Skip to main content

Posts

AI & Higher Education: The Empty Classroom

  ARTIFICIAL INTELLIGENCE & HIGHER EDUCATION The Empty Classroom When students outsource learning to AI and companies cut the engineers who know better, both ends of the talent pipeline fray at once. India is not watching from a safe distance. Chuppala Nagesh Bhushan At the University of California, Berkeley, something unremarkable happened in spring 2026: a professor held office hours. The unremarkable part was that nobody came. Dan Garcia, who teaches CS 10, a broad introductory computing course popularly called “The Beauty and Joy of Computing,” found his calendar conspicuously clear at the very moment his gradebook became conspicuously alarming. Of the students who sat CS 10’s final examination, 35.3% received an F—five times the historical norm of roughly 7%. Two other courses in Berkeley’s elite Electrical Engineering and Computer Sciences department suffered similarly: 10.6% of CS 61A students failed, and 16.8% of those in EECS 127, an upper-division optimi...
Recent posts

Spies in the Classroom: How Universities Are Training the Next Generation of Intelligence Officers

  Spies in the Classroom: How Universities Are Training the Next Generation of Intelligence Officers Chuppala Nagesh Bhushan From the Paris suburbs to the banks of the Thames, a quiet revolution is reshaping how democratic nations develop their intelligence professionals. The Campus That Trains Spies On a grey morning on the outskirts of Paris, a university professor takes attendance. It is, by most appearances, an ordinary ritual — except that several names on his list are almost certainly false. Professor Xavier Crettiez, a researcher specialising in jihadism at Sciences Po Saint-Germain-en-Laye, has grown accustomed to the uncertainty. "I rarely know the intelligence agents' backgrounds when they are sent on the course," he says, "and I doubt the names I'm given are genuine anyway." Welcome to France's so-called 'School for Spies': the Diplôme sur le Renseignement et les Menaces Globales — the Diploma on Intelligence and Global Threat...

The Institutional Evolution of Russian Statecraft (1997–2024)

CHUPPALA NAGESH BHUSHAN An overview of  Mark Bennetts' book,  The Descent , which recounts his twenty-five-year journey as a witness to  Russia’s gradual transformation into a totalitarian state  under Vladimir Putin. Through interviews and personal memoirs, Bennetts explores how early political opportunities to  exclude former KGB officers from power  were missed, ultimately allowing the security services to capture the Kremlin. The narrative examines the  psychological impact of aggressive state propaganda , describing how it disorientated the Russian public and cultivated a culture that increasingly embraced  violence and the occult . The text highlights key turning points, such as the  annexation of Crimea and the invasion of Ukraine , which Bennetts views as the culmination of a "spiral into madness." Ultimately, the sources reflect on the  deeply ingrained nature of state-sponsored torture  and the tragic erosion of the brief ...

The Hard Problem Gets Harder

Science & Technology The Hard Problem Gets Harder After decades of neuroscience, the mystery of consciousness is not shrinking. It is expanding — into plants, into bodies, into the cosmos itself chuppala nagesh bhushan |  15th June 2025 T HERE is a peculiar irony at the heart of consciousness research. The thing being studied — the felt quality of inner experience — is the only phenomenon in the universe of which every human being has direct, first-person knowledge. And yet, after thirty years of concerted scientific effort, the mystery of consciousness has not diminished. It has deepened. This is the central tension of "A World Appears: A Journey Into Consciousness", a new book by the science writer Michael Pollan, better known for his investigations into food and, more recently, psychedelics. The book is an ambitious tour through the latest theories of mind — from neural workspace models to panpsychism — and Mr Pollan arrives at its end, if anythin...

Toward Mental Sovereignty : Mindful inquiry

What does science say about consciousness—and why do we remain so mystified? Chuppala Nagesh Bhushan The hard problem softens Consciousness is the most familiar thing in the world and the least understood. Humans experience it continuously—every moment of waking life—and yet cannot explain what makes it tick. Scientists can map neural activity, measure brain responses and model cognitive processes. But none of this illuminates the central mystery: why should any of this  feel like  something from the inside? This paradox has driven researchers toward increasingly unconventional territory. In his new book,  A World Appears , the writer Michael Pollan chronicles this strange journey through plant neurobiology, psychedelic research, meditation studies and philosophical idealism. His conclusion is characteristically modest: after five years of investigation, he knows more—but perhaps understands less. And that may be progress. Botanical mysteries For decades, p...