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Luxury, Taste, and Infection: Where we choose to eat and the biology of how safe it is

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  A plate of food can reveal more than hunger. It can reveal social class, public health systems, economic pressure, cultural identity, and humanity’s long evolutionary struggle against disease. In many modern cities, the contrast is striking, with a scene, that includes a roadside vendor serving smoky grilled meat beside a polished hotel restaurant where meals arrive on spotless ceramic plates under soft lighting. One environment appears informal and exposed, the other controlled and refined. Yet both are connected by the same invisible biological reality of microbes. As concerns over food safety, disease outbreaks, and rising food prices continue to grow, people are increasingly asking difficult questions. Is expensive food truly safer? Are street foods unfairly judged? And as inflation pushes millions toward cheaper meals, is hygienic eating becoming a luxury rather than a basic expectation? The relationship between luxury, taste, and infection is not simply about choosing b...

Trends of globalization and culture and the facts of biology: Are biological innovations and societal and cultural beliefs finding their space between each other to move society forward?

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  Biology has become one of the most influential scientific fields in modern society. Through biological research, humanity has developed vaccines that prevent deadly diseases, medical technologies that improve quality of life, agricultural innovations that increase food production, and environmental strategies aimed at protecting ecosystems under threat. As global challenges continue to grow, ranging from pandemics and climate change to food insecurity and genetic disorders, biology increasingly stands at the center of humanity’s attempts to solve worldwide problems. However, scientific advancement rarely occurs in isolation. Biological innovation often intersects with religion, culture, ethics, politics, and social traditions. Around the world, communities interpret scientific progress differently depending on their beliefs, histories, and experiences. While some societies embrace new technologies and medical discoveries quickly, others approach them cautiously, fearing the los...

Healing, Escape, and the Human Brain: The Biology and Cultural Evolution of Drug Use and Mental Illness

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  Humanity’s Long Relationship With Psychoactive Substances Psychoactive substances, often alter brain function, which tend to affect mood, awareness, perception, cognition and behaviour by acting on the central nervous system. Humans have always maintained a complicated relationship with psychoactive substances. Long before modern neuroscience identified neurotransmitters or mapped neural pathways, communities across the world had already discovered that certain plants, chemicals, and fermented compounds could alter consciousness, reduce pain, induce euphoria, heighten spiritual experiences, or temporarily silence emotional suffering. From ceremonial ayahuasca practices in the Amazon, to opium use in ancient civilizations, to alcohol in religious rituals and social bonding, many psychoactive substances have existed at the intersection of medicine, spirituality, culture, and survival. Their meanings have constantly shifted depending on the era and the society interpreting them....

Clocking In. Cell by Cell: The future of work is a physiological experiment and the test is on your body

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  From the start of prehistoric man being on earth, they had to scavenge and find food for the day, and also provide themselves with shelter from various environmental hazards. However, did they ever stop to wonder if they suffered stress if they felt hungry? Tired? Overwhelmed? Or simply doubtful over the next meal? Maybe not, and they treaded on to the next hunt. In today’s age, the modern worker is expected to perform like software, from being scalable, always-on and infinitely optimizable. Beneath the productivity systems, motivational rhetoric, and digital tools lies something far less flexible, which at times, is not given much attention, which involves, the working person, is yet another biological organism shaped by millions of years of evolution. The tension between these two realities, tend to put cultural expectations of constant output and the physiological limits of the human body, as quietly becoming one of the defining conflicts of the future of work. This isn’t ...