“Values emphasizing tolerance and self-expression have diverged most sharply, especially between high-income Western countries and the rest of the world.”
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Literature’s first utopia shows how far we’ve come.
Science doesn’t fit neatly into ideology.
Some Europeans really don’t want to use the internet.
A textbook pregnancy consists of three trimesters. The baby develops at a relatively predictable rate during this time, from pomegranate seed to avocado to watermelon. And mom’s body adapts accordingly […]
Medical science can save lives, but should it do so at the cost of quality of life?
Millennials are reversing a 40-year decline in stroke deaths.
There are many problems with relying on SAT and ACT scores for college admissions. But removing them entirely creates less opportunity.
Every December, the Geminid meteor shower reaches its peak. Its 2021 show will be spectacular, but only if you do it right.
As Russia’s youth welcomed a new era of capitalism in the 1990s, their parents and grandparents clung to fleeting memories of Soviet life.
Virgin birth – which involves the development of an unfertilised egg – has preoccupied humans for aeons. And although it can’t happen in mammals, it does seem to be possible in […]
In a recent paper, biologists outlined a three-part hypothesis for how all life as we know it began.
Mixed messages and competing interests have left college students feeling lost and stressed.
Your mentors made time for you. Now, go and make time for others.
Most exoplanets have been found around single stars via the transit method. But binary star systems might contain even more of them.
Smaller family networks, more great-grandparents, and fewer cousins.
Virtually all the statistical methods researchers commonly use assume potential mating partners decide who they will have children with based on a roll of the dice.
“I grew up in New Jersey in the 1970s and that experience gave me everything I needed to become a skeptic.”
The pursuit of excellence is a noble goal — but constantly having to prove your self-worth can derail your plans for success.
In work and life, the rules of success are being redefined.
Short-termism is both rooted in our most primal instincts and encouraged by runaway technological development. How can we fight it?
“When Harry Met Sally” lied to you.
Looking at our planet with post-Copernican eyes has the power to change how we relate to it and each other.
Merely 256 genetically engineered mice could make an island’s pest population go extinct.
Running to catch the bus might help you live longer.
These landscapes — of geographical differences in head shapes — have vanished from acceptable science (and cartography).
In 1924, sociologist and social reformer Caroline Bartlett Crane designed an award-winning tiny home in Kalamazoo, Michigan.