How can you maximize the amount of love and happiness in your life? One of history’s greatest scientists found the answer: with math.
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One of Apple’s key innovations serves as a psychological breakthrough, as its technology eliminates the isolating feel of headset use.
Glueballs are an unusual, unconfirmed Standard Model prediction, suggesting bound states of gluons alone exist. We just found our first one.
“Less is better” is not a catchy marketing slogan, but one doctor who didn’t shower for five years thinks there’s a lot of truth to it.
The crabs’ blue blood contains an ancient immune defense mechanism that has helped save countless human lives.
Would you confess your crimes to a skeleton with “an unnatural ghastly glow”? One inventor thought you would.
It is through speaking and listening that human beings become who they are.
There are three kinds of failure. Only one can help you have a better shot of succeeding in the future. A Harvard business professor explains.
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The biggest, brightest galaxies are the easiest to spot, but the tiniest ones teach us about how the Milky Way assembled and grew up!
Dark energy is one of the biggest mysteries in all the Universe. Is there some way to avoid “having to live with it?”
In one experiment, the Viking landers added water to Martian soil samples. That might have been a very bad idea.
Just as human beings diversified so that people in Asia look different from people in Europe, so too did their microbiomes.
“Carpe diem” was only one part of Horace’s poem Odes 1.11.
If you’re trying to break a bad habit or start a good one, psychologists have some tips.
More than a century ago, Halifax suffered an accidental blast one-fifth the size of the atomic bomb dropped on Hiroshima.
The conservation of energy is one of the most fundamental laws governing our reality. But in the expanding Universe, that’s just not true.
We are prone to false memories. One reason is that we are biased toward remembering tidy endings for events, even if they didn’t exist.
It just takes one “yes.” Wharton professor Jonah Berger shares his three tips for getting what you want from others.
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“Dune: Part One” screenwriter Eric Roth spoke with Big Think about the challenges of bringing Frank Herbert’s sci-fi epic to the big screen.
Most philosophers merely contemplate the world, but what about the ones who actually tried to change it?
Radical Emotional Acceptance calls on you to celebrate all of life’s emotions — even the negative ones.
An emerging leaders program can help organizations harness leaders from the inside. Read on to learn how to design one.
There’s enough evidence to conclude president Bukele had no idea what he was doing.
Due to export controls from China, the Europeans had to invent their own forms of porcelain. One type involves dead cows.
China has always been one of the world’s wealthiest nations, but Chinese wealth looks different across the country’s eventful history.
While one may be helpful, the other may be harmful.
As far as we know, it’s only happened once to one unlucky person in Oklahoma.
Modern robotics are creating a kind of cultural paradox, where the best religion is the one that eventually involves no humans at all.
One tiny change might have made a huge difference.
How Stacy Madison — founder of Stacy’s Pita Chips and BeBOLD Foods — discovered that reinvention is not a one-off deal but an ongoing process.