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More from Res Obscura

Why were Belle Époque cities beautiful?

It's not because they were "traditional" or "classical" — in fact it's just the opposite

a month ago 20 votes
AI makes the humanities more important, but also a lot weirder

Historians are finally having their AI debate

a month ago 24 votes
Onfim's world

Child artists in history

2 months ago 36 votes
When Jorge Luis Borges met one of the founders of AI

One reason I became a historian is the joy of encountering moments in the past that are foreign, yet also oddly familiar.

3 months ago 37 votes
AI legibility, physical archives, and the future of research

A followup to "The leading AI models are now good historians"

4 months ago 36 votes

More in history

Weekly Wisdom Quiz

Ancient Volcanoes, the Founding Fathers and more...

16 hours ago 2 votes
Pensioners for war

Many years ago when I lived in Belgrade, just before the beginning of the “Yugoslav Wars of Succession”, I noticed an interesting phenomenon.

yesterday 4 votes
My Weekly Reader February 4, 1962

Happy 4th of July! Here is your My Weekly Reader for "Happy 4th of February, 1962."

yesterday 5 votes
Nomonhan, 1939

A four-month long war between Great Powers of which you have never heard

yesterday 5 votes
Collections: The American Civil-Military Relationship

As is traditional here, I am taking advantage of the Fourth of July this week to write something about the United States, this time a brief discussion of the nature of civil-military relations in the United States. Civil-military relations (typically shortened to ‘civ-mil’ or sometimes CMR) is, simply put, the relationship between the broader civil … Continue reading Collections: The American Civil-Military Relationship →

2 days ago 6 votes