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    Awe review: Neglected feeling of awe could help battle climate change

    We pay little attention to the feeling of awe, but, as Dacher Keltner’s new book argues, it can make our lives more meaningful – and could even help us engage with huge problems like the climate crisis

    Humans

    4 January 2023

    By Sarah Phillips
    Mountain peaks are a sure way to create feelings of aweTetra Images, LLC/Alamy
    Awe
    Dacher Keltner (Allen Lane)
    IN JANUARY 2019, when Dacher Keltner was present at his younger brother Rolf’s bedside during the last moments of his life, he felt many things. Perhaps the most surprising was awe: “I felt small. Quiet. Humble. Pure. The boundaries that separated me from the outside world faded.”
    Awe is something that Keltner, a professor of psychology at the University of California, Berkeley, has now considered extensively. In 1988, when he asked his mentor Paul Ekman … More

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    Don’t Miss: The Last of Us – hit video game becomes a TV show

    New Scientist’s weekly round-up of the best books, films, TV series, games and more that you shouldn’t miss

    Humans

    4 January 2023

    HBO/Warner Media
    Watch
    The Last of Us moves from award-winning video game to TV show, with Pedro Pascal (pictured above) as Joel Miller, a smuggler who escorts a teenage girl, Ellie (Bella Ramsey), across a post-apocalyptic US. On HBO from 15 January.

    Read
    Emotional Ignorance by neuroscientist Dean Burnett tracks the author’s journey after the death of his father from covid-19, as he explores where our emotions come from and what purpose they serve. On sale from 12 January.
    Paul Craft/shutterstock
    Visit
    The Science of Dreams reveals how and why we dream, and how to enhance our … More

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    The Terraformers review: What do we owe the animals in our care?

    Annalee Newitz’s new novel examines the dark side of “uplifting” animals to a state of self-awareness – and asks whose intelligence is being used as the template, finds Sally Adee

    Humans

    4 January 2023

    By Sally Adee
    Terraforming means creating human values as much as physical placesTithi Luadthong/shutterstock
    The Terraformers
    Annalee Newitz (Tor Books on sale 2 February)
    IN A deep future tens of thousands of years from now, animals have been brought into the so-called Great Bargain: in saving Earth from the consequences of the Anthropocene, a deal has been struck between all creatures, and humans now include everyone in managing the shared land.
    But to participate, you need to be a person, and for that you must pass an intelligence assessment. So while relations between species look … More

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    The best popular science books out in 2023

    When did hominins start cooking? It might be earlier than we thoughtWe know for certain cooking isn’t unique to our species and that it was going on 750,000 years ago. The evidence of hominins deliberately exposing their food to heat is being pushed back further all the time, finds Michael Marshall More

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    When did hominins start cooking? It might be earlier than we thought

    We know for certain cooking isn’t unique to our species and that it was going on 750,000 years ago. The evidence of hominins deliberately exposing their food to heat is being pushed back further all the time, finds Michael Marshall

    Humans

    | Columnist

    28 December 2022

    By Michael Marshall
    Gorodenkoff/Shutterstock
    AT THIS time of year, as the temperatures drop, I find myself craving pies. I don’t know what unrecognised geniuses invented pastry and then had the idea to put a casserole inside it, but I owe them an unpayable debt. So let’s talk about the invention of cooking. How long have humans been deliberately exposing their food to heat to make it better?
    You might remember a recent story reporting evidence that hominins were cooking carp fish in an earthen oven around 780,000 years ago in what is now Israel. Previously, the oldest unambiguous evidence of cooking … More

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    The best science fiction books out in 2023

    CERN-inspired stories, a feminist retelling of George Orwell’s Nineteen Eighty-Four and a new deep future from Annalee Newitz: sci-fi fans have a lot to look forward to in 2023

