Without wormholes, warp drive, or some type of new matter, energy, or physics, everyone is limited by the speed of light. Or are they?
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Made from concrete, it cost 15% less per square foot to construct than a typical house.
How many tins of beans make a stockpile, and when does a basement become a bunker?
How would you feel about working like a Lutheran or a Cistercian?
Could a theory from the science of perception help crack the mysteries of psychosis?
Quarterback Tom Brady was initially overlooked by NFL scouts, but he had vast hidden reserves of character.
A.J. Jacobs looks back at what he learned about religion, himself, and modern American culture during “The Year of Living Biblically.”
Why dispelling the notion that it’s all about getting the correct answer is so powerful.
Our concept of “failure” is way too narrow.
The Source Family, a radical 1970s utopian commune, still impacts what we eat today.
Tardigrades can completely dehydrate and later rehydrate themselves, a survival trick that scientists are harnessing to preserve medicines in hot temperatures.
One of Apple’s key innovations serves as a psychological breakthrough, as its technology eliminates the isolating feel of headset use.
The lithium-ion alternatives could help create a safer, greener future.
The second law of thermodynamics is an inviolable law of reality. Here’s what everyone should know about closed, open, and isolated systems.
The essential element needed for innovation is creative dissonance — and the keys to unlocking it were forged by bankers in Italy.
An in-depth interview with astronomer Kelsey Johnson, whose new book, Into the Unknown, explores what remains unknown about the Universe.
Computers are growing more powerful and more capable, but everything has limits
A-list lessons for better work-life collaboration — direct from the movie set.
Intrinsic motivation cannot be imposed on a team — but you can provide the right culture for it to flourish.
The game of Plinko perfectly illustrates chaos theory. Even with indistinguishable initial conditions, the outcome is always uncertain.
Just being a pessimist, cynic, or apathetic doesn’t make you a nihilist.
High-frequency oscillations that ripple through our brains may generate memory and conscious experience.
According to neuropsychologist Julia DiGangi, no one can live a life free of emotional pain. We can only choose how those emotions empower us.
Nicole has been dating someone for a while but it’s not working out from her point of view. Is sudden radio silence an ethical option?
Gamification, minimalist design, using AI to track behavior — this article dives into these and other key ways to optimize an eLearning strategy.
How the cult hit sci-fi show imagines a “techno-realist” future.
Do you really need a monstrous upbringing to make monsters?
Science is for everyone, even those possessing strongly held beliefs that seem to conflict with the best available evidence.
Intellectual humility demands that we examine our motivations for holding certain beliefs.
The true story of the shot that “reverberated through England” when science collided head-on with religion.