The Body-Mass Index is a poor way to determine your health. Try this more important ratio instead.
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The Space Aggressor squadrons develop strategies to defend against space-oriented attacks.
Break-ups can be bad for your health. But new research shows that writing about your separation can improve cardiac health—as long as you write in a certain way.
Bob Dylan finally presents his Nobel prize acceptance speech.
Can genius be reproduced from extracted DNA? Introducing the Leonardo Project.
Exploring the ramifications of consciousness in alien life.
Two sociologists examine how religious practice impacts African American and Latino marriages.
The event horizon is real, and we know it without even needing to see it directly. “Where we’re going, we won’t need eyes to see.” –Sam Neill, Event Horizon If […]
Here are five ORBITER-recommended podcasts sure to challenge your thinking on what it means to be human in this world.
There’s been an alarming uptick in sufferers of depression turning to opioids, increasing addiction numbers.
“The most important, obvious realities are often the ones that are the hardest to see.”
Fancy a game of Japanese chess?
Constant? Not-a-constant? Or is there a fundamental flaw in the way we’re doing business? This article was written by Sabine Hossenfelder. Sabine is a theoretical physicist specialized in quantum gravity […]
It isn’t just supernovae or merging neutron stars. In fact, it’s the quietest way of all! “N6946-BH1 is the only likely failed supernova that we found in the first seven years […]
The jawbone scanned in the study is the oldest hominin fossil ever found.
Silicon Valley insiders are voicing concerns about programmers’ deliberate attempts to turn users into addicts.
An MIT study predicts when artificial intelligence will take over for humans in different occupations.
In case you haven’t already heard of CRISPR-Cas9, it is the revolutionary gene-editing technology, discovered just a few years ago, that allows scientists to edit the DNA of any species […]
When you have a decision to make, a behavioral psychologist suggests you ask yourself what you’d advise a friend making this choice.
We may pay a price for abstract thinking.
There’s a point beyond which we cannot go, there are things beyond that we cannot know. But here’s what we expect. “The Edge… there is no honest way to explain it […]
Stephen M. Walt, a professor at Harvard’s Kennedy School of Government, tackles some seemingly non-controversial statements about human rights, democracy, and international law.
A new study indicates that the brain can detect and help avoid diseases in others through the senses of sight and smell alone.
Elon Musk and many top CEOs condemned President Trump’s decision to pull out of the Paris Agreement on climate change.
Genetic changes in Egypt might have been caused by trade routes.
Spontaneous talk on surprise topics. Writer Ariel Levy on the silence around the animal facts of women’s physical lives, her comically awkward experience with the shamanic hallucinogen Ayahuasca, and much more.
It’s not too late to change course, but we’re headed in the wrong direction faster than ever now. “Oh Beautiful for smoggy skies, insecticided grain,For strip-mined mountain’s majesty above the asphalt […]
Known as Cunningham’s Law, it is the assertion that “the best way to get a right answer on the internet is to post a wrong answer.” It turns out our impulse to correct a wrong online may outweigh our desire to merely give answers.
It’s durable, exponentially scalable, and it’ll last millennia, if not millions of years.
That’s a big yes, as an incredible new study from University of Melbourne researchers found.