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Saturday, 16 May 2026

Saturday, May 16, 2026

The African Origin of Homo sapiens and the Genetic History of Human Migration

The African Origin of Homo sapiens and the Genetic History of Human Migration

Modern humans — Homo sapiens — are the only surviving species of the genus Homo. Despite our visible diversity, all living humans share a recent common evolutionary origin in Africa. This conclusion is supported by palaeoanthropology, archaeology, and population genetics.

The study of ancient fossils, archaeological cultures, and genetic markers — including mitochondrial DNA, Y-chromosome lineages, and genome-wide variation — has allowed scientists to reconstruct the major stages of human origins, migrations, and adaptation.

1. The African Origin of Modern Humans

The “Out of Africa” model is one of the central frameworks in modern human evolutionary science. It proposes that anatomically modern humans originated in Africa and later dispersed into Eurasia and the rest of the world.

However, contemporary research suggests that the emergence of Homo sapiens was not limited to a single small region. Instead, our species likely arose through a complex pan-African evolutionary process, involving multiple interconnected populations across the African continent.

Saturday, May 16, 2026

Dr Olga Azarova: Five Scientific Truths About Your Inner Strength

The Miracle of Birth: The Biology of Human Strength

“Why are some people so lucky, while others are not?”
“I will try once more, and then decide whether to continue.”
“Maybe I am simply not as strong as others.”
“Perhaps we have a different mentality.”
“Why does life give opportunities to some people and not to others?”

Have you heard such phrases before?

Of course you have. They fill the air around us, because the world often contains more voices of complaint than voices of courage. Yet biology tells a different story. From the very beginning, life is not built on weakness. Life begins with energy, selection, interaction, movement, and the extraordinary capacity to overcome resistance.

Five Scientific Truths About Your Inner Strength

Saturday, May 16, 2026

Dr. Olga Azarova: Full Potential begins from signs of viability

An excerpt from the book by renowned entrepreneur and innovator Dr. Olga Azarova, The Full Potential of the Human Being: The Eight Intelligences, offers a clear conceptual foundation for understanding what it means to be “alive.” As an introduction to the methodology of MINIBOSS & BIGBOSS BUSINESS SCHOOLS, this text presents a broader vision of life itself — and of the kind of education humanity needs in order to understand, develop, and consciously manage life for the benefit of the individual and the Planet.

A little science is useful for all of us, isn’t it?

Yes, life is a remarkable journey — one that human beings instinctively wish to extend for as long as possible. Yet within this journey, some processes may be prolonged, while others may be shortened. In other words, the quality and duration of life can be consciously influenced if we understand three fundamental questions:

Who are we, and where do we come from?
In other words, to which larger macro-system do we belong?

How do we function?
What biological, psychological, and social mechanisms sustain our survival and development?

How can we manage our organism and, consequently, our life?
Where are we going, and for what purpose?

From 20 to 70 Years

Of course, human life cannot yet be extended indefinitely. However, we are already capable of influencing many biological and behavioural processes — and, to a significant extent, their outcomes.

While scientists around the world continue to investigate how to extend human life, slow ageing, and perhaps one day approach biological immortality, it is worth remembering how far humanity has already progressed. The average life expectancy of Neanderthals is believed to have been approximately 20 years. Early Homo sapiens often lived around 30–35 years. In the Middle Ages, average life expectancy remained roughly within the same range. Only with scientific, medical, hygienic, and technological progress — especially from the 17th and 18th centuries onward — did human life expectancy gradually increase to 50–60 years. Today, in many parts of the world, the average lifespan has reached approximately 70 years or more.

At the same time, many factors continue to shorten human life: wars, epidemics, disease, hunger, environmental degradation, chronic stress, and destructive lifestyles. Yet when a person is equipped with knowledge — when one understands how to operate and protect one’s own “biological machine,” the human organism — life no longer appears merely as suffering or as a chain of random fatal events. Instead, it becomes a conscious voyage: a ship of happiness, meaning, and self-directed development.

Yes, the ocean of life contains storms, whirlpools, and even “pirates.” There will be crises, losses, obstacles, and uncertainty. But a person can withstand the pressure of these forces and process defeat, deprivation, and pain more effectively when they understand what they already possess, what may await them beyond the horizon, and what price is paid for victories and failures in every battle of life.

Question No. 1

Are you alive?

Surprisingly, not every reader will answer this simple question with an immediate “yes.” Some may pause, reflect on their current or past experience, and answer: “I do not know,” “only partly,” or even “is this really life?”

Such uncertainty often arises when a person lives unconsciously — without studying the world, without understanding the self, and without recognising the true aspirations of the body, mind, and spirit. Many people pass through life without activating a significant part of their potential. They may fulfil only a fraction of their biological, intellectual, emotional, creative, social, and spiritual capacities. And at the end of life, some still ask: “Was that really life?”

