in Nepal
622. US Maternal Mortality Rate Declines, New CDC Data Shows
623. Anaemia among Pregnant Women Dropped in Mumbai
624. A Pill for Postpartum Depression Is Finally Getting to Patients
625. Researcher Finds Mothers Live Longer as Child Mortality Declines
626. The AI Transforming Pregnancy Scans in Africa
627. Big Declines in US Teen Births
628. Thailand Halves Number of Teen Mothers, Sets More Ambitious Goal

Fertility and birth control

629. The First Endometriosis Drug in Four Decades Is on the Horizon
630. FHI 360 Conducting Trial for Biodegradable Contraceptive Implant
631. Male Birth Control Gel Shows Promise in Early-Stage Clinical Trials
632. Your Boss Will Freeze Your Eggs Now
633. Study Suggests Drug Could Extend Women’s Fertility by Five Years
634. More than 70 Babies Have Been Born from Uterus Transplants
635. Making Eggs Without Ovaries
636. Pharma Eyes Male Birth Control Pill for Gen Z
637. US Startup Charging Couples to “Screen Embryos for IQ”
638. AI Reveals How Sperm Sticks to Egg During Fertilization
639. The Scientists Trying to Improve IVF Success Rate
640. Micro-Robot Will Navigate Fallopian Tubes to Treat Infertility
641. First Live Birth Using Procedure That Matures Eggs Outside Body

Mental health, substance abuse, and addiction

642. Vertex Non-opioid Painkiller Shows Positive Results
643. A Brain Pacemaker Helped a Woman With Depression
644. Deep Brain Stimulation Working Wonders against OCD
645. US Drug Overdose Deaths Decline for First Time in 5 Years
646. Semaglutide Treatment Reduces Risk of Alcohol Abuse, Study Finds
647. Long-Term Changing Patterns of Suicide Mortality in China
648. Can an AI Friend Make You Less Lonely?
649. Startups Launch Life-Saving Tech for the Opioid Crisis
650. Sadness among Teen Girls May Be Improving, CDC Finds
651. An Implantable Sensor Could Reverse Opioid Overdoses
652. Cigarette Smoking Rate in US Ties 80-Year Low
653. Youth E-Cigarette Use Drops to Lowest Level in a Decade
654. US Overdose Deaths Plummet, Saving Thousands of Lives
655. The New Drug Set to Tackle Schizophrenia
656. Ozempic Patients Have Much Lower Risk of Opioid Overdose
657. AI Chatbots May Ease the World’s Loneliness
658. Teen Tobacco Use Falls to 25-Year Low

Weight and nutrition

659. Cheaper, Faster Method Produces 10X More Ozempic
660. You Can Now Get Weight-Loss Drug Zepbound through Amazon
661. Weight Loss from Wegovy Sustained for up to Four Years
662. The First Step toward Precision Medicine for Obesity
663. New GLP-1 Drugs Promise Weight Loss and Health Benefits
664. The New Bacon Safe for Some People Allergic to Red Meat
665. Forget Cutting Sugar—New Tech Makes It Healthier Instead
666. US Obesity Rates Fall For the First Time Ever, New CDC Data Shows
667. GLP-1s Are Among the Most Important Drug Breakthroughs
668. Obesity Dipped in US Adults Last Year for the First Time in a Decade

Longevity and mortality

669. Indian State of Maharashtra Sees 11 Percent Drop in Child Mortality
670. Historic Milestone as Global Child Deaths Fall Below 5 Million in 2022
671. US Life Expectancy Rises after 2-Year Dip
672. Morocco’s Remarkable Progress in Reducing Child Mortality
673. Immunization Efforts Saved 154 Million Lives over past 50 Years
674. Life Expectancy Projected to Increase Nearly 5 Years by 2050
675. Ozempic Can Reduce Risk of Serious Illness and Death, Study Finds
676. How a Kettle Could Help Keep Older People Safe
677. Startup Brings New Hope to the Pursuit of Reviving Frozen Bodies
678. US Death Rate Dropped 6 Percent in 2023, CDC Says
679. Ozempic Could Delay Ageing, Researchers Suggest
680. Unlikely Candidates Lead Hunt for New Longevity Drugs
681. A Disease That Makes Children Age Rapidly Gets Closer to a Cure
682. Life Expectancy Is Returning to Pre-pandemic Levels

Surgery and emergency medicine

683. New Antivenom Raises Hopes Against Lethal Snakebites
684. The Bone-Marrow-Transplant Revolution
685. Spanish Doctors Perform Robotic Heart Surgery on Teenagers
686. New Technique Could Make Blood Types Mutually Compatible
687. New Technique to Freeze Brain Tissue without Harm
688. “Digital Twin” Heart Lets Doctors Test Treatments before Surgery
689. The Search for a Blood Substitute
690. Blood Thinner Could Be Used to Treat Cobra Venom, Global Study Suggests
691. Injectable Goo Could Fix Joints without Surgery, Study Suggests
692. FDA Approves Nasal Spray to Treat Dangerous Allergic Reactions
693. A New Device That Stops Bleeding from Gunshot Wounds
694. Not Ready for a Knee Replacement? You Might Be Able to Fix Your Cartilage
695. A Placenta Restored Her Face After an Explosion
696. One Company Is Turning To Cadavers for Bone Marrow
697. Survivor of Suicide Attempt Receives Innovative Face Transplant
698. “Neural Tourniquet” Can Stop Bleeding with Nerve Stimulation

Organ transplantation

699. Experimental Use of Pig Liver Filters Blood Externally
700. Japanese Startup Creates Pigs Engineered for Organ Donation
701. Genetically Modified Pigs Could End Organ Transplant Shortage
702. Scientists Grow Organs Using Fluid Drawn During Pregnancy
703. Patient Receives World’s First Gene-Edited Pig Liver Transplant
704. First Human Transplant of a Genetically Modified Pig Kidney Performed
705. Woman Given a New 3D-Printed Windpipe in a World-First
706. Pig Kidney Transplant Patient Leaves Hospital
707. “Mini Liver” Will Grow in Lymph Node in Bold New Trial
708. She Received a Pig Kidney Instead of a Traditional Transplant
709. Pig-to-Human Liver Transplant Recipient “Doing Very Well”
710. Meet the Pigs Raised to Grow Kidneys and Hearts for Humans
711. Startup Raises $191 Million to Edit Pig Organs for Human Transplant
712. Donating a Kidney Is Safer than Ever, Reassuring Research Finds
713. World’s First Whole-Eye Transplant
714. World’s First Fully Robotic Double Lung Transplant
715. Woman Receives Nation’s Third Pig Kidney Transplant

Testing, diagnosis, measurement, and imaging

716. How Portable X-Ray Machines Are Helping Remote Patients
717. Google AI Could Use a Person’s Cough to Diagnose Disease
718. FDA Authorizes AI-Driven Test to Predict Sepsis in Hospitals
719. Will AI Replace Doctors Who Read X-Rays?
720. Smart Bandages Heal Wounds Faster and Talk to Your Doctor
721. Rapid UTI Test Cuts Detection Time to 45 Minutes
722. Low-Cost CRISPR-Based Test Offers Rapid Influenza Diagnosis
723. Apple Watch Is Becoming Doctors’ Favorite Medical Device
724. AI Is Supercharging Disease Diagnosis
725. New Imaging Set to Accelerate Cardiovascular Medicine
726. The Companies Realizing Theranos’s Failed Dream
727. FDA Authorizes First Over-the-Counter Home Syphilis Test
728. How Portable, AI X-Ray Machines Are Helping Uganda Beat TB
729. Common Food Dye Lets Scientists See through Skin
730. FDA Approves First At-Home Flu Vaccine in US, a Nasal Spray
731. This $400 Genetic Test Could Save Your Life
732. Doctors Can Create a “Digital Twin” of Your Heart and Other Organs
733. Breakthrough Genomic Test Identifies Virtually Any Infection
734. AI Chatbots Defeated Doctors at Diagnosing Illness
735. AI Is Trained to Spot Warning Signs in Blood Tests

Health systems

736. AI May Make Shopping for Health Insurance Less Painful
737. How Sewers Are Helping Us to Monitor Disease Outbreaks
738. Medical AIs with Human Faces Are on Their Way
739. ChatGPT 4 Could Be Used to Triage Eye Problems
740. AI That Determines Risk of Death Helps Save Lives in Hospital Trial
741. Infrastructure Upgrade to Kenya’s Vaccine Cold Chain Rolls Out
742. Ro Launches GLP-1 Supply Tracker to Mitigate Shortages
743. OpenAI Expands Healthcare Push with Color Health’s Cancer Copilot
744. Foreign Physicians Can Help Solve America’s Doctor Shortage
745. Perceptive Says AI-Driven Robot Is Faster than a Human Dentist
746. Day Zero Antivirals for Future Pandemics
747. Dr. Chatbot Will See You Now
748. Hospitals Are Safer than They Were Before the Pandemic: Study
749. Semaglutide Reduces All-Cause Hospital Admissions

General wellbeing

750. Internet Use Is Associated with Greater Wellbeing, Study Finds
751. A Mysterious Health Wave Is Breaking Out Across the US
752. Most American Adults Are Flourishing Online

Other innovations

753. New Allergy Drug Protects Against Severe Food Reactions
754. Tooth-Regrowing Drug Will Be Given to Humans in September
755. Australia Starts New Peanut Allergy Treatment for Babies

Politics & Freedom

756. Return to Pre-pandemic Passport Processing Times
757. Australia to Abolish Nearly 500 So-Called Nuisance Tariffs
758. Japan to Allow Divorced Parents to Share Custody of Children
759. Human Rights Have Improved in All Regions over the Last Century
760. Bribery Becoming Less Accepted in Nigeria, Says New Report
761. Americans Can Now Renew Passports Online
762. Half a Million Stateless People Got Citizenship in past Decade
763. Americans Can Now Visit China for up to 10 Days Without a Visa

