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Scientists Create Novel Organism with Primitive Nervous System

In a prospective cohort study involving more than 130 000 US adults followed for up to 43 years, higher intake of caffeinated coffee and tea was associated with lower risk of developing dementia and modestly better cognitive performance, as measured by both subjective and objective tests.

The inverse association was most pronounced at moderate intake, approximately 2 to 3 cups per day of caffeinated coffee or 1 to 2 cups per day of tea, while decaffeinated coffee intake showed no significant relationship to dementia risk or cognitive outcomes.


Question Is long-term intake of caffeinated and decaffeinated coffee associated with risk of dementia and cognitive outcomes?

Findings In this prospective cohort study of 131 821 individuals from 2 cohorts with up to 43 years of follow-up, 11 033 dementia cases were documented. Higher caffeinated coffee intake was significantly associated with lower risk of dementia. Decaffeinated coffee intake was not significantly associated with dementia risk.

Meaning Higher caffeinated coffee intake was associated with more favorable cognitive outcomes.

Ben Goertzel responds

As part of Future Day 2026, we hosted a conversation between two of the most provocative minds in AGI – Ben Goertzel and Hugo de Garis (with Adam Ford as moderator/provocateur) – to tackle the ultimate existential question: Is an Artilect War inevitable, and should humanity accept becoming the “number two” species?

The discussion will build upon last years discussion between Ben and Hugo on AGI and the Singularity.

It will explore the idea of human transcendence. If we can’t beat them, do we join them?

Will humanity transcend into a Jupiter brain quectotech utility fog?

Is the Artilect War the inevitable conclusion of biological intelligence? Or can we find a path toward existing in a universe that still finds us aesthetically pleasing?

0:00 Intro.

Scientists say there is one sea on Earth that touches no land, and that is because it has no shore

The Atlantic Ocean holds a secret: a patch of calm water ringed by swift currents, sitting about 590 miles east of Florida yet never touching land. Known as the Sargasso Sea, sailors have crossed it for centuries, but few notice the border when they slip into glassy indigo waters.

Those who linger find the surface scattered with golden-brown seaweed – Sargassum – named for the Portuguese word sargaço, a type of grape-like algae. The plants bob in slow motion, rolling gently like tumbleweeds on a prairie of water.

CellVoyager: AI CompBio agent generates new insights by autonomously analyzing biological data

CellVoyager is an artificial intelligence agent capable of exploring new biological hypotheses by autonomously analyzing single-cell RNA sequencing datasets and accounting for background information and prior analyses.

Feed Your Curiosity with Curiosity Box, use code ‘isaac25’ to get 25% off

From abiogenesis to AI, we rank the top Great Filter candidates and test them against the data to see which best explains the Fermi Paradox. Is the universe empty, or just dangerous? We explore ten filters—cosmic, biological, and civilizational—that could silence civilizations before they spread.

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. Credits:
Could We Accidentally Destroy the Universe?
Written, Produced & Narrated by: Isaac Arthur
Select imagery/video supplied by Getty Images
Music Courtesy of Epidemic Sound http://epidemicsound.com/creator.

Chapters
0:00 Intro
5:08 #10 The Fine-Tuned Universe & Rare Earth
12:55 #9 Abiogenesis (The Origin of Life)
16:29 #8 Complex Cells & Eukaryotes
20:14 #7 Multicellularity and Specialization
22:39 #6 Sexual Reproduction & Genetic Innovation
23:54 #5 Complex Animal Life
25:24 Curiosity
26:39 #4 Extended Childhood & Cooperative Rearing
29:17 #3 Long-Term Climate Stability
31:40 #2 Intelligence That Produces Technology
35:11 #1 The Late Filters: Surviving Technology, Ourselves, and Expanding Beyond the Home System.

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The Genetics of Living Longer: Study Challenges Decades of Aging Research

What determines how long people live, and how much of their lifespan is influenced by genetics?

For many years, scientists believed the genetic contribution to human lifespan was relatively modest compared with other biological traits. Earlier estimates placed the heritability of lifespan at around 20 to 25 percent, and some more recent large studies suggested it might be even lower, in some cases below 10 percent.

A new study from the Weizmann Institute of Science now challenges that view. The research, published in the journal Science, reports that genetic differences may account for roughly half of the variation in human lifespan. This estimate is more than double many previous calculations. The work was led by Ben Shenhar in the laboratory of Prof. Uri Alon of the Weizmann Institute’s Molecular Cell Biology Department.

The Abstraction Fallacy: Why AI Can Simulate But Not Instantiate Consciousness

The core issue: computation isn’t an intrinsic physical process; it’s an extrinsic, descriptive map. It logically requires an active, experiencing cognitive agent, a “mapmaker”, to alphabetize continuous physics into meaningful, discrete symbols.


Computational functionalism dominates current debates on AI consciousness. This is the hypothesis that subjective experience emerges entirely from abstract causal topology, regardless of the underlying physical substrate. We argue this view fundamentally mischaracterizes how physics relates to information. We call this mistake the Abstraction Fallacy. Tracing the causal origins of abstraction reveals that symbolic computation is not an intrinsic physical process. Instead, it is a mapmaker-dependent description. It requires an active, experiencing cognitive agent to alphabetize continuous physics into a finite set of meaningful states. Consequently, we do not need a complete, finalized theory of consciousness to assess AI sentience—a demand that simply pushes the question beyond near-term resolution and deepens the AI welfare trap. What we actually need is a rigorous ontology of computation. The framework proposed here explicitly separates simulation (behavioral mimicry driven by vehicle causality) from instantiation (intrinsic physical constitution driven by content causality). Establishing this ontological boundary shows why algorithmic symbol manipulation is structurally incapable of instantiating experience. Crucially, this argument does not rely on biological exclusivity. If an artificial system were ever conscious, it would be because of its specific physical constitution, never its syntactic architecture. Ultimately, this framework offers a physically grounded refutation of computational functionalism to resolve the current uncertainty surrounding AI consciousness.

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Disorder Drives One of Nature’s Most Complex Machines

* A “Bouncer” Made of Motion: New high-resolution microscopy and computational modeling (notably a study from late 2025) reveal that the NPC’s function is driven by this very flexibility. The disordered tails constantly rearrange themselves, creating a dynamic barrier that recognizes and ushers through specific molecules while blocking harmful enzymes or misfolded RNA.

* Scientific Breakthrough: By moving beyond static “snapshots” of the pore to observing it in motion at millisecond resolution, researchers have realized that disorder, not order, is the secret to the nuclear pore’s speed and precision.

In essence, the article highlights a paradigm shift in biology: the realization that one of life’s most complex and essential machines functions not like a rigid mechanical valve, but like a flexible, chaotic filter that uses “wiggle room” to maintain the integrity of the genetic code.


Every second, hundreds to thousands of molecules move through thousands of nuclear pores in each of your cells. A new high-definition view reveals the machine in action.

Cell death’s ‘beautiful’ rings have implications for biological resilience and immunity

Researchers at the University of Michigan have revealed that cells use a previously unknown feat of molecular craftsmanship to help protect their larger host organisms. The building blocks required for this work are found across the tree of life, meaning this finding could help better understand and support plant resilience and human immune response, the researchers said.

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