Tuesday, August 12, 2025

AI: The End of The English Essay Writing?

             (Hua Hsu’s post from the NEW YORKER MAGAZZINE on 30 June 2025.)

What Happens After A.I. Destroys College Writing? The demise of the English paper will end a long intellectual tradition, but it’s also an opportunity to reëxamine the purpose of higher education. There are no reliable figures for how many students use A.I., just stories about how everyone is doing it.

On a blustery spring Thursday, just after midterms, I went out for noodles with Alex and Eugene, two undergraduates at New York University, to talk about how they use artificial intelligence in their schoolwork. When I first met Alex, last year, he was interested in a career in the arts, and he devoted a lot of his free time to photo shoots with his friends.

But he had recently decided on a more practical path: he wanted to become a C.P.A. His Thursdays were busy, and he had forty-five minutes until a study session for an accounting class. He stowed his skateboard under a bench in the restaurant and shook his laptop out of his bag, connecting to the internet before we sat down.

Sunday, August 3, 2025

Turning Point When Your Body's Aging Accelerates

           (Michelle Starr’s post from the SCIENCE ALERT on 28 July 2025.)

Study Reveals Turning Point When Your Body's Aging Accelerates: The passage of time may be linear, but the course of human aging is not. Rather than a gradual transition, your life staggers and lurches through the rapid growth of childhood, the plateau of early adulthood, to an acceleration in aging as the decades progress.

Now, a new study has identified a turning point at which that acceleration typically takes place: at around age 50. After this time, the trajectory at which your tissues and organs age is steeper than the decades preceding, according to a study of proteins in human bodies across a wide range of adult ages – and your veins are among the fastest to decline.

"Based on aging-associated protein changes, we developed tissue-specific proteomic age clocks and characterized organ-level aging trajectories. Temporal analysis revealed an aging inflection around age 50, with blood vessels being a tissue that ages early and is markedly susceptible to aging," writes a team led by scientists from the Chinese Academy of Sciences. "Together, our findings lay the groundwork for a systems-level understanding of human aging through the lens of proteins."

Saturday, August 2, 2025

Trump’s Rare Earth Deal with KIA?

          (Antonio Graceffo’s post from the MIZZIMA-ENGLISH on 30 July 2025.)

Trump Administration Considers Rare Earth Deal That Could Reshape the Burma Conflict: In a groundbreaking shift, the Trump administration is reportedly considering two proposals for securing rare earth minerals from Myanmar, resources critical to advanced weaponry and battery production.

The first option would involve engaging directly with the military junta, which would carry the side effect of granting it de facto recognition. The second, far more transformative option, would be to bypass the junta entirely and negotiate directly with the Kachin Independence Army (KIA), the ethnic armed organization that controls most of Myanmar’s rare earth mining territory.

If the U.S. chooses the latter, it would mark a historic break from the longstanding convention of democratic governments only engaging with officially recognized state authorities. Such a move would not only grant legitimacy to the KIA but also offer hope to all of Burma’s ethnic armed organizations, many of which have long sought international recognition and support.