Technology

Artificial intelligence

764. Microsoft Is Adding an AI Button to PC Keyboards
765. ChatGPT Can Now “Remember” Users—Including Their Voice
766. Anthropic Debuts Its Most Powerful Chatbot Yet
767. AI Race Heats up between OpenAI, Google and Mistral
768. Meta’s Llama 3 Language Model Outperforms Competitors in Tests
769. Microsoft Makes a New Push into Smaller AI Systems
770. Microsoft Readies New AI Model to Compete with Google, OpenAI
771. OpenAI Releases GPT-4o, a Faster Model for All ChatGPT Users
772. Pocket-Sized AI Models Could Unlock a New Era of Computing
773. Anthropic Releases “Most Intelligent” AI Model in Rivalry with OpenAI
774. New LLM Can Run on the Energy Needed to Power a Lightbulb
775. OpenAI Unveils GPT-4o Mini, a Smaller and Cheaper AI Model
776. OpenAI Working on New Reasoning Technology
777. Meta Releases the Biggest and Best Open-Source AI Model Yet
778. OpenAI Is Launching Search Engine, Taking Aim at Google
779. New Device Could Slash AI Energy Use by up to 2,500 Times
780. Ask Claude: Amazon Turns to Anthropic’s AI for Alexa Revamp
781. Apple Unveils New iPhones with Built-in Artificial Intelligence
782. OpenAI Releases “Strawberry” Model with Better Reasoning
783. OpenAI Launches AI Models It Says Are Capable of Reasoning
784. Google Will Begin Flagging AI-Generated Images in Search
785. Is Math the Path to Chatbots That Don’t Make Stuff Up?
786. Anthropic Releases AI Tool That Can Take over the User’s Cursor
787. OpenAI Folds AI-Powered Search Engine Into ChatGPT
788. The IEA Thinks We Should Chill Out About AI’s Energy Demand
789. Gemini 2.0 Flash Has Enhanced Performance and Fast Responses
790. OpenAI’s ChatGPT Will Respond to Video Feeds in Real Time
791. New LLM Technique Slashes Memory Costs up to 75 Percent

AI content

792. OpenAI Teases “Sora,” Its New Text-To-Video AI Model
793. Scientists Turn to AI to Make Beer Taste Even Better
794. Microsoft’s VASA-1 Can Deepfake a Person with Photo and Audio
795. Google Rolls Out AI-Generated, Summarized Search Results in US
796. Ancestry.com Uses AI to Boost Black Family Trees
797. DeepMind Creates AI Model That Can Add Sound to Silent Videos
798. India’s Farmers Are Now Getting Their News from AI Anchors
799. AI Races to Adapt Chatbots to India’s Many Languages
800. An AI Version of Al Michaels’ Voice for Summer Olympics
801. How AI Brought 11,000 College Football Players to Digital Life
802. Audible to Start Generating AI Voice Replicas of Select Narrators
803. Roblox Is Launching a Generative AI That Builds 3D Environments
804. People Are Using Google Study Software to Make AI Podcasts
805. Meta Unveils Instant AI Video Generator That Adds Sounds
806. New AI Audio Model Synthesizes Sounds That Have Never Existed
807. OpenAI Makes Video Generator Sora Publicly Available in US

Communications

808. SpaceX Deploys New Direct-to-Smartphone Satellites
809. Apple Making “Significant” Push to Bring AI to iPhones
810. 6G Speeds 500 Times Faster than Average 5G Cellphones in Test
811. Nokia and NASA Are Taking 4G into Space
812. Google Builds First Subsea Cable Connecting Africa to Australia
813. Musk Launches SpaceX’s Starlink Internet Services in Indonesia
814. Welcome to the Era of the AI Smartphone
815. Mobile Money Accounts Are Surging Globally
816. Starlink Mini Brings Space Internet to Backpackers
817. How Mobile Phone Networks Are Embracing AI
818. Google Translate Is Using AI to Translate 110 New Languages
819. Record-Breaking 402 Tbps Data Transmission Speeds Achieved
820. Google Unveils AI-Powered Pixel 9 Series Smartphones
821. United Airlines to Offer Free Wi-Fi Using Starlink from SpaceX
822. Air France Launches Free Ultra-High-Speed Wi-Fi on All Flights
823. Starlink Roll-Out Across Africa Could Transform Digital Health Services
824. Meta Plans to Build Subsea Cable Spanning the World, Sources Say
825. FCC Approves Starlink Plan for Cellular Phone Service
826. Europe Signs €10.6bn Iris² Satellite Deal to Rival Starlink

Computing

827. Qualcomm Unveils Chip for Mixed Reality
828. Digital Transformation Drives Development in Africa
829. Intel Unveils Largest-Ever AI “Neuromorphic Computer”
830. Practical Uses for Quantum Computers Are Emerging
831. Putting Data Centers in Space Could Reduce Carbon Footprint
832. Quantum Computers Could Be Powered Using Lasers Made 10,000 Times Smaller
833. Japan on Edge of EUV Lithography Chip-Making Revolution
834. Novel Ideas to Cool Data Centers: Liquid in Pipes or a Dunking Bath
835. Google Says It’s Made a Quantum Computing Breakthrough
836. New Quantum Computer Chip Now Outperforms Fastest Supercomputers in Certain Areas
837. Microsoft Builds First Datacenters with Wood to Slash Emissions
838. Amazon Announces Super-Computer, Homegrown AI Chips
839. Google Reveals Breakthrough Quantum Computing Chip

Construction and manufacturing

840. Material Discovered by AI Could Reduce Lithium Use in Batteries
841. The Man Leading the Masters with Irons Made by a 3D Printer
842. Ford Introduces Mixed Reality Tech to Factory Floor
843. The World’s Fastest Brick-Laying Construction Robot
844. World’s Largest 3D-Printed Neighborhood Nears Completion
845. Completion of World’s First 1-Km Skyscraper in Sight
846. Global Robot Density in Factories Doubled in Seven Years
847. America’s Biggest Apartment Owner Leaps Into Modular Homes
848. New Ironmaking Breakthrough Achieves Huge Productivity Boost

Drones

849. 2024 Will Be a Breakout Year for Delivery Drones
850. Delivery Drones Are Getting Bigger — Much Bigger
851. Amazon Gets FAA Approval to Expand Drone Deliveries
852. The Drones Looking Inside Intensifying Hurricanes
853. Drone Deliveries, Slow to Take Flight, Come to Silicon Valley

Robotics and automation

854. Toyota’s Robots Are Learning to Do Housework
855. A Restaurant Robot Might Mix Your Next Cocktail
856. Humanoid Robots Will Join BMW’s Production Line
857. Companies with Robots Now Need Human “Robot Wranglers”
858. Uber Eats Is Launching Robot Deliveries in Japan
859. New AI Outperforming Customer Service Representatives?
860. Amazon Robots Provide Glimpse of an Automated Workplace
861. Underwater Robots Are Helping Maritime Shipping
862. How Robots Are Taking over Warehouse Work
863. At Moderna, OpenAI’s GPTs Are Changing Almost Everything
864. Boston Dynamics’ New Humanoid Moves Like No Other Robot
865. Why It’s Good News That Robots Are Getting Smarter
866. Restaurant Robots Can Cook, Serve and Bus Your Meal Now
867. Walmart Plans to Launch Digital Shelf Tags in 2,300 Stores
868. The German Robots Hunting the Sea for WW2 Bombs
869. AI Drive-Thru Ordering Is on the Rise
870. The Company Making AI Robots to Do America’s Toughest Jobs
871. A Major Change Is Coming to Taco Bell Drive-Thrus
872. DeepMind Develops a Robot That Can Play Amateur Level Ping-Pong
873. Robots Are Starting (Good) Fires in California
874. These New AI Bots Will Do Just about Anything for You
875. Chipotle’s New Guac Robots Can Peel Avocados in 26 Seconds
876. Teeth-Cleaning Robots, Red-Light Therapy: What’s Ahead for Dental Health
877. Robot Performs the Cello with a Symphony Orchestra
878. Incredible Generalist Robots Show Us a Future Free of Chores
879. Contract Bots Could Soon Be On Both Sides of Negotiations
880. Robots and Labor in Nursing Homes
881. Robot Learns to Perform Surgical Tasks Expertly Just by Watching Videos
882. Amazon Developing Special Eye Glasses to Speed Up Deliveries
883. Robot Runs Marathon for the First Time in South Korea

Autonomous vehicles

884. Waymo’s Driverless Cars Are Finally Ready for the Highway
885. Huge Remote Controlled Vessels Are Setting Sail
886. Self-Driving Semi-trucks Are Coming to America’s Highways
887. Tesla to Unveil Robotaxi in August, Elon Musk Says
888. Waymo Will Launch Paid Robotaxi Service on Wednesday
889. Abu Dhabi Autonomous Racing League Starts This Weekend
890. Waymo Says Its Driverless Cars Are 200 Percent Safer Than You
891. Waymo Opens up Its Robotaxis to Everyone in San Francisco
892. Cheap Robotaxi Rides Rattle China’s Taxi Drivers
893. Self-Driving Labs Are the New AI Asset
894. Waymo Has Doubled Its Weekly Paid Robotaxi Trips since May
895. Waymo’s Roomier Robotaxi with Less-Expensive Tech
896. Human Drivers Are to Blame for Most Serious Waymo Collisions
897. Uber, Waymo to Expand Autonomous Ride Hailing
898. Driverless Semis Could Be Months Away
899. Uber Partners With WeRide to Offer Robotaxi Rides in UAE
900. Elon Musk Shows off Tesla “Robotaxi” That Drives Itself
901. Up Close with the 300 Tonne Driverless Trucks
902. Waymo Opens Robotaxi Service to Anyone in Los Angeles
903. Waymo and Hyundai Enter Multi-Year, Strategic Partnership
904. Waymo Unveils Plan to Bring Its Robotaxi Service to Miami
905. Study: Waymo Is Safer than Even the Most Advanced Human-Driven Vehicles

