Words of wisdom from Cuban national hero José Martí: “A knowledge of different literatures is the best way to free one’s self from the tyranny of any of them.”
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If you have to say “never forget,” you’ve probably already forgotten.
What makes a great artist? According to French writer Émile Zola, it’s talent coupled with tenacity.
“If you shut up truth and bury it under the ground, it will but grow, and gather to itself such explosive power that the day it bursts through it will blow up everything in its way.”
Words of wisdom from the great composer and pioneer of ethnomusicology: “Competitions are for horses, not artists.”
Words of wisdom from Hungarian composer Béla Bartók, the founder of ethnomusicology: “In art there are only fast or slow developments. Essentially it is a matter of evolution, not revolution.”
Ninety years ago, America invented the Human Map, an art form now dominated by India.
A look at the implications of a promising discovery by researchers at Google.
If all the random motions of the molecules inside aligned, how far and fast would it go? “Millions saw the apple fall, but Newton was the one who asked why.”-Bernard […]
Two documentarians want to do something about it.
The space agency seeks to index the parts of the Internet Google won’t show you.
How does one make a marriage last? Researchers interviewed and surveyed over 700 people with a combined 40,000 years of marriage experience.
Many don’t have a leg to stand on where their understanding of evolution is concerned. David Sloan Wilson (head of the Evolution Institute) says “natural selection is life Monopoly.” But, it could be more like basketball…
Thankfully, parents have the power to help nurture and strengthen this part of the brain.
The gender-wage gap is more complex than we may think, as researchers find female managers are not the solution to the wage issues.
On January 1, 2016, one of the most infamous books of the 20th century — Adolf Hitler’s Mein Kampf — enters public domain and can be published by anyone in Germany for the first time since the end of World War II. Seventy years after the fall of the Nazis, people still debate allowing that particularly evil genii out of the bottle to influence young minds. Others argue that the genii’s been out of the bottle all along, either through underground sources or, more recently, the Internet. More controllable, however, have been the propaganda films of the Nazis, whose chief propagandist, Joseph Goebbels, announced in 1941 that, “Film is our most important medium for propaganda.” Felix Moeller’s new documentary Forbidden Films: The Hidden Legacy of Nazi Film examines this question of allowing new generations to see these banned films and, if so, how to show them without that evil history repeating itself.
“So much of what we do is ephemeral and quickly forgotten, even by ourselves, so it’s gratifying to have something you have done linger in people’s memories.”
The death of any given person is just a lack of connectedness to future experiences.
But I use that term loosely.
Liberals and conservatives unite when thinking of America’s Golden Age — a fictionalized time whose history we constantly rewrite.
You can’t expect to foster effective K-12 education using outdated and analog methods to educate kids raised on digital.
Some day fact-checking will be as easy as using spell-check.
Nowhere in American politics do cultural proxy wars play out more vividly than in the chambers of the United States Supreme Court.
What happened when a team of researchers slapped a button and a countdown timer on Reddit? A community formed.
How, with a sunny solstice, you can figure out how much our planet is tilted! “Soon the earth will tilt on its axis and begin to dance to the reggae […]
Sometimes a small business model is the way to go, so companies don’t have to sell off user data to make money.
“There’s a very basic human, nonverbal aspect to our need to make music and use it as part of our human expression. It doesn’t have to do with body movements; it doesn’t have to do with articulation of a language, but with something spiritual.”
Turns out groups help us define our individual identities, which boosts our sense of self.
“The written word, obviously, is very inward, and when we’re reading, we’re thinking. It’s a sort of spiritual, meditative activity. When we’re looking at visual objects, I think our eyes are obviously directed outward, so there’s not as much reflective time. And it’s the reflectiveness and the spiritual inwardness about reading that appeals to me.”
A quote from author Joyce Carol Oates: “The worst cynicism: a belief in luck.” She believes hard work and tenacity are the main ingredients for success. Do you agree?