    Humans

    28 December 2022

    By Sally Adee
    In The Lies of the Ajungo, a boy journeys into the desert to save his motherTimothy Allen/The Image Bank/Getty Images, NASA
    The Terraformers
    Annalee Newitz (Tor Books)
    This deep future from New Scientist columnist Annalee Newitz stars a Lone Ranger type and her partner, a telepathic moose. The mission: to keep interlopers off a planet under construction. Things go awry.
    Collision
    Edited by Rob Appleby and Connie Potter (Comma Press)
    Authors worked with particle physicists at the CERN lab near Geneva, Switzerland, on this anthology, in which Stephen Baxter and Margaret Drabble’s thought-provoking stories do more … More

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    Telling the story of Antarctica through 100 objects

    The 250th anniversary of the first documented crossing of the Antarctic circle is being marked with a new book that traces the continent’s history via 100 artefacts from around the world

    Humans

    28 December 2022

    By Alison Flood
    Herbert Ponting/Royal Geographical Society via Getty Images
    THE first documented crossing of the Antarctic circle was made on 17 January 1773 by James Cook on the HMS Resolution. Now, 250 years later, Jean de Pomereu and Daniella McCahey are marking its anniversary in Antarctica: A history in 100 objects, a book that tells the story of the continent via 100 photos and artefacts from around the world.
    The main image is an iconic photograph taken from a grotto in an iceberg in 1911 by Herbert Ponting (pictured below). Ponting was the first professional photographer to travel to Antarctica, after being invited by Robert Falcon Scott to join his ill-fated expedition. The ship is the Terra Nova and the men are geologist Thomas Griffith Taylor and meteorologist Charles Wright.
    Herbert Ponting in Antarctica in 1910Herbert Ponting/Royal Geographical Society via Getty ImagesAdvertisement
    Shaun O’Boyle
    Pictured above are the South Pole Telescope and BICEP (Background Imaging of Cosmic Extragalactic Polarization) experiment at the Amundsen-Scott South Pole Station. The telescope helped to capture the first image of a supermassive black hole in 2019.
    L: Vestfold Museums: R: United States Navy History and Heritage Command
    Leather goggles to protect against snow blindness, made during Roald Amundsen’s 1910-1912 Antarctic expedition, are shown above left. Pictured to the right of them are mittens knitted by Edith “Jackie” Ronne during an expedition in 1946-48. Ronne was one of the first two women to winter in Antarctica as part of a geographical expedition.
    G. H. Mumm & Cie
    The  image above shows Ernest Gourdon and Paul Pléneau sharing a bottle of champagne in July 1904. This was intended to promote Mumm Cordon Rouge, since the Mumm family was a sponsor of the trip.

    Pablo de León/University of North Dakota
    A spacesuit tested in Antarctica in 2011 for possible use on Mars. (pictured above).

    Sebastian Copeland
    A humpback whale skeleton (pictured above) reconstructed by conservationist and film-maker Jacques Cousteau on King George Island in 1972-73, to raise awareness of whaling.

    Frédéric Perin/Météo France
    An anemometer from a 1908-10 expedition.

    Pictured above is a New Zealand $5 note commemorating Edmund Hillary, whose team was the first to reach the South Pole using overland vehicles, in 1958.
    Fine Art Images/Heritage Images/Getty Images
    The 1602 Kunyu Wanguo Quantu map from China, (pictured above) featuring a vast “Terra Australis” with the inscription “Few have reached these southern regions. So the things are not explored yet”.
    Royal Belgian Institute of Natural Sciences
    Coryphaenoides lecointei, a fish specimen collected in the Antarctic on 15 March 1899 (pictured above).

    More on these topics: More

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    The best science fiction television to watch out for in 2023

    From new seasons of The Mandalorian and Severance to a much-anticipated adaptation of The Three-Body Problem, settle in for some stellar shows next year

    Humans

    28 December 2022

    By Bethan Ackerley
    Mark Scout (Adam Scott) in Severance.Atsushi nishijima
    IN THE waning days of 2022, with little to do but gorge on Christmas leftovers, I find myself thinking about the coming year. Because sincere self-reflection is beyond me, however, all those thoughts concern television – and so I have amassed a non-exhaustive list of the nine shows I am most looking forward to in 2023.
    If any TV series gives me hope for the medium’s future, it is Severance, an unsettling workplace dramedy that debuted on Apple TV+ in February. We followed Mark Scout … More