Aviation

906. 3 Reasons Why Everyone Aboard Japan Airlines Flight 516 Survived
907. 2023 Was One of Aviation’s Safest Years on Record
908. Two Airplanes Lugging Cargo Together Is Texas Startup’s Bet
909. Boom’s First Test Flight Could Signal Return of Supersonic Travel
910. First Test Flight of “Un-Jammable” Quantum Navigation System
911. Blue Origin Launches Six Tourists to the Edge of Space
912. Solar-Powered Planes Take Flight
913. Joby Says FAA Authorizes In-House Software for Air Taxi Service
914. Air Taxi Startup Is Developing a Hydrogen-Powered VTOL
915. Hypersonic Breakthrough Can Eliminate Deadly “Shock Train”
916. New Study Finds Commercial Air Travel Keeps Getting Safer
917. XB-1 Supersonic Aircraft Completes Second Flight
918. Toyota to Invest $500 Million in Flying Taxi Start-up Joby
919. Boom Supersonic XB-1 Hits New Speed Record in Latest Test Flight
920. NASA and Partners Scaling up Air Traffic Management
921. Feds OK Rules for US To Begin Electric Air Taxi Service
922. Archer Inks Deal to Bring Electric Air Taxis to Japan
923. US Airlines Have Traveled Light-Years Since the Last Plane Crash

Other transportation

924. World’s Biggest Cruise Ship Icon of the Seas Sets Sail
925. A Novel Solution to Clean up Heavy-Duty Truck Emissions
926. Formula E Electric Vehicles Could Spark Widespread Innovation
927. Revolutionary Electric Car Battery Can Charge in 10 Minutes
928. A New Model for Saving Lives on Roads around the World
929. US Traffic Deaths Decline by an Estimated 3.6 Percent in 2023
930. Want an EV with 600 Miles of Range? It’s Coming
931. AI and Radar Seek to Unsnarl a 500-Year-Old Traffic Jam
932. In Warsaw, Falling Road Deaths Signal a Traffic Safety Turnaround
933. Cruise Ships Keep Breaking Records

Science

Archeology, geology, and paleontology

934. Vesuvius Challenge 2023 Grand Prize Awarded
935. Ceramic Head Reveals Previously Unknown Roman Settlement
936. The Future of AI Is Helping Us Discover the Past
937. UK’s Most Complete Dinosaur Fossil in a Century Reveals New Species
938. Deepest-Ever Samples of Rock from Earth’s Mantle Unveiled
939. AI Is Helping Scholars Decipher the Epic of Gilgamesh
940. AI Research Uncovers 300 Ancient Etchings in Peru’s Nazca Desert
941. LIDAR Uncovers A New Mayan Lost City
942. Satellites Reveal Stunningly Detailed Maps of Earth’s Seafloors

Biology

943. Science Is Immortalizing Argentina’s Top Polo Horses
944. Moonwalk Bio Joins Push for “Epigenetic” Treatments
945. A Key to Detecting Brain Disease Earlier than Ever
946. A New Clue to Understand Lupus and Other Autoimmune Diseases
947. Researchers Produce 3D-Printed Functional Human Brain Tissue
948. Move Over, CRISPR: RNA-Editing Therapies Pick up Steam
949. Doctors Can Now Edit the Genes Inside Your Body
950. This AI Can Find Billions of New Antibiotics
951. World’s Most Powerful MRI Scans First Images of Human Brain
952. Generative AI Arrives in the Gene Editing World of CRISPR
953. AI Identifies New Parkinson’s Treatments 10X Faster
954. Study Maps Most Detailed Tree of Life Yet for Flowering Plants
955. AlphaFold 3 Predicts the Structure and Interactions of All of Life’s Molecules
956. AI Used to Predict Potential New Antibiotics
957. Gene Editing’s Next Big Targets
958. Scientists Get a New Tool to Study a Common Genetic Heart Condition
959. Ex-Meta Experts Offer Tool to Create New Molecules
960. New System for Programmable Genome Design Discovered
961. How Science Went to the Dogs (And Cats)
962. “Jumping Gene” Enzyme Edits Genomes without Breaking DNA
963. Nobel-Winning Technique Like “Google Earth for Molecules”
964. Mice Live Longer When Inflammation-Boosting Protein Is Blocked
965. Ex-Meta Scientists Develop AI Model That Creates New Proteins
966. Engineered Skin Microbiome Outsmarts Mosquitoes
967. Scientists Uncover Microbes That Destroy Forever Chemicals
968. Arc Institute Is Bringing Science into the Century of Biology
969. Where Did Viruses Come From? AIs Are Finding Answers
970. After a Decade, Scientists Unveil Fly Brain in Stunning Detail
971. CRISPR Helps Brain Stem Cells Regain Youth in Mice
972. DNA “Printing Press” Could Quickly Store Mountains of Data
973. Plan to Sequence DNA of Millions of Species Gains Momentum
974. Researchers Enable Hamster Cells to Photosynthesize Light
975. AI Protein-Prediction Tool AlphaFold3 Is Now More Open
976. New Tool Allows Study of Gene Mutation in Living Human Cells
977. Scientists Map Out the Human Body One Cell at a Time
978. New CRISPR System Pauses Genes Rather than Turning Them Off
979. LLMs Surpass Human Experts in Predicting Neuroscience Results
980. “Dark Proteome” Survey Reveals Thousands of New Human Genes
981. Researchers Get an Updated Look at the Human Cell Atlas
982. “DNA Typewriters” Can Record a Cell’s History
983. Animals as Chemical Factories

Chemistry and materials

984. Reflective “Cooling Glass” Could Help Fight Climate Change
985. AI to Drastically Cut Time to Develop New Battery Materials
986. A Shape-Shifting Plastic with a Flexible Future
987. Researchers Develop Better Way to Make Painkiller from Trees
988. Diamond Wafers Could Store a Billion Blu-Ray’s Worth of Data
989. World’s Thinnest Gold Leaf Is Just One Atom Thick
990. Researchers Turn Wool and Hair Offcuts into Graphite for Batteries
991. LEDs Change Everything
992. Scientists Grow Diamonds from Scratch in 15 Minutes
993. AI Develops “Ground-Breaking” Magnet Free of Rare Earth Metals
994. A New Age of Materials Is Dawning
995. AI Radically Speeds Predictions of Materials’ Thermal Properties
996. This Sound-Suppressing Silk Can Create Quiet Spaces
997. Unique Transistor “Could Change the World of Electronics”
998. AI Makes Effective Solar Cells—and Explains the Results
999. Genome Stored In Crystal Could Survive to the End of the Universe
1000. Rings Get Bigger as Lab-Grown Diamonds Catch up to Naturals
1001. Carbon Bond That Uses Only One Electron Seen for First Time
1002. “Forever” Chemicals Can Be Destroyed with Clever Chemistry

Math and physics

1003. A Quantum Leap Measuring Microscopic Gravity
1004. Most Accurate Clock Ever Can Tick for 40 Billion Years
1005. How Light Can Vaporize Water without the Need for Heat
1006. Google’s Proof-Solving AI Models Claim Math Breakthrough
1007. Breakthrough Step Toward Revealing Hidden Structure of Prime Numbers
1008. Mathematicians Discover New Class of Shape Seen Throughout Nature
1009. China Poised to Turn On Powerful Source of X-Ray Light

More AI in science

1010. AI Copilots and Robo-Labs Turbocharge Research
1011. These Engineers Say Chatbots and AI Can Help Design Chips
1012. The AI Scientist: Automated Open-Ended Scientific Discovery
1013. Do AI Models Produce More Original Ideas than Researchers?
1014. DeepMind and BioNTech Build AI Lab Assistants for Scientific Research
1015. “In Awe”: Scientists Impressed by Latest ChatGPT Model o1

Space industry and exploration

1016. Aditya-L1: India’s Solar Mission Reaches Sun’s Orbit
1017. Japan’s Successful Moon Landing Was the Most Precise Ever
1018. Japan: Moon Lander Slim Comes Back to Life and Resumes Mission
1019. NASA Gives 95-Minute Warning as Meteor Burns up outside Berlin
1020. Private Space Company to Make Historic Lunar Landing Attempt
1021. Tiny Robot Completes First Simulated Surgery in Space
1022. Space Mission Will Deliver Hyper-Detailed View of Earth
1023. Odysseus, a Private Lunar Lander, Launches Toward the Moon
1024. Odysseus Mission Marks Milestone in Reaching the Moon
1025. Varda Hopes New Research Draws More Drugmakers to Space
1026. SpaceX Celebrates Progress on the Third Flight of Starship
1027. 3D Cosmic Map Raises Questions over Future of Universe
1028. NASA Hears from Voyager 1 after Months of Quiet
1029. “We’re in a New Era”: The 21st-Century Space Race Takes Off
1030. Intuitive Machines Eyes Second Moon Landing This Year
1031. Mars Rover Mission Will Use Pioneering Nuclear Power Source
1032. SpaceX to Launch ESA’s EarthCARE Satellite
1033. A New Search for Ripples in Space from the Beginning of Time
1034. Lunar Probe Is First to Land on Far Side of the Moon
1035. SpaceX’s Starship Rocket Completes Test Flight
1036. Largest Camera Ever Built Arrives at Rubin Observatory in Chile
1037. “At Least 150,000 Tons” of Water Frost Discovered on Mars
1038. China Space Probe Returns with Rare Moon Rocks
1039. Japan Launches Advanced Satellite on Its New H3 Rocket
1040. Scientists Design Spacesuit That Turns Urine into Drinking Water
1041. Cave on the Moon Confirmed, and Scientists Suspect Hundreds More
1042. Space-Based Solar Power Gets Practical
1043. Reservoir of Liquid Water Found Deep in Martian Rocks
1044. SpaceX Is Set to Launch the First Civilian Spacewalk
1045. Robot Metalsmiths Resurrect Toroidal Tanks for NASA
1046. Lab-Grown Muscle Launched Into Space for Medical Research
1047. Polaris Dawn Astronauts Reach Record High Orbit Above Earth
1048. Tech Billionaire Pulls off First Private Spacewalk High Above Earth
1049. First Private Spacewalk a Success!
1050. NASA’s Laser Comms Demo Makes Deep Space Record
1051. SpaceX Machines Catch Rocket Booster Back at the Launch Pad
1052. Europa Clipper Launched to Explore a Moon’s Habitability
1053. SpaceX Capsule Returns Stranded Astronauts to Earth
1054. SpaceX Completes Sixth Starship Test Flight but Calls Off Catch
1055. Falcon 9’s Flight Rate 30x Higher than Shuttle at 1/100th the Cost
1056. Satellites Launched to Create Artificial Solar Eclipses in a Demo

