Objective reality exists, but what can you know about it that isn't subjective. According to some neuroscientists, not much.
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Meet your new flying nightmare: Thapunngaka shawi.
Psychedelics are going mainstream. Here's your reading list.
Junk food causes weight gain, but it's not just about the calories.
To preserve biodiversity and ecosystems, protected areas should be connected into a gigantic World Park.
This graph shows how badly German cities were hit by Allied bombing raids.
Did fire change the development of the human brain?
Australian parrots have worked out how to open trash bins, and the trick is spreading across Sydney.
MIT engineers devise a decision map to identify the best mission type to deflect an incoming asteroid.
From time-traveling billiard balls to information-destroying black holes, the world's got plenty of puzzles that are hard to wrap your head around.
Age ain't nothing but a number, but "inflammatory age" may be real.
For some reason, the bodies of deceased monks stay "fresh" for a long time.
The questions about which massive structures to build, and where, are actually very hard to answer. Infrastructure is always about the future: It takes years to construct, and lasts for years beyond that.
In his book with Richard Clarke, "Warnings," Eddy made clear this was inevitable.
Your life is far more arbitrary than you might think.
If you truly want to understand modern astrophysics, knowing how to read this graph is essential.
How our fantasy world of the past has become everyday reality.
After 100 million nights of people asking, "What are those twinkly lights?" it is pretty remarkable that we happen to live in one of the first generations that actually knows the answer.
One single plot of data embodies the most profound thing we know about the stars.
Just for giggles, would it be a good idea to have our leaders take shrooms?
The space tourism company Virgin Galactic teams up with Rolls Royce to create a new Mach 3 supersonic aircraft.
By the end of this decade, Seabed 2030 wants to produce accurate maps for the remaining 80 percent of the ocean floor.
The physicist was both a gentleman and scholar.
There are pros and cons to owning a pet as a marginalized individual.
Psychologists discover that the way the brain perceives beauty differs between art or faces.
Researchers dramatically improve the accuracy of a number that connects fundamental forces.
The pandemic has many people questioning whether they ever want to go back to the office.
Neuroscientists and ethicists wants to ensure that neurotechnologies remain benevolent.
When does a healthy desire for wealth morph into greed? And how can we stop it?