National Geographic’s first James Webb Space Telescope book shows us the cosmos like never before.
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The new book “Lost Cities, Ancient Tombs” documents 100 archaeological discoveries that changed the world.
With almost every shovel of sand shifted in Egypt, another artifact comes to light.
We should not romanticize ancient Egyptian culture.
“We’re acting more like fans of a football team going to a game than a banker carefully choosing investments.”
Esperanto was intended to be an easy-to-learn second language that enabled you to speak with anyone on the planet.
What if the barrier to a fulfilled life isn’t technology but culture?
A new generation of leaders is forging a path for 21st-century capitalism that’s both profitable and socially responsible.
True north, magnetic north, and grid north have aligned. There’s also a connection to James Bond.
These five great books should prompt us to work on what needs fixing the most in the world: ourselves.
Guess which country has 269% inflation.
Instead of giving the 239 suffering families and the public a true story, Netflix exploited a horrifying tragedy to push conspiracy theories.
Of the world’s 300 honey varieties, none is stranger and more dangerous than mad honey.
When it comes to behavior, genetics may play a larger role than you think.
There are many ways asynchronous learning benefits both individuals and organizations, from learner autonomy to cost savings.
Religion fosters traits that are helpful in a school system that relies on authority figures and rewards people who follow the rules.
The Swedish Academy honored the writer for his uncompromising inquiry into the lasting consequences of Africa’s colonization.
The questions about which massive structures to build, and where, are actually very hard to answer. Infrastructure is always about the future: It takes years to construct, and lasts for years beyond that.
Everybody wins, everybody loses, or something in between.
There were at least four major climate catastrophes that reshaped global religion. It could be happening again.
Invented in 1902 by an American, the ‘Middle East’ is all over the place.
The current focus on the Chinese and Jews is nothing new.
New book focuses on some of the world’s most peculiar borderlines.
From anti-gravity pens to cool model kits, these space-themed gifts will make any star gazer very happy.
Prevention is always better than waiting .
Why do so many people report encounters with seemingly similar entities after taking DMT?
Personal crises and national crises have more than a few things in common. From Brexit to the partisan divide in America to Germany after World War II, Jared Diamond talks with host Jason Gots about how we get through them (or don’t).
Why one expert believes it is knocking on death’s door.
A comprehensive interdisciplinary paper removes any doubt that orcas don’t belong in marine parks and zoos.