Violence

1057. Intentional Homicides in Mexico Fall by 4.18%, below 30,000 in 2023
1058. Italy, Home of the Mafia, Now One of Europe’s Safest Countries
1059. The US Crime Rate Is Still Dropping, FBI Data Shows
1060. Murder Rates Are Plummeting. What Should We Make Of It?
1061. Most Crime Has Fallen by 90% in 30 Years in England and Wales
1062. Number of Crimes in Seoul Falls, Yet Public Anxiety Rises
1063. Homicide Rates Have Declined Dramatically over the Centuries
1064. A Plummeting Murder Rate Stuns Boston
1065. Number of Countries with the Death Penalty Falls
1066. Drop in Death Penalty Support Led by Younger Generations

Blog Post | Progress Studies

Why Our Economic Intuitions Are Often Wrong

Such tendencies stem from our evolutionary psychology.

Summary: Many common economic misconceptions stem from evolved psychological instincts shaped in small, zero-sum tribal environments rather than modern market systems. These “folk-economic beliefs” lead people to misinterpret trade, immigration, profit, and regulation in ways that conflict with core economic principles, often resulting in support for counterproductive policies. Because these intuitions are predictable products of human evolution, they help explain why flawed policy ideas persist. Recognizing their origins can help counteract misleading instincts while reinforcing those that support cooperation, openness, and exchange.


Economic models, rooted in assumptions of rational agents maximizing utility under constraints, have long provided elegant frameworks for understanding human behavior in markets and societies. Yet, a persistent friction exists between these idealized portrayals of human beings and the ways humans actually navigate economic choices. People frequently champion policies that contravene basic economic principles, including minimum wages presumed to boost income without increasing unemployment, rent controls expected to enhance housing affordability without reducing supply, or tariffs that run counter to comparative advantage and affordability. 

People also often harbor counterproductive intuitions, including a belief that markets erode social bonds, despite evidence that markets foster cooperation and thus generate wealth. Those tendencies stem not primarily from information deficits or irrationality, but from our evolutionary psychology. Our economic intuitions were shaped over thousands of years in a world of tight-knit coalitions and zero-sum intergroup rivalry, rendering modern market dynamics counterintuitive. As such, markets are often rejected even when they are beneficial.

Perhaps the most parsimonious theory explaining why people often behave in economically harmful ways is the evolutionary cognitive model of folk-economic beliefs, proposed by anthropologist Pascal Boyer and political scientist Michael Bang Petersen. Folk-economic beliefs are those convictions about economics held by laypeople untrained in the discipline, which frequently diverge from fundamental economic tenets. These encompass mental representations of varied topics, from prices, taxes, and tariffs to welfare and immigration policies. 

Economists have traditionally critiqued those as irrational beliefs or mere byproducts of ignorance, but an evolutionary lens reveals them as predictable outcomes. Ensuring fairness in trade, sustaining social ties, forming stable coalitions, and resolving ownership disputes are all responses to ancestral challenges.

If this theory is right, both actual economic behavior and theories generated to explain one’s own economic behavior are predictable outputs shaped by evolution. When folk-economic beliefs are wrong, they are wrong in predictable ways. We talk about impersonal markets as if they were tribal conflicts. We treat economies built on innovation and surplus as if they were competitions over a fixed pile of resources.

Consider the intuition that international trade is harmful because another country’s gain must come at our expense. From the perspective of standard economics, this belief contradicts the well-established principle of comparative advantage. People benefit from specializing in what they produce most efficiently relative to other goods, even if a trading partner could produce everything more cheaply in absolute terms. For example, a surgeon who happens to type faster than his or her secretary still benefits from hiring the secretary and devoting more time to the operating room. Likewise, America could manufacture its own consumer electronics, but every dollar and worker devoted to assembling phones is one not devoted to designing the software, chips, and financial services where American companies dominate globally. The result is more total output and mutual gain. 

But our evolutionary psychology wasn’t built for comparative advantage, especially not across nations or tribes. Human groups historically competed for territory, food, and status in genuinely zero-sum ways. If a rival coalition grew stronger, it often meant danger for one’s own group. When modern individuals read that another nation is exporting more goods to us or running a trade surplus, our tribal instincts activate automatically. Nations are cognitively represented as tribes, and the success of one tribe is interpreted as a threat to another. The idea that both sides could benefit simultaneously—one of the central insights of the founder of economics, Adam Smith—runs against these deeply ingrained intuitions.

The same coalitional logic helps explain folk intuitions about immigration. People opposed to immigration often claim that immigrants steal jobs from native workers while also claiming that immigrants siphon welfare benefits without working. At the level of policy argument, these beliefs are apparently contradictory. But at the level of psychology, it is an expression of a single concern: Outsiders are draining scarce resources, whether the resource is employment or benefits. Humans evolved in groups where membership conferred access to shared resources—food, protection, or status—and where vigilance against free riders was essential to sustaining cooperation. Newcomers were therefore automatically treated with suspicion until they proved themselves contributors rather than exploiters. 

When this ancestral heuristic is applied to modern societies, it produces the intuition that outsiders must be consuming resources that properly belong to the in-group. Whether the imagined resource is employment or welfare benefits—or even whether the resources are truly being drained at all—matters less than the perceived threat that group boundaries are being crossed without reciprocal contribution.

The psychology of free-rider detection also helps explain the peculiar ambivalence that many people feel toward welfare programs. While people readily endorse the idea that society should help those who fall on hard times through no fault of their own, they also often worry that welfare encourages laziness or dependency. These views appear inconsistent only if one assumes that the public is applying a unified economic theory. In reality, they reflect two separate intuitions inherited from ancestral exchange systems. 

Communal sharing evolved as a form of insurance against bad luck—injury, illness, or an unsuccessful hunt—where helping unlucky group members benefited everyone in the long run. But the same systems also evolved to punish individuals who accepted benefits without contributing. Modern welfare debates, therefore, activate both intuitions simultaneously: compassion toward the unlucky and hostility toward perceived free riders.

Another common folk-economic belief concerns the relationship between labor and value. Many people feel instinctively that hard work should determine how much something is worth. In the hunter-gatherer economy that prevailed throughout most of human history, where the value of goods was closely tied to the labor required to obtain them, strenuous physical effort was intrinsically linked to value production itself. Hunting, gathering, building shelter, or crafting tools all involved visible effort, and individuals who contributed more effort typically produced more resources. When applied to modern economies, however, the same intuition can generate confusion. A programmer writing code, an entrepreneur coordinating supply chains, or an investor allocating capital may create enormous value without performing visible physical labor. Yet because our ownership psychology is sensitive to effort and physical transformation, profits earned through organization or innovation are often framed as morally suspect, particularly in socialist ideology, as if they are thought to represent extraction rather than creation.

Some common opposition to the profit motive itself is explained by evolutionary psychology. In face-to-face exchange within small groups, unusually large gains might indeed signal exploitation or hoarding of limited resources, especially since producing anything of value typically required communal effort. Someone who consistently benefited more than others from trades might be suspected of manipulating information or violating norms of fairness. Modern markets, however, often reward individuals precisely when they discover new ways to produce value—whether by inventing technologies, improving logistics, or coordinating complex networks of production. Because these gains arise in impersonal systems where the beneficiaries are distant strangers rather than known partners, the profits they generate can appear less like the rewards of innovation and more like evidence of exploitation. Our evolved moral intuitions struggle to track value creation in dispersed and opaque market economies. 

Likewise, many popular beliefs about regulation reflect ancestral intuitions that authorities can directly control outcomes. If the chieftain declared that food should be shared in a particular way, the order could be enforced through social pressure or direct monitoring. Everyone knew everyone else, contributions were visible, and deviations from the rule could be punished immediately. This experience makes it intuitively plausible that governments—which our minds intuitively represent as tribal coalitions—can simply command economic results. If rents are too high, they can seemingly be capped. If wages are too low, they can seemingly be raised. In naive folk economic theories, prices behave like promises: If the authority decrees a new price, the outcome should follow.

