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To The Best Of Our Knowledge

Slime molds that solve mazes and parasitic dodder plants that seek out their prey are remarkable examples of nature's intelligence.  Anthropologist Jeremy Narby offers lessons on how to see the entire world as our kin.

To The Best Of Our Knowledge

Melissa Coleman spent the formative years of her chilldhood roaming the lands of her family's farn in rural Maine.  Melissa, her sister Heidi, and their parents, Eliot and Sue Coleman, lived off the grid, and became media darlings when the Wall Street Journal ran an article about her father.  Coleman writes about that time in her memoir "This Life is in Your Hands."

To The Best Of Our Knowledge

A ghost story from listener Jonathan Blyth, called "You Are What You Eat."

To The Best Of Our Knowledge

Paul Hoffman is the author of “Wings of Madness: Alberto Santos-Dumont and the Invention of Flight.”  Hoffman tells Jim Fleming that Santos-Dumont’s craft (which he tethered to a light-post outside Maxim’s while he had dinner) was a motorized hot air balloon.

To The Best Of Our Knowledge

Can you learn to be more creative? You can if you go to Lynda Barry's workshop on "writing the unthinkable." In this EXTENDED interview, she tells Anne Strainchamps how to unleash our hidden muse.

To The Best Of Our Knowledge

Randall Miller and Jody Savin wrote, directed and are distributing the 2008 Sundance Festival film, "Bottle Shock."

To The Best Of Our Knowledge

In 1975, Dr. Raymond Moody coined the term "near death experience" and published the first definitive account of patients who described dying and coming back to life.  He tells Steve Paulson what he's come to believe after listening to thousands of reports.

To The Best Of Our Knowledge

Michael Keith recalls his nomadic life with his divorced, alcoholic father.  He never had enough to eat, and got into trouble, but decided who he didn’t want to be.

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