Where do cultures come from? The answer is as old as life itself.
All Articles
Scientists are developing liquid metal or “electric blood” that can move and form 2D shapes. This may revolutionize the field of soft robotics.
In the wake of Facebook’s Cambridge Analytica scandal, another data firm was discovered to have amassed similar user profiles of millions of people.
A little peek into our past reveals tantalizing details.
Sure, we found the Higgs Boson at the LHC earlier this decade. But what else has, and more importantly, hasn’t turned up? It’s now just over five years since the two […]
In her new memoir, Duke Divinity School professor Kate Bowler opens up about battling Stage IV cancer.
A new paper explores why women gossip about each other, and identifies some key factors that influence how women choose gossiping targets.
After the wrongful arrest of two black men, the coffee shop chain will be closing down for an afternoon in order to educate up to 175,000 employees on racial bias in the workplace.
It’s not a solution yet, but perhaps the start of one.
Sometimes conspiracy theories turn out to be true, like the one about how the CIA tried to use LSD to find a mind-control drug.
Rapper Meek Mill is stuck in jail, caught in the U.S. justice system’s perpetual probation trap that keeps a disproportionate number of black people in America incarcerated.
Optimal efficiency is a goal that every organization or business strives for. However, achieving that task is easier said than done. Helping employees find ways to increase their efficiency while […]
The ‘Great Polish Map of Scotland’ is the coolest map story you’ve never heard of.
Among the general public, people compare it to the aether, phlogiston, or epicycles. Yet almost all astronomers are certain: dark matter and dark energy exist. Here’s why. If you go by […]
A longtime debate over Buddhism’s religiosity has drawn a line between metaphysics and action.
The programs are long and intense, the creativity and relationships aspect of the vocation has been eroded, there is pervasive negativity in the media, and comparatively poor salary and working conditions.
Space X successfully launches TESS, the Transiting Exoplanet Survey Satellite a.k.a. “The Planet Hunter.” NASA will use it to search for planets that may support extraterrestrial life.
SpaceX recently secured about $507 million in new funding. Based on recent statements, SpaceX will put that cash toward three ambitious projects.
Earth is old enough to have been home to other industrialized civilizations so far back in the past we have no idea they were there. What we’ll leave behind may offer clues of what we could look for as evidence.
Kakistocracy is rule by the worst, but who are the worst? A better question, how do we know?
Churches and religious organizations are tax-exempt. Should they continue to get such a benefit?
These sober maps have a chilling topic: the prevalence of lynchings throughout the U.S. from 1930 to 1938.
After generations of speculations, we’ve finally got the images that tell us the full story. Some 4.5 billion years ago, our Sun and Solar System were born from a collapsing cloud […]
What do Google, sharks, and money have in common? They’re all in our weekly random fact roundup.
The scales are not in favor for the most religious among us.
April 20, 4:20 in stoner folklore, is a day of celebration—as well as a 12 percent increase in fatal car crashes.
NASA is developing something called an X-Plane that could potentially bring back supersonic speeds to the skies.
The Mnemonic Induction of Lucid Dreams (MILD) was originally developed in the 1970s by the American psychophysiologist Stephen LaBerge.
The impact of this research could help save millions of lives each year. Only thing is, it has to be done from space.