Take rent control. The intuition behind it is straightforward and morally compelling. If landlords raise rents beyond what tenants can afford, people may feel exploited: The owner of a scarce resource is extracting more money without providing more housing. A government rule limiting rents, therefore, appears to be a simple act of fairness. Ostensibly, the authority steps in, declares that rents may not exceed a certain level, and housing becomes affordable again. But in a large market economy, rent is not just a moral claim between two parties; it is also a signal that coordinates investment and construction of new housing. When rents are capped below market levels, the signal changes. Developers build fewer apartments, landlords convert rental units into other uses, and maintenance becomes less attractive when returns are limited. Over time, the supply of housing shrinks, and the shortage intensifies the very scarcity that drove up rents in the first place. The policy fails because the mechanism through which housing supply adjusts is invisible to the mental model that produced the intuition.

The same dynamic appears in debates over minimum wages. If workers are paid very little for difficult or unpleasant jobs, the situation feels unfair. But in a modern labor market, wages also function as signals that coordinate hiring decisions across the entire economy. When the legal wage floor rises above the productivity level of some jobs, employers do not simply pay the higher wage and continue as before. They reduce hiring, substitute machines for labor, or restructure tasks so fewer workers are needed. When the price signal changes, behavior adjusts in ways that the regulation does not anticipate. That often results in the direct opposite of the desired effect.

Our minds are not utility-maximizing computers that simply deviate from optimal choice due to insufficient information or computing power. They are toolkits. Our brains have evolved specialized cognitive inferences, or intuitions, that solved specific recurrent problems in our ancestral environments: “Who is trustworthy enough for exchange?”; “Who belongs to us, and who is a rival?”; “Who is contributing, and who is free riding?”; “Who owns what, and by what right?” These intuitions can be triggered by modern economic situations that resemble ancestral ones, even when the actual circumstances are entirely new. 

Folk-economic beliefs persist not because people are irrational, but because they are reasoning with tools that evolved for cooperation in small bands rather than coordination among millions of strangers. The challenge for modern societies is therefore not simply to correct mistaken beliefs, but to build policies that work with—rather than against—the grain of human psychology. 

Modern market societies represent one of humanity’s most remarkable cultural achievements. They sprang into existence by harnessing a set of different ancient social instincts—ones that enable cooperation on an unprecedented scale. Systems of property rights, contract enforcement, and voluntary exchange allow millions of strangers to coordinate their efforts in mutually beneficial ways. 

The claim here is not that markets are infallible. It is that our evolved intuitions often misidentify the nature of the problem and thus point us toward remedies that make matters worse. In modern economies, visible losses are concentrated, immediate, and emotionally salient, while gains are diffuse, gradual, and spread across millions of consumers and workers. A serious defense of markets should therefore acknowledge adjustment costs and real harms without conceding the larger error: namely, the belief that mutual gain, price signals, profit, and exchange are themselves forms of exploitation.

Some of our evolved instincts—like valuing reciprocity, rewarding contribution, and building reputations for trustworthiness—remain essential foundations of prosperous societies. Markets themselves depend on these deeply rooted norms of cooperation and exchange. Other intuitions, however—such as zero-sum thinking about trade, suspicion toward profitable innovation, or faith that authorities can simply command prices—reflect cognitive shortcuts suited to environments of scarcity and small-group control rather than decentralized abundance.

Recognizing that distinction should not slide into a blanket dismissal of public concern. Not every market outcome is benign, and not all economic anxieties are mere illusions. Trade, technological change, and broader shifts from manufacturing to services can impose real, concentrated losses on particular workers, firms, and regions, especially on lower-skill laborers whose jobs are exposed to offshoring or displaced by new forms of production. A person who loses a job to foreign competition is not simply trapped by faulty intuition. He is often responding to a real personal setback, even if the economy as a whole still becomes more productive and prosperous. The same is true in recessions or cases of fraud and negative externalities. 

The question, then, is how societies can address those real costs without defaulting to the very intuitions that misdiagnose their causes. 

Human beings are unusual among species in our ability to revise intuitive judgments through abstract reasoning and accumulated knowledge. Economic theory, empirical evidence, and institutional experimentation provide ways of testing whether our intuitions about markets actually match the systems we inhabit. Over time, societies that learn to distinguish between intuitions that promote cooperation and those that misread economic signals tend to design more effective institutions. 

Much of the progress of the last two centuries reflects this process of institutional learning precisely. Expanding trade networks, protecting property rights, encouraging innovation, and allowing prices to coordinate decentralized decisions have produced levels of prosperity that would have been unimaginable in the environments where our economic intuitions evolved. Understanding the evolutionary roots of folk-economic beliefs, therefore, helps explain why certain policy ideas remain politically attractive despite poor outcomes—and why sustained progress often depends on institutions that counteract some of our most natural intuitions while reinforcing others that support cooperation, openness, and exchange.

This article was originally published at The Dispatch on 4/21/2026.

Blog Post | Water & Sanitation

If You Think New York City Life Is Bad Now

A grim tour of preindustrial New York

Summary: Many people today feel that life in New York has become uniquely difficult. Some imagine that the city was cleaner, safer, and more livable in the distant past. Historical reality tells a different story: Preindustrial New York was marked by extreme filth, unsafe water, rampant disease, pervasive poverty, and living conditions that made everyday life harsh and dangerous compared to contemporary times.


Discontent fueled the 2025 New York City mayoral election and Zohran Mamdani’s victory. A common theme echoed across the five boroughs: New York is a hard place to live. “We are overwhelmed by housing costs,” said Santiago, a 69-year-old retiree, outside a Mamdani rally. Those opposed to Mamdani had their own complaints. María Moreno, a first-time voter from the Bronx who supported Andrew Cuomo, lamented, “Now everything’s dirty, and our neighborhood does not feel safe.”

Today’s voters have legitimate grievances. The city’s housing costs, quality-of-life issues, and perceptions of disorder weigh heavily on residents’ minds. But it’s important to keep things in perspective. Different voters may romanticize different eras, but many seem to share a sense that if they could travel back far enough in time, they’d find a New York that was once clean, safe, and affordable. When Americans were polled in 2023, almost 20 percent said that it was easier to “have a thriving and fulfilling life” hundreds of years ago. Across the country, as one writer put it, people are engaged in an “endless debate around whether the preindustrial past was clearly better than what we have now.” In fact, Mamdani’s politics are grounded in an ideology that first arose from the frustrations of the early industrial era.

If Americans could go back in time to preindustrial New York City, however, they’d likely be horrified and possibly traumatized. Despite today’s real challenges, most New Yorkers would not trade places with their predecessors.

Long before the rise of factories and industry, New York City was a bustling port, founded by the Dutch as New Amsterdam in order to trade furs in the early seventeenth century. As early as 1650, local authorities enacted an ordinance against animals roaming the streets to protect local infrastructure—but to no avail. Then, in 1657, according to the Dutch scholar Jaap Harskamp:

New Amsterdam’s council attempted to ban the common practice of throwing rubbish, ashes, oyster-shells or dead animals in the street and leave the filth there to be consumed by droves of pigs on the loose. When the English took over the colony from the Dutch, pigs and goats stayed put. . . . Pollution persisted. The streets of Manhattan were a stinking mass. Inhabitants hurled carcasses and the contents of loaded chamber pots into the street and rivers. Runoff from tanneries where skins were turned into leather flowed into the waters that supplied the shallow wells. The (salty) natural springs and ponds in the region became contaminated with animal and human waste. For some considerable time, access to clean water remained an urgent problem for the city. . . . The penetrating smell of decomposing flesh was everywhere.

Into the early twentieth century, urban living in the United States felt surprisingly rural and agrarian, with an omnipresent reek to match. As late as the mid-nineteenth century, pigs roamed freely through New York City streets, acting as scavengers, and nearly every household maintained a vegetable garden, often fertilized with animal manure.

Indoor air quality was no better. A drawing from Mary L. Booth’s History of the City of New York depicts a seventeenth century New Amsterdam home with smoke from the fireplace swirling through the room. Indoor air pollution remains a serious problem today in the poorest parts of the world, as smoke from hearths can cause cancer and acute respiratory infections that often prove deadly in children. One preindustrial writer railed against the “pernicious smoke [from fireplaces] superinducing a sooty Crust or furr upon all that it lights, spoyling the moveables, tarnishing the Plate, Gildings and Furniture, and Corroding the very Iron-bars and hardest stone with those piercing and acrimonious Spirits which accompany its Sulphur.”

That said, before industrialization, though inescapable filth coated the interiors of homes, the average person owned few possessions for the corrosive hearth smoke and soot to ruin. By modern standards, New Yorkers—like most preindustrial people—were impoverished and lacked even the most basic amenities. According to historian Judith Flanders, in the mid-eighteenth century, “fewer than two households in ten in some counties of New York possessed a fork.” Many were desperately poor even by the standards of the day and could not afford housing. One 1788 account lamented how in New York City, “vagrants multiply on our Hands to an amazing Degree.” Charity records suggest that the “outdoor poor” far outnumbered those in almshouses.

Water quality was infamously awful. In seventeenth-century New Amsterdam, as Benjamin Bullivant observed, “[There are] many publique wells enclosed & Covered in ye Streetes . . . [which are] Nasty & unregarded.” A century later, New York’s water remained as foul as Bullivant had described. Visiting in 1748, the Swedish botanist Peter Kalm noted that the city’s well water was so filthy that horses from out of town refused to drink it. In 1798, the Commercial Advertiser condemned Manhattan’s main well as “a shocking hole, where all impure things center together and engender the worst of unwholesome productions; foul with excrement, frogspawn, and reptiles, that delicate pump system is supplied. The water has grown worse manifestly within a few years. It is time to look out [for] some other supply, and discontinue the use of a water growing less and less wholesome every day. . . . It is so bad . . . as to be very sickly and nauseating; and the larger the city grows the worse this evil will be.”

