Nagomi helps us find balance in discord by unifying the elements of life while staying true to ourselves.
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From grave robbing to giving your own body to science.
A new book by historian and author Paul Strathern argues that the Northern European Renaissance has long been overlooked.
The first tests of optical communications far from Earth will take place aboard the asteroid-bound Psyche spacecraft
Can we stop mass shootings? The first step is collecting data, and these authors have done just that.
There were many other species of human on the planet. Svante Pääbo discovered one of them.
There’s an entire Universe out there. So, with all that space, all those planets, and all those chances at life, why do we all live here?
Discover the history of homemade sugar skulls, home altars, and fantastical spirit animals.
This pup puts us one step closer to resurrecting extinct species.
Frozen adversity set the stage for an explosion of diversity.
A new generation of leaders is forging a path for 21st-century capitalism that’s both profitable and socially responsible.
It turns out it’s hard to make work at an Amazon warehouse fun.
“Painfully forced” is how one contemporary critic described Fitzgerald’s writing style.
Life is governed by unspoken rules. How do you know you’re following them correctly?
A history of injustice and the greatest natural location for ground-based telescopes have long been at odds. Here’s how the healing begins.
The first observational evidence showing the Universe is expanding is 100 years old now: in 2023. Here’s the story of its 100th anniversary.
It’s like radar, but with light. Distributed acoustic sensing — DAS — picks up tremors from volcanoes, quaking ice and deep-sea faults, as well as traffic rumbles and whale calls.
The discovery calls into question the few things scientists know about these powerful astronomical phenomena.
Comet A3, also known as Comet Tsuchinshan-ATLAS, has sprung to life since 2024’s last equinox. Here’s how to catch the show for yourself.
Frustrating failures sometimes lead to great breakthroughs.
Ketamine’s remarkable effect bolsters a new theory of mental illness.
Awe-inspiring moments can be found in our daily lives, and they have surprising benefits for our health and sense of well-being.
The DART mission tested whether it’s possible to deflect an asteroid by crashing something into it.
The nature of civilizational threats has changed in a mere decade.
The first stars in the Universe were made of pristine material: hydrogen and helium alone. Once they die, nothing escapes their pollution.
9 minutes of cruel history may cure the anti-progress delusion.
Stanford psychologist Jamil Zaki discusses the dangers of cynicism and how skepticism can invigorate our relationships and communities.
Einstein’s laws of gravity have been challenged many times, but have always emerged victorious. Could wide binary stars change all that?
It’s a problem on both sides of the political divide.