Ah, ha, ha, ha, stayin’ alive, stayin’ alive.
Search Results
You searched for: -%20-
Deep learning AI has accurately created color images from night vision images.
Neuroscience research suggests it might be time to rethink our ideas about when exactly a child becomes an adult.
A new generation of leaders is forging a path for 21st-century capitalism that’s both profitable and socially responsible.
Radical Emotional Acceptance calls on you to celebrate all of life’s emotions — even the negative ones.
The hot Big Bang is often touted as the beginning of the Universe. But there’s one piece of evidence we can’t ignore that shows otherwise.
Scientists discover burrows of giant predator worms that lived on the seafloor 20 million years ago.
And debate over it started soon after.
1859’s Carrington event gave us a preview of how catastrophic the Sun could be for humanity. But it could get even worse than we imagined.
Thanks to protocols established centuries ago in Europe, world leaders no longer need to worry about having their heads bashed with an axe.
Tracing the origin and development of jaws — and other anatomical features that humans share — sheds some light on how we came to be.
Japan just opened to tourists for the first time since the coronavirus pandemic began, echoing the island country’s isolationist policies during the feudal era.
Human beings are tiny creatures compared to the 92 billion light-year wide observable Universe. How can we comprehend such large scales?
This map of Europe’s 20 most populous islands holds a few surprises and unlocks a truckload of trivia.
Are anti-workers the lazy children of privilege or the brave vanguard of a utopic upheaval?
After 20 months, scientists find lab-dish brain cells matured at a similar rate to those of an actual infant.
Impressive but deadly physics underlie catastrophic eruptions.
If stars don’t go supernova at first, they can get a second chance after becoming a white dwarf. But can their companions survive?
More than 90% of human faces are home to mites that live in our skin pores. These friendly guests might be merging with us.
One of the winners. Dr. K. Barry Sharpless, is now the fifth person in history to win two Nobels.
The history of hell doesn’t begin with the Old Testament. Instead, hell took shape in the 2nd century from Mediterranean cultural exchange.
A disturbing interview given by a KGB defector in 1984 describes America of today and outlines four stages of mass brainwashing used by the KGB.
Listening to some songs can cause a powerful physiological response known as “frisson.” What is it, and why does it happen?
An insect? A vermin? An unwanted animal? What in the world is Franz Kafka talking about?
Researchers use fluid dynamics to spot artificial imposter voices.
Uploading your mind is not a pathway to immortality. Instead, it will create a possibly hostile digital doppelgänger.
The Athenian rich paid their taxes because they craved the social success of being perceived as “useful.”
Is there victory in defeat?
Myrkl (pronounced “miracle”) is supposed to let you go wild without facing the consequences the next day. But does it actually work?