In 1831, a letter in the New York Evening Journal described the state of the water supply:

I have no doubt that one cause of the numerous stomach affections so common in this city is the impure, I may say poisonous nature of the pernicious Manhattan water which thousands of us daily and constantly use. It is true the unpalatableness of this abominable fluid prevents almost every person from using it as a beverage at the table, but you will know that all the cooking of a very large portion of the community is done through the agency of this common nuisance. Our tea and coffee are made of it, our bread is mixed with it, and our meat and vegetables are boiled in it. Our linen happily escapes the contamination of its touch, “for no two things hold more antipathy” than soap and this vile water.

In 1832, New York experienced a devastating outbreak of cholera, a bacterial disease that typically spread through contaminated water and killed with remarkable speed. A person could wake up feeling well and be dead by nightfall, struck down with agonizing cramps, vomiting, and diarrhea. The epidemic killed about 3,500 New Yorkers.

The initial actions taken to protect city water supplies were often private in nature. In fact, throughout the eighteenth and early nineteenth centuries, private businesses generally supplied urban water infrastructure. Despite such efforts, drinking water remained generally unsafe, even after industrialization, until the chlorination of urban water supplies became widespread.

The pervasive grime took a visible toll on New Yorkers. Between drinking tainted water, eating contaminated food, inhaling smoke-filled air, and living with poor hygiene, the average resident sported visibly rotten teeth. One letter from 1781 described an acquaintance: “Her teeth are beginning to decay, which is the case with most New York girls, after eighteen.”

The dental practices of the time were often as horrifying as the effects of neglect. The medieval method of using arsenic to kill gum tissue, providing pain relief by destroying nerve endings, remained common until the introduction of Novocain in the twentieth century. As late as 1879, the New York Times ran a story with the headline “Fatal Poison in a Tooth; What Caused the Horrible Death of Mr. Gardiner. A Man’s Head Nearly Severed from His Body by Decay Caused by Arsenic Which Had Been Placed in One of His Teeth to Deaden an Aching Nerve—an Extraordinary Case.” The story detailed the gruesome demise of a man in Brooklyn, George Arthur Gardiner, who died “in great agony, after two weeks of indescribable suffering.”

Preindustrial New York City wasn’t uniquely miserable for its time. Life was harsh everywhere, and cities around the world contended with the same foul smells, filth, poor sanitation, and grinding poverty. Rural villages were no better. Peasant families often brought their livestock indoors at night and slept huddled together for warmth. In many cases, rural peasants were even poorer than their urban counterparts and owned fewer possessions. Farm laborers frequently suffered injuries and aged prematurely from backbreaking work, while fertilizing cesspits spread disease and filled the air with an inescapable stench.

Though they may have been slightly better off than their rural counterparts, the struggles of early New Yorkers are worth remembering. However daunting the problems of today may seem, a proper historical perspective can remind us of how far we’ve come.

This article was originally published in City Journal on 1/13/2026.

Blog Post | Human Development

The Grim Truth About the “Good Old Days”

Preindustrial life wasn’t simple or serene—it was filthy, violent, and short.

Summary: Rose-tinted nostalgia for the preindustrial era has gone viral—some people claim that modernity itself was a mistake and that “progress” is an illusion. This article addresses seven supposed negative effects of the Industrial Revolution. The conclusion is that history bears little resemblance to the sanitized image of preindustrial times in the popular imagination.


When Ted Kaczynski, the Unabomber, declared in 1995 that “the Industrial Revolution and its consequences have been a disaster for the human race,” he was voicing a sentiment that now circulates widely online.

Rose-tinted nostalgia for the preindustrial era has gone viral, strengthened by anxieties about our own digital era. Some are even claiming that modernity itself was a mistake and that “progress” is an illusion. Medieval peasants led happier and more leisurely lives than we do, according to those who pine for the past. “The internet has become strangely nostalgic for life in the Middle Ages,” journalist Amanda Mull wrote in a piece for The Atlantic. Samuel Matlack, managing editor of The New Atlantis, observed that there is currently an “endless debate around whether the preindustrial past was clearly better than what we have now and we must go back to save humanity, or whether modern technological society is unambiguously a forward leap we must forever extend.”

In the popular imagination, the Industrial Revolution was the birth of many evils, a time when smoke-belching factories disrupted humanity’s erstwhile idyllic existence. Economics professor Vincent Geloso’s informal survey of university students found that they believed “living standards did not increase for the poor; only the rich got richer; the cities were dirty and the poor suffered from ill-health.” Pundit Tucker Carlson has even suggested that feudalism was preferable to modern liberal democracy.

Different groups tend to idealize different aspects of the past. Environmentalists might idealize preindustrial harmony with nature, while social traditionalists romanticize our ancestors’ family lives. People from across the political spectrum share the sense that the Industrial Revolution brought little real improvement for ordinary people.

In 2021, History.com published “7 Negative Effects of the Industrial Revolution,” an article reflecting much of the thinking behind the popular impression that industrialization was a step backward for humanity, rather than a period of tremendous progress. But was industrialization really to blame for each of the ills detailed in the article?

“Horrible Living Conditions for Workers”

Were horrible living conditions a result of industrialization? To be sure, industrial-era living conditions did not meet modern standards—but neither did the living conditions that preceded them.

As historian Kirstin Olsen put it in her book, Daily Life in 18th-Century England, “The rural poor . . . crowded together, often in a single room of little more than 100 square feet, sometimes in a single bed, or sometimes in a simple pile of shavings or straw or matted wool on the floor. In the country, the livestock might be brought indoors at night for additional warmth.” In 18th-century Wales, one observer claimed that in the homes of the common people, “every edifice” was practically a miniature “Noah’s Ark” filled with a great variety of animals. One shudders to think of the barnlike smell that bedchambers took on, in addition to the chorus of barnyard sounds that likely filled every night. Our forebears put up with the stench and noise and cuddled up with their livestock, if only to stave off hypothermia.

Homes were often so poorly constructed that they were unstable. The din of collapsing buildings was such a common sound that in 1688, Randle Holme defined a crash as “a noise proceeding from a breach of a house or wall.” The poet Dr. Samuel Johnson wrote that in 1730s London, “falling houses thunder on your head.” In the 1740s, “props to houses” keeping them from collapsing were listed among the most common obstacles that blocked free passage along London’s walkways.

“Poor Nutrition”

What about poor nutrition? From liberal flower children to the “Make America Healthy Again” crowd, fetishizing the supposedly chemical-free, wholesome diets of yore is bipartisan. The truth, however, is stomach-churning.

Our ancestors not only failed to eat well, but they sometimes didn’t eat at all. Historian William Manchester noted that in preindustrial Europe, famines occurred every four years on average. In the lean years, “cannibalism was not unknown. Strangers and travelers were waylaid and killed to be eaten.” Historian Fernand Braudel recorded a 1662 account from Burgundy, France, that lamented that “famine this year has put an end to over ten thousand families . . . and forced a third of the inhabitants, even in the good towns, to eat wild plants. . . . Some people ate human flesh.” A third of Finland’s population is estimated to have died of starvation during a famine in the 1690s.

Even when food was available, it was often far from appetizing. Our forebears lived in a world where adulterated bread and milk, spoiled meat, and vegetables tainted with human waste were everyday occurrences. London bread was described in a 1771 novel as “a deleterious paste, mixed up with chalk, alum and bone ashes, insipid to the taste and destructive to the constitution.” According to historian Emily Cockayne, the 1757 public health treatise Poison Detected noted that “in 1736 a bundle of rags that concealed a suffocated newborn baby was mistaken for a joint of meat by its stinking smell.”

Water was also far from pristine. “For the most part, filth flowed out windows, down the streets, and into the same streams, rivers, and lakes where the city’s inhabitants drew their water,” according to environmental law professor James Salzman. This ensured that each swig included a copious dose of human excreta and noxious bacteria. Waterborne illnesses were frequent.

“A Stressful, Unsatisfying Lifestyle”

Did stressful lifestyles originate with industrialization? Did our preindustrial ancestors generally enjoy a sense of inner peace? Doubtful. Sadly, many of them suffered from what they called melancholia, roughly analogous to the modern concepts of anxiety and depression.

In 1621, physician Robert Burton described a common symptom of melancholia as waking in the night due to mental stress among the upper classes. An observer said the poor similarly “feel their sleep interrupted by the cold, the filth, the screams and infants’ cries, and by a thousand other anxieties.” Richard Napier, a 17th-century physician, recorded over several decades that some 20 percent of his patients suffered from insomnia. Today, in comparison, 12 percent of Americans say they have been diagnosed with chronic insomnia. Stress is nothing new.

Sky-high preindustrial mortality rates caused profound emotional suffering to those in mourning. Losing a child to death in infancy was once a common—indeed, near-universal—experience among parents, but the loss was no less painful for all its ordinariness. Many surviving testimonies suggest that mothers and fathers felt acute grief with each loss. The 18th-century poem, “To an Infant Expiring the Second Day of Its Birth,” by Mehetabel “Hetty” Wright—who lost several of her own children prematurely—heartrendingly urges her infant to look at her one last time before passing away.

So common were child deaths that practically every major poet explored the subject. Robert Burns wrote “On the Birth of a Posthumous Child.” Percy Bysshe Shelley wrote multiple poems to his deceased son. Consider the pain captured by these lines from William Shakespeare’s play King John, spoken by the character Constance upon her son’s death: “Grief fills the room up of my absent child. . . . O Lord! My boy, my Arthur, my fair son! My life, my joy, my food, my all the world!” Shakespeare’s own son died in 1596, around the time the playwright would have finished writing King John.

Only in the modern world has child loss changed from extraordinarily common to exceedingly rare. As stressful as modern life can be, our ancestors faced forms of heartache that most people today will never endure.

