What Broadens the Mind More: Books or Traveling?| thosewhowander.substack.com
A newsletter for readers who want to learn about the meaning of travel, why we seek adventure, and how to incorporate more of it into our lives. In short, the anthropology of wandering. Click to read Those Who Wander, by Justin S. Bailey, a Substack publication with hundreds of subscribers.| thosewhowander.substack.com
The problem of alternative media is a false promise that dense subjects and information about our world can be swiftly downloaded into our brains. Travel and life-long reading provide antidotes.| thosewhowander.substack.com
Our perceptions of who we are at our core are foundational to building a just society, yet uncovering who we are has been a centuries-old debate that is still highly polarized and contentious.| thosewhowander.substack.com
What is the anthropology of wandering? And can it guide us toward a more favorable view of humanity?| Those Who Wander
Travel enthusiasts feel compelled to promote travel with hopes that it can bring about peace and understanding, but is that idealism speaking or an underlying truth about the world?| thosewhowander.substack.com
The Oxford Word of 2024 was declared to be ‘brain rot.’ What actionable solutions does a 19th-century hermit offer us to curb this modern social contagion?| thosewhowander.substack.com
Full archive of all the posts from Those Who Wander.| thosewhowander.substack.com