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  • Current Issue
    • Opening Remarks
    • A Visitor’s Guide to the Museum of Human Intelligence
    • Finding Intelligence on Your Knees
    • intranauts
    • A Snake in the Garden
    • WE ARE YOUNG
    • “And Ye Shall Be Like God”
    • After the Storm
    • Casual Intellectualism at the Lunch Table
    • CANIS FAMILIARIS
    • The Thinkers
  • Newsletter
  • Subscribe
  • About
    • Our Story
    • Profiles
    • Donations
  • Submissions
  • The Poetry Competition
    • An Interview with Poetry Editor Whitney Rio-Ross
    • DIRE WOLF
    • Wisdom
    • Postcard from Mexico City, 15 July 2025
    • Ars Poetica, with Foxes
    • Neuroception
  • Archives
    • Issue 37: The Mystery of Music
    • Issue 36: Devotion in Practice
    • Issue 35: A Home Divided
    • Issue 34: Prodigal Grace
    • Issue 33: On Growing Up
    • Issue 32: Treasures on Earth
    • Issue 31: Attention
    • Issue 30: The Art of Storytelling
    • Issue 29: On Waiting Well
    • Issue 28: Why Go to Church?
    • Issue 27: Kingdoms of Knowledge
    • Issue 26: Advent
    • Issue 25: Film
    • Issue 24: Doubt
    • Issue 23: Poetry
    • Issue 22: Death
    • Issue 21: Education
    • Issue 20: Play
    • Issue 19: Nature
    • Issue 18: Family
    • Issue 17: Covenants
    • Issue 16: Memory
    • Issue 15: Vocation
    • Issue 14: Friendship
    • Issue 13: Poetry
    • Issue 12: Correspondence
    • Issue 11: Pilgrimage
    • Issue 10: The Never-Ending End of the World
    • Issue 9: A Festschrift for Marilynne Robinson
    • Issue 8
    • Issue 7
    • Issue 6
    • Issue 5
    • Blog Archive
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The Deepest Breath

A documentary about freediving raises questions about the lure of the mysterious ocean—and about the mysteries of our connections to one another. By Marie Glancy O’Shea

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Read more about the article Asteroid City

Asteroid City

Wes Anderson’s latest is even more than typically meta, but it also manages to touch on the real—and really human. Review by Sharla Moody

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Read more about the article Tears of the Kingdom

Tears of the Kingdom

A worthy follow-up to the groundbreaking Breath of the Wild, Tears of the Kingdom engages our own questions of dis- and re-enchantment. Review by Jake Casale

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Read more about the article Roderick Hudson

Roderick Hudson

Henry James’s first novel explores the choices all artists must make, between the pursuit of truth and beauty and the surrender to self-idolization. Review by Katy Carl

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