Question No. 2

Do you want to discover the nature of your personal potential?

If your answer is yes, then you are fortunate: you are not only ready to study yourself and the world, but also to act. In this case, this book may become your personal Book of Life — a source to which you return again and again, finding new answers, insights, and motives for the flourishing of your life.

This life may be relatively short in biological terms, yet it can be extraordinary, meaningful, creative, and deeply fulfilled.

For this purpose, the eight-book cycle The Full Potential of the Human Being, based on Olga Azarova’s methodology, explores each element of human potential separately: each intelligence, each dimension of development, and each major theme of human life in a holistic and systematic way.

In this first book, the task is to understand life itself: its relationship to macro-systems and micro-systems, its universal biological and evolutionary laws, and the meaning of your individual life through the lens of your own potential. This understanding becomes the first and greatest wealth of human perception: the ability to recognise oneself within the world.

So, what is life?

Friday, 15 May 2026

Friday, May 15, 2026

Anne Applebaum: What, actually, is European Civilization?


Since 2019, the Institute for Human Sciences and the Erste Foundation have sponsored an annual Speech for Europe. The speech is always timed to coincide with the opening of the Wiener Festwochen, Vienna’s annual cultural festival, and is on or near Europe Day, which is also the anniversary of the end of the Second World War. The speech is held outdoors, on Judenplatz, the center of the Viennese Jewish community during the Middle Ages and the site of an important Holocaust memorial today. Entry is free and the audience stands to listen. Hopefully it doesn’t rain.

This year I gave the speech. You can read all of it or watch it here, together with introductions from Boris Marte, until recently the CEO of the Erste Foundation, and Milo Rau, the artistic director of the Vienna Festival (both speak German). American readers might note that I speak here as a European, and that I offer advice to Europeans. This is because I have a Polish passport (acquired in 2013) but also because I consider myself to be a patriotic citizen of the transatlantic alliance that America built together with Europe more than eighty years ago. I also believe that the ideas and values that lie behind the American, Polish and British constitutions are the same.

Here is a very lightly edited version, cut in a few places to make for smoother reading.

Thursday, 14 May 2026

Thursday, May 14, 2026

A New Pause Between the United States and China: Why the World Has Received Not Peace, but a Temporary Architecture of Managed Rivalry

Julian Fenwick presents World and Analytics on 100% NEWS with a global map background and a report on United States and China managed rivalry

WORLD & ANALYTICS | 100% NEWS
Presented by Julian Fenwick, Senior World Affairs Presenter and Analyst, 100% NEWS

The meeting between Donald Trump and Xi Jinping in Beijing was not a decorative diplomatic event of the day, but an attempt by the world’s two principal powers to install safeguards within a global system overheated by wars, energy risks, trade conflicts and the fear of a new major confrontation.

On 14 May 2026, the central issue in world politics became the meeting between the President of the United States, Donald Trump, and the President of the People’s Republic of China, Xi Jinping, in Beijing. Formally, it was a bilateral summit. In substance, it was a test of whether the global system is still capable of producing managed stability at a time when the Middle East, Ukraine, the trading system and energy markets are all under simultaneous pressure.

According to the Ministry of Foreign Affairs of the People’s Republic of China, the parties agreed on a new formula for relations: “constructive strategic stability” for the next three years and beyond. This phrase matters not as diplomatic decoration, but as an acknowledgement of reality: the United States and China can no longer return to the old model of globalisation, in which economic interdependence was assumed to be a sufficient guarantee of peace. Yet they are also not ready for a direct rupture, because the cost of such a rupture would be systemic — for trade, currencies, technologies, logistics, raw materials markets and security.

Thursday, May 14, 2026

Eduard Rubin: G2 or what did SI say to Trump in metaphors?

Donald Trump and Xi Jinping meeting in Beijing as 100% NEWS analyses the strategic rivalry between the United States and China

In global politics, where every word is weighed on an apothecary’s scale and a protocol smile can cost billions, the recent meeting between Donald Trump and Xi Jinping at the Great Hall of the People predictably became the centre of gravity for all those trying to discern the contours of tomorrow. However, while analysts on live broadcasts argue over tariffs and trade balances, a much older and more dangerous play is unfolding behind the scenes. Chinese diplomacy rarely speaks directly — it paints ideograms of meaning, understood only by those ready to peer into the depths of centuries.

Xi Jinping began the conversation by mentioning the “Thucydides Trap”. To a person accustomed to the transactional politics of deals, this might seem like a beautiful historical quotation or an intellectual bow. But for Beijing, this is not just a phrase. It is the signature that Xi has placed under every address to American leaders for twelve consecutive years — from Seattle to the Oval Office.