The old linear job model is obsolete. Our post-pandemic work lives are defined by options and flexibility.
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Cancers can’t develop without genetic mutations — or can they?
A new generation of leaders is forging a path for 21st-century capitalism that’s both profitable and socially responsible.
Until recently, video games were accused of killing brain cells. Now, researchers are trying to understand how they help players get smarter.
As Uranus approaches its solstice, its polar caps, rings, and moons come into their best focus ever under JWST’s watchful eye. See it now!
There are billions of potentially inhabited planets in the Milky Way alone. Here’s how NASA will at last discover and measure them.
All across the Universe, planets come in a wide variety of sizes, masses, compositions, and temperatures. And most have rain and snow.
Survey data suggests that our bodily perceptions of love extend far beyond the heart.
Screens were around in previous generations, but now they truly define childhood.
Happiness is not a five-star holiday. It’s often the result of struggle — and asking for help, as author Stephanie Harrison recently told Big Think.
What’s one of the most reliable indicators that a first date is going well? The answer might lie in how closely the couple is matching each other’s behavior and physiology. […]
What the ‘decade of the brain’ taught us about drug addiction. (Hint, we had it all wrong before.)
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We all play the genetic lottery – and the outcome matters a lot.
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Hybrid animals emerge when two different species from the same family reproduce. For many years, the kunga’s lineage was just another genetic mystery.
JWST just found its first transiting exoplanet, and it’s 99% the size of Earth. But with no atmosphere seen, perhaps air is truly rare.
Are the stellar remnants in our cosmic backyard actually our parents and grandparents?
Moral panics about the content of children’s cartoons and other forms of entertainment have a long history.
30 years ago Jim VandeHei — co-founder and CEO of Axios — got leadership feedback all wrong. Now, he has the ideal blueprint so you can get it right.
There’s no escaping the death of loved ones. But that doesn’t mean we’re powerless in the wake of loss.
The replication crisis has debunked many of psychology’s fair-haired hypotheses, but for the marshmallow test, things have only become more interesting.
Like sneaking veggies into dessert, these board games teach STEM, strategy, and executive functions through the joys of play.
If you think you know what sex, gender, and “the right thing to do” for trans youth and adults are, be sure it agrees with actual science.
Football is a risky sport, but bicycling to work is far more dangerous.
In Georgia, it’s becoming less common to pronounce words like “prize” as “prahz.”
There’s really only one mistake you can make: continue doing the same thing you already know is hurting you and expect a different result.
The FDA approved a single-dose, long-acting injection to protect babies and toddlers from RSV over the fall and winter.
After my father died, my journey of rediscovery began with the Czech language.
The catastrophic birth defect anencephaly affects about 1 in 4,600 pregnancies in the U.S. It is largely preventable with folic acid supplements.
The Church of England is debating if believers should stop using gendered language when talking about God.