Understanding these links could bring us closer to a cure.
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Javelin missiles have been an effective force multiplier, the latter-day equivalent of the sling that David used against Goliath.
Crafting an effective learning and development strategy can be challenging. Here are five key considerations.
Our economy is dominated by middlemen, including huge companies such as Walmart and Amazon. There are many benefits to going direct instead.
Before the war, medical experts treated the body as a sum of its parts. Conditions like wound shock and brain damage called for a change in perspective.
Impressive but deadly physics underlie catastrophic eruptions.
A new paper explores how noise from human activities pollutes the oceans, and what we can do to fix it.
When you can’t enter flow, you can still lean on your internal rhythm.
“When molecules misbehave, it can lead to great insight.”
Though Sun Tzu’s “The Art of War” is a classic military treatise, its advice applies to all manner of conflict.
Modernism has lasted longer than any art movement since the Renaissance.
Passing chunks of ice can fertilize ocean waters and play a role in the planet’s carbon cycle.
What can elite athletes teach you about how to win?
Lasers, mirrors, and computational advances can all work together to push ground-based astronomy past the limits of our atmosphere.
Being bilingual benefits children as they learn to speak — and adults as they age.
In a state of “hyperwar,” accidents or unexpected AI decisions could lead to widespread devastation before humans could intervene.
Embedded in a cell phone or in accessories such as rings, bracelets or watches, the novel tools aim to make it easier to manage hypertension. But they must still pass several tests before hitting the clinic.
“Why are you unhappy? Because 99.9 percent of everything you think, and of everything you do, is for yourself — and there isn’t one.”
Forget little green men: These scientists say we should be more worried about little green germs.
There is no long-term beneficial effect of medication on standardized test scores.
Across all wavelengths of light, the Sun is brighter than the Moon. Until we went to the highest energies and saw a gamma-ray surprise.
A warming Arctic Circle could be responsible for bursts of cold weather in the south.
The laws of physics don’t prefer matter over antimatter. So how can we be certain that distant stars & galaxies aren’t made of antimatter?
Has the “age of psychopharmacology” shrunk society’s sense of responsibility for mental health?
This list of leadership training topics is designed to help businesses navigate the times and prepare for the future.
Some of these trends may be due, in part, to the lockdown.
Elastic thinking can reveal the assumptions that hamstring our ability to solve seemingly intractable problems.
Questioning isn’t just a way to get the right answer — it’s also a means for sustaining relationships and creative thinking.
Despite billions of years of life on Earth, humans first arose only ~300,000 years ago. It took all that time to make our arrival possible.