Derek Beres
Derek Beres is a freelance writer. Based in Portland, Oregon, he has served in senior editorial positions at a number of tech companies and has years of experience in health, science, and music writing. He is the co-host of the Conspirituality podcast and co-author of Conspirituality: How New Age Conspiracies Became a Health Threat.
Despite tens of millions of dollars pouring into new technologies, a ‘clean’ burger remains elusive.
The Canadian professor takes issue with blocking free speech, but is he part of the problem?
The famed science fiction author coined the term “cyberspace” before it existed.
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Beef, salt, and water is all the Canadian professor eats. Is that sustainable?
Between the noise and frustration, we’re suffering more than ever.
A new review article makes the case that you can always use it.
Chemo is our best response to cancer so far. A novel new therapy could render it obsolete.
The Canadian professor has an extensive collection posted on his site.
Sometimes doing nothing means everything.
A new study from Oregon State University makes it clear: it’s you.
It may create the conditions for further inequality.
Florida researchers offer schools a simple message: Send home report cards earlier in the week.
A definition of death is surprisingly malleable, leading to complications when it comes to organ donation.
The American Psychological Association recently released guidelines for treating boys and men. Men aren’t happy about it.
We knew the Chicxulub crater was massive. We just didn’t know how widespread the damage actually was.
Co-ops are more pervasive than you think. They just suffer from a marketing problem.
The Israeli historian has plenty to say.
You can become a tree or even the soil supporting it.
Turns out the more we desire a food, the more we have to consume to feel satiated.
To go beyond meaning you might need a helpful phrase.
A new study reveals that it increases eye pressure, negating the effects of THC.
Good quotes are powerful catalysts for positive actions.
A new study out of the University of Tennessee, Knoxville traces a disturbing correlation.
Celebrating five years since Grain Brain was published, David Perlmutter doubles down on his warnings.
More farm space equals more carbon.