Wading into the gun control debate, Facebook has announced it will restrict person-to-person sales of firearms on its platform.
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On the map, the changing fortunes of French baby boys’ names look like battles in a weird, unreported war.
The similarities between the Universe and a living being are striking and surprising. Could larger entities than us be alive? “Do not look at stars as bright spots only. Try to […]
Big Think’s Jason Gots reviews David McCullough’s 2001 Pulitzer Prize-winning biography John Adams.
How “the stats” are being used often causes a fog of low-quality quantification. Multiple regression is widely misunderstood by researchers and journalists.
As the world works toward a zero-emission economy, Japan has had to get creative about building up its solar infrastructure.
New research shows that the most effective leaders, from Abraham Lincoln to Jeff Bezos, are always questioning their own convictions.
An unfamiliar new threat that harms babies, that we can’t protect ourselves from, that experts don’t fully understand, and about which the media is blaring loud alarms; Zika virus has several powerful emotional characteristics that make any potential danger feel much more dangerous than it might actually be.
Chinese activist Ai Weiwei is the most political artist on Earth. Did he just sell his soul to a department store?
And how close does the farthest one we’ve ever found so far come to it? “Science, however, gives me the feeling of steady progress: I am convinced that theoretical physics […]
Planet Nine? More like “Planet maybe.” “Finding out that something you have just discovered is considered all but impossible is one of the joys of science.” –Mike Brown Last week, the […]
Out of those hundreds of friends on Facebook, you’d only count four of them as “true friends.”
All cities have clogged traffic arteries, post-industrial pockets of hipness, and districts that hate each other’s guts for no other reason than that they’re across the river from each other, or on opposite sides of the tracks.
Could Michael Bloomberg actually win? Or should he spend his billions on fixing our broken electoral system instead?
Google.org is trying to help refugees regain the lives they lost.
Photographer Eric Pickersgill has imagined a strange new world. One not unlike our own.
Tinder now offers free testing for sexually transmitted infections to users.
Is inertia of prior ideas the only thing keeping us from the next major revolution in science? This post was written by Brian Koberlein. Brian is an astrophysicist and Senior Lecturer […]
Researchers tested police on major misconceptions about the psychology of policing
Designed by Uruguayan-born, New York-based architect Rafael Viñoly, the new Laguna Garzón Bridge aims to reduce the speed of crossing cars and encourage drivers to enjoy the view.
Climate change has brought a disease out of obscurity and into new regions of America, causing a pandemic.
Super Bowl season illustrates a deep part of who we are, not just as sports fans.
Life may have ended before it had a chance to begin. They’re calling this solution to the Fermi Paradox the Gaian Bottleneck. It’s not that life has never emerged in the universe — it just never had the chance to grow or evolve.
Locate any of the 57 trillion three-by-three-metre squares on Earth with just three words.
Confronting the logic of the “I have nothing to hide” argument.
How the darkest places on the sky unexpectedly house the closest new stars. “You will never be happy if you continue to search for what happiness consists of. You will […]
Our ape ancestors might give us insight into the GOP frontrunner’s sustained dominance.
And here’s the reason why, despite all you may have heard. “Thou shalt not embarrass thyself and thy colleagues by claiming false planets.” –Bill Cochran Late last year, one of the […]
Two Rice University students have created “TrumpScript,” a programming language Donald Trump would approve of.
The Universe may be truly infinite, but our understanding of it never will be. Here’s why. “To know that we know what we know, and to know that we do not […]