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Nick Hilden

Arts, science, and travel writer Nick Hilden contributes to the likes of the Washington Post, Scientific American, Esquire, Popular Science, National Geographic, and more. You can follow him on Twitter at @nickhilden or Instagram at @nick.hilden.

Doing Science and Philosophy On Drugs

Justin Smith-Ruiu takes a philosophical and first-person look at psychedelics

March 2, 2026

Love in the Time of Climate Change

Megha Majumdar’s acclaimed novel <i>A Guardian and a Thief</i> explores a near-future where scarcity forces hard choices

January 29, 2026

Can Embracing the Unknown Save Us From Dystopia?

An interview with Daniel Wilson, author of shamanic techno-thriller <i>Hole in the Sky</i>

October 16, 2025

Scientists Are People, Too

Can humanizing scientists help win back public trust?

September 11, 2025

The Evolution of … Everything

From cells to cellphones, trial and error shapes it all

August 26, 2025

The Philosophy of Tyranny

What a formative period in Plato's life tells us about US politics today

August 8, 2025

AI Has Already Run Us Over the Cliff

Cognitive neuroscientist Chris Summerfield argues that we don’t understand the technology we’re so eager to deploy

June 12, 2025

The Importance of Muscle

In his new book, Michael Joseph Gross explores how the notion of strength has changed since Homer

March 12, 2025

Life in an Atmospheric Zoo

Journalist Carl Zimmer tells the story of the science of aerobiology

February 14, 2025

Pico Iyer’s Wide-Awake Silence

The author on losing his home to wildfire, finding strength in solitude, and his new book <i>Aflame</i>

January 10, 2025

Breaking a Cycle of Apocalypse

John Larison’s new novel <i>The Ancients</i> suggests some societies are built for cataclysm

January 3, 2025

Don’t We Belong to Nature?

Norwegian author Karl Ove Knausgaard on the inspiration for his latest novel and his turn to sci-fi.

November 8, 2024