“Dangerous Workplaces” and “Child Labor”

Dangerous workplaces and child labor both predate the Industrial Revolution. In agrarian societies, entire families would labor in fields and pastures, including pregnant women and young children. Many preindustrial children entered the workforce at what today would be considered preschool or kindergarten age.

In poorer families, children were sent to work by age 4 or 5. If children failed to find gainful employment by age 8, even social reformers unusually sympathetic to the plight of the poor, would express open disgust at such a lack of industriousness. Jonas Hanway was reportedly “revolted by families who sought charity when they had children aged 8 to 14 earning no wages.”

For most, work was backbreaking and unending. A common myth suggests that preindustrial peasants worked fewer days than modern people do. This misconception originated from an early estimate by historian Gregory Clark, who initially proposed that peasants labored only 150 days a year. He later revised this figure to around 300 days—higher than the modern average of 260 working days, even before factoring in today’s paid holidays and vacation time.

Physically harming one’s employees was once widely accepted, too, and authorities stepped in only when the mistreatment was exceptionally severe. In 1666, one such case occurred in Kittery, in what is now Maine, when Nicholas and Judith Weekes caused the death of a servant. Judith confessed that she cut off the servant’s toes with an axe. The couple, however, was not indicted for murder, merely for cruelty.

“Discrimination Against Women”

The preindustrial world was hardly a model of gender equality—discrimination against women was not an invention of the early industrialists but a long-standing feature of many societies.

Domestic violence was widely tolerated. In London, a 1595 law dictated: “No man shall after the houre of nine at the Night, keepe any rule whereby any such suddaine out-cry be made in the still of the Night, as making any affray, or beating hys Wife, or servant.” In other words, no beating your wife after 9:00 p.m. That was a noise regulation. A similar law forbade using a hammer after 9:00 p.m. Beating one’s wife until she screamed was an ordinary and acceptable activity.

Domestic violence was celebrated in popular culture, as in the lively folk song “The Cooper of Fife,” a traditional Scottish tune that inspired a country dance and influenced similar English and American ballads. To modern ears, the contrast between its violent lyrics and upbeat melody is unsettling. The song portrays a husband as entirely justified in his acts of domestic violence, inviting the audience to side with the wifebeater and cheer as he beats his wife into submission for her failure to perform domestic chores to her husband’s satisfaction.

Sexist laws often empowered men to abuse women. If a woman earned money, her husband could legally claim it at any time. For instance, in 18th-century Britain, a wife could not enter into contracts, make a will without her husband’s approval, or decide on her children’s education or apprenticeships; moreover, in the event of a separation, she automatically lost custody. Mistreatment of women, in other words, long predated industrialization. Arguably, it was the increase in female labor force participation during the Industrial Revolution that ultimately gave women greater economic independence and strengthened their social bargaining power.

“Environmental Harm”

While many of today’s environmental challenges—such as climate change and plastic pollution—differ from those our forebears faced, environmental degradation is not a recent phenomenon. Worrying about environmental impact, however, is rather new. Indeed, as historian Richard Hoffmann has pointed out, “Medieval writers often articulated an adversarial understanding of nature, a belief that it was not only worthless and unpleasant, but actively hostile to . . . humankind.”

Consider deforestation. The Domesday Survey of 1086 found that trees covered 15 percent of England; by 1340, the share had fallen to 6 percent. France’s forests more than halved from about 30 million hectares in Charlemagne’s time (768–814) to 13 million by Philip IV’s reign (1285–1314).

Europe was hardly the only part of the world to abuse its forests. A 16th-century witness observed that at every proclamation demanding more wood for imperial buildings, the peasants of what are today the Hubei and Sichuan provinces in China “wept with despair until they choked,” for there was scarcely any wood left to be found.

Despeciation is also nothing new. Humans have been exterminating wildlife since prehistory. The past 50,000 years saw about 90 genera of large mammals go extinct, amounting to over 70 percent of America’s large species and over 90 percent of Australia’s. 

Exterminations of species occurred throughout the preindustrial era. People first settled in New Zealand in the late 13th century. In only 100 years, humans exterminated 10 species of moa in addition to at least 15 other kinds of native birds, including ducks, geese, pelicans, coots, Haast’s eagle, and an indigenous harrier. Today, few people realize that lions, hyenas, and leopards were once native to Europe, but by the first century, human activity eliminated them from the continent. The final known auroch, Europe’s native wild ox, was killed in Poland by a noble hunter in 1627.

Progress Is Real

History bears little resemblance to the sanitized image of preindustrial times in the popular imagination—that is, a beautiful scene of idyllic country villages with pristine air and residents merrily dancing around maypoles. The healthy, peaceful, and prosperous people in this fantasy of pastoral bliss do not realize their contented, leisurely lives will soon be disrupted by the story’s villain: the dark smokestacks of the Industrial Revolution’s “satanic mills.”

Such rose-colored views of the past bear little resemblance to reality. A closer look shatters the illusion. The world most of our ancestors faced was in fact more gruesome than modern minds can fathom. From routine spousal and child abuse to famine-induced cannibalism and streets that doubled as open sewers, practically every aspect of existence was horrific.

A popular saying holds that “the past is a foreign country,” and based on recorded accounts, it is not one where you would wish to vacation. If you could visit the preindustrial past, you would likely give the experience a zero-star rating. Indeed, the trip might leave you permanently scarred, both physically and psychologically. You might long to unsee the horrors encountered on your adventure and to forget the shocking, gory details.

The upside is that the visit would help deromanticize the past and show how far humanity has truly come—emphasizing the utter transformation of everyday lives and the reality of progress.

This article was published at Big Think on 11/19/2025.

Blog Post | Human Development

Discontent in the Age of Plenty | Podcast Highlights

Marian Tupy interviews Brink Lindsey about why unprecedented prosperity has failed to deliver widespread meaning.

Listen to the podcast or read the full transcript here.

Today, I’ll be speaking with Brink Lindsey, an American political writer and Senior Vice President at the Niskanen Center. Previously, he was Cato’s Vice President for Research and a dear colleague. Today, we’ll be discussing his latest book, The Permanent Problem: The Uncertain Transformation from Mass Plenty to Mass Flourishing.

I want to start by congratulating you on your excellent book. It is concise, thoughtful, and beautifully written. As a published author, I’m envious of your style, and I really recommend the book to our listeners.

Let’s start with the most obvious question. What is the permanent problem?

I stole that line from the British economist John Maynard Keynes, who wrote a fascinating essay called “Economic Possibilities for Our Grandchildren.”

That essay came out in 1930 in the depths of the Great Depression, but he was brave enough to argue that this global catastrophe was just a bump in the road in a much longer process of modern economic growth, which he believed would continue until his audience’s grandchildren were grown. By that point, he said that the economic problem, meaning serious material deprivation, would be more or less solved. With that done, he foresaw that humanity’s permanent problem would loom into view: how to live wisely and agreeably and well with the blessings that modern economic growth has bestowed upon us.

He got some specific things wrong. He imagined that by now we’d only be working 15 hours a week, which hasn’t panned out. However, he got the big picture profoundly right, which is that an abundant future was coming, and that moving from tackling the economic problem to the permanent problem would be traumatic for societies. That they would have to unlearn the habits of untold generations.

He imagined that this transition would be, in his words, something like a “general nervous breakdown throughout society.” That phrase struck me as a pretty good description for the predicament that the United States and other advanced democracies have found themselves in. We’re richer, healthier, better educated, and more humanely governed than any people have ever been before, yet economic growth has slowed to a crawl in most advanced economies, class divisions have sparked a global populist uprising against elites and established institutions, personal relationships are fraying, mental health problems are on the rise, faith in democracy is wavering, and widespread pessimism is one of the few things you can get people across the political spectrum to agree on.

So, the thesis of the book is that our predicament amounts to the fact that we are in this no man’s land between mass plenty and mass flourishing. That, having achieved mass plenty, we’ve moved the goalposts of what makes a successful life. It’s no longer just about having food, shelter, and clothing, but meaning, purpose, belonging, and status. While we are providing those conditions for a larger fraction of the population than ever before, for 70 or 80 percent of people, our current way of life is not providing the conditions for flourishing that one would imagine would go with our level of technological and organizational prowess.

So, in America today, things are so good that we are moving to the top of Maslow’s hierarchy, but on the other hand, we have a hysteria where people are saying basic necessities like food and shelter have never been more unaffordable.

Can both be true at the same time?

I think we are absolutely materially richer than any society before. People who are discontent with the status quo grope for something quantifiable that has gone wrong, and so they try to make an argument about material decline that just isn’t consistent with the facts. It is true that we are rich enough to take our basic material needs for granted. Nonetheless, we enjoy these blessings with a kind of asterisk, which is that we get them only by spending the bulk of our waking adult lives working 40-hour weeks.

The blessed 20 or 30 percent at the top have an arena for flourishing. They’ve got intellectually challenging jobs that offer a lot of autonomy and scope for creativity, and social status. The rest are in fairly low-autonomy jobs with a lot of scutwork, and they’re one stroke of bad luck away from losing their job and falling into a serious hole. They’re shadowed by both the precarity of their hold on mass plenty and also by the need to spend a lot of their lives in drudgery to pay the bills.

According to Gallup, life satisfaction in America remained pretty much the same between 1979 and 2025. Roughly 80 percent of Americans say they are either satisfied or very satisfied with their lives, while only 20 percent of Americans believe that America is going in the right direction.

So, how bad is it really, if 80 percent of Americans say that they are satisfied or very satisfied with their lives?

I don’t put much stock in self-assessments of life satisfaction. Psychologically healthy people make the best of things, whatever the circumstances. Plus, happiness and life satisfaction surveys have a lot of cultural variation. Latin Americans seem to report higher life satisfaction given their level of GDP than Scandinavians or Japanese.

What I look at instead is the conditions for a well-lived life. The chances to do work that is challenging, fulfilling, and interesting are very good for a considerable fraction of people, but they’re not so good for the majority. There’s a large divergence there between the well-off and well-educated and everybody else. That’s also translated into diverging odds of even being in the workforce: there’s been a small drop-off in male prime-age labor force participation for college-educated men from the mid-’60s to the present, and a big drop-off in labor force participation for non-college-educated men. There’s been a similar divergence in the odds of getting married and in the odds of growing up in a two-parent home. And finally, in recent years, we’ve seen a divergence in life expectancy. Rather than the poor catching up with the rich over time, they’re now pulling apart.

So, are we doing better than ever before? Sure. But I don’t think that exhausts the inquiry. In a society organized around progress, a purely backward-looking standard of evaluation isn’t dispositive. In some of the more intangible aspects of flourishing, there are warning signs that things are going in the wrong direction.

So, do you have in your mind a sense of what an agreeable life should be?

At least in broad outlines.

In the agrarian age, to quote Hobbes, “Life was poor, nasty, brutish, and short,” but it was not solitary. People were miserable and poor, but they weren’t atomized or alienated. Now, I think it’s a real liberation that we’re not stuck in the same place that we were born, working the same trade as our parents. We can choose our own lives, and that’s a great opportunity. The next question is, “Are we going to develop cultural and institutional supports in these new conditions that will help us to have satisfying lives?

It’s beyond serious dispute that for most people, the most important determinant of the quality of their life is the quality of their personal relationships. And once upon a time, when the world was poor, your face-to-face relationships with other people filled vital practical functions. Your spouse was a partner in economic co-production. Your kids were economic assets. Your neighbors were an insurance policy. The main source of entertainment was hanging out with your friends and talking.

Over time, as we’ve gotten richer, we’ve outsourced a lot of those functions either to the marketplace or the welfare state. Personal relationships with people have become just one consumption option in a sea of expertly marketed alternatives. Learning to live wisely and agreeably and well amidst riches requires cultural and institutional supports that push us to spend our time on what really matters, which is the people who are close to us. We don’t have those, so we’re seeing fraying human connection.

This is cashing out most fatefully in the declining rate of people getting married and having babies. More than half of people now live in countries where the fertility rate is below replacement. That puts the whole demographic sustainability of liberal, democratic, capitalist, cosmopolitan, affluent civilization in doubt.

I want to ask you about the danger of presentism.

When we see a problem on the front pages of newspapers, we tend to extrapolate from it a broader crisis. In other words, we have trouble separating that which is fundamental to our civilization from that which is just a passing trend.

Let me give you a few examples. You write in the book that “we are getting fatter, dumber, and our mental health is deteriorating.” It certainly feels like it, right? But obesity is already declining in the United States because of Ozempic. Increasingly large numbers of young people are switching off social media. Apparently, Gen Z, the newest ones, are the best at that. Suicide rates are falling in rich countries outside of the United States, meaning this may be a particular American problem, or even simply a problem of measurement, rather than a general problem with modernity.

So, are we underestimating human adaptability and technological innovation?

That’s a very good point. We learn over time that some things that we thought were great turned out to be bad, and we put them behind us. Forty percent of American adults used to smoke, and we covered our walls with lead paint. And yes, we’ve got what looks like a deus ex machina for obesity, but the fact that the obesity wave happened at all is a good example of a more general challenge of being rich.

When we were poor, we developed a scarcity-based morality of self-discipline and self-control and resisting temptation out of necessity, but as those material constraints lessened, there was an inevitable and appropriate loosening. People could indulge their desires more. They could, to a greater extent than in the past, follow an “if it feels good, do it” kind of path. Well, it turns out that those qualities of self-discipline and self-mastery are still extremely helpful today, not for keeping you from falling into horrible poverty, but for keeping you focused on the things that really matter, rather than trivial, distracting desires.

Capitalism gives us what we want, and we don’t yet have the cultural supports that make sure it gives us what we want to want.

One set of problems that you identify has to do with the disintegration of personal bonds and the atomization of society.

Now, if I wanted to make grandparents more reliant on their children, to make neighbors more helpful to each other, and to increase church attendance, I would start by abolishing the welfare state, which I think has eroded the kind of mutual, voluntary reliance that people once had on each other.

This might irritate you, but I see the welfare state as an integral part of modern capitalism. Nowhere do we see a complex, technologically intensive, organizationally intensive division of labor without a strong welfare state. It’s possible to imagine such a thing, but it’s also possible to imagine a human being that’s 100 meters tall. If you actually had a human being that tall, he would collapse under his own weight. Plus, the libertarian movement in the United States has made zero headway in knocking back the welfare state, so I think libertarians need some kind of plan B.

The hopeful future I have in mind is more localistic and involves reimbuing our face-to-face relationships with family and neighbors with practical functions, which will allow people to live without the welfare state to a considerable degree. You can imagine a world of small modular nuclear reactors and 3D printing and vertical farming where small communities, with small divisions of labor, could have a degree of material affluence that today requires large-scale divisions of labor. But even in the here and now, if people are living together in communities, they can reassume duties of care that have been outsourced to private enterprise and the welfare state, such as taking care of little kids and elderly people and educating the young.

I wonder what is going to be more effective at driving culture change: appealing to people, or changing the incentives. When the government says, “We can pay for your child to go to a school,” you can opt out, but you will have to pay twice if you want to send your kids to a private school.

At the very least, I think we agree we will need to have competition. We could give the welfare state to the states and let them play around with it so that different jurisdictions can learn from each other.

Yeah. And, even more importantly, on the regulatory side. This is what I call capitalism’s crisis of inclusion, which is the weakening relationship between growth and widespread good conditions for the good life for people.

Meanwhile, though, we have a crisis of dynamism, a weakening capacity of the system to just keep delivering growth and pushing the technological frontier outward. Mancur Olson identified this problem a long time ago, which is that the richer you get, the more people you have with a stake in the status quo. For those people, the prospect of disruptive change is anxiety-provoking because it could knock them off their privileged perch, so they have an incentive to stop change. Also, the richer you get, the lower communication costs are, and the easier it is to band together with like-minded people and throw sand in the gears of creative destruction.

Meanwhile, the knowledge economy has created this large class of knowledge workers who desire to control and rationalize everything in their grasp. When something isn’t working, the solution is to add another layer of bureaucracy and process. Obviously, we’ve got lots of this kind of dysfunction in the public sector, but I think we also see it in the private sector, with the explosion of administrative staff on campus, the HR-ization of corporate life, and also in personal life, with helicopter parenting. These same professionals, on their off hours, deploy their managerial instincts to squeeze every drop of spontaneity out of childhood in the name of safety.

Those impulses are deep-seated, and they have contributed to an increasing drag on our dynamism.

One of the most effective ways to tackle this is inter-jurisdictional competition, allowing different groups to have different rules to limit the exposure of those different rules. Then, if that different set of rules really is producing better results, they can be emulated elsewhere. Beyond that, we’re just ineradicably culturally pluralistic people, especially under conditions of modernity. People are not going to agree with each other on what the good life is. They’re going to have different values. Having us all crammed together under one set of rules makes those value differences really high stakes and combustible and has produced a lot of the dysfunctional politics we’re experiencing now.

Last question.

My view of what living wisely, agreeably, and well may be very different from a guy who is perfectly satisfied living in his basement playing games and smoking a lot of pot. I would find such a life appalling, but who am I to tell this person that they are not living wisely, agreeably, and well?

In other words, aren’t you worried that even if all your hopes come to pass, the future may still contain a lot of people who will not be living wisely, agreeably, and well, just as they are today?

We can talk about flourishing at the individual level and then flourishing at the societal level.

In the book, I talk about projects, relationships, and experiences. Some people are really focused on projects and very light on relationships, and they do fine. Some people are great at cultivating amazing experiences, and they’re not very practical about anything else, but they live well that way. So there are a lot of different ways to have a good life.

At the social level, there’s a little bit less variety. To take one example, you can totally have a flourishing individual life without having children, but you can’t really have a flourishing society unless a certain number of people are having babies. So, I think you can’t have a flourishing society that isn’t a free society where people are the authors of their own lives, but a free society requires the freedom to fail. Some people are just not going to live wisely and agreeably and well.

I think we can create better conditions for people to choose well than we have at present. But that doesn’t mean we need to converge on one way of living well. That would be boring. Getting richer should mean a flowering of variety, not everybody converging on one way of life. And I think a more pluralistic, localistic institutional environment is most conducive to that end.

And it seems to me that living in a pluralistic society doesn’t mean that you are voiceless, that you don’t have a right to express your views about other people’s lives. Pluralism does not require total relativism. I can still say to little Jimmy, “Spend less time playing video games in your room and go out and explore the world.”

Ultimately, if we are going to be living in a pluralistic society where people can choose their values and how they want to live, it should be possible for people to persuade them that some ways of living, such as living up to their best potential, are better than wasting their lives.

This is the ultimate challenge for Homo sapiens: are we cut out for freedom? Are we cut out for being allowed to choose the good? Or are we just such a refractory species that we have to be lorded over?

The dystopian novel Brave New World, I think, is a much better fit with the predicament we’re in right now than 1984. The human spirit is being degraded, not by a regime of fear, but by a regime of cheap pleasures. At the end of that book, there’s this long monologue by the head of the society making this argument that human beings just don’t know what’s good for them and need to be taken care of. I don’t believe that. I have faith that there is a human nature that wants the good, that wants to connect to the outside world, and to other people, and figure things out. And we have the great privilege of living in a very rich, technologically advanced world that gives more people opportunities to do those things. We just need to structure things a little bit better to make it easier to make the right choices.