3D-printing robots are being used to build a 100-home housing development in the US state of Texas.
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The fabric of spacetime is four-dimensional, with three for space and only one for time. But wow, time sure is different from space!
It’s difficult to project a sphere onto a flat, two-dimensional surface. All maps of the Earth have flaws; the same is true for the cosmos.
Psychiatrist Dr. Bessel van der Kolk discusses key methods for rewiring the brain, kickstarting the healing process, and opening your mind to new perspectives.
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Just 10 years ago, humanity had never directly detected a single gravitational wave. We’re closing in on 300 now, with so much more to come!
From the present day all the way to less than 400 million years after the Big Bang, we’re seeing how the Universe grew up like never before.
According to Stephen Hawking, spontaneously emitted radiation should cause all black holes to decay. But we’ve never seen it: not even once.
A mid-flight scare reveals how embracing death can bring purpose and meaning to everyday life.
Those who know who they are — and what they truly value — refuse to compromise their authentic direction to placate others.
How choosing Stoic acceptance — not dour resignation — galvanized great leaders from Thomas Edison to Phil Jackson and Tony Hawk.
Most stars shine with properties, like brightness, that barely change at all with time. The ones that do vary help us unlock the Universe.
Traveling back in time is a staple of science fiction movies. But according to Einstein, it’s a physical possibility that’s truly allowed.
The New York Times bestselling author and founder of Going With Grace shares how close confrontations with death inspired her to change her life.
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The Wharton School professor — and author of Co-Intelligence — outlines ways we can tap into the AI advantage safely and effectively.
The psychology of people who cut off all communication—and how that affects their partners.
Get rid of the notion that the best employees come from Harvard, Yale, and Princeton.
It’s something to wrestle and live with, says behavioral scientist Arthur Brooks.
To gain its full value, L&D leaders must be open to challenging assumptions about how they approach on-the-job training.
You no longer need an army of followers to stand out as a writer — “one great piece is all it takes,” says Perell.
The best autonomous car may be one you don’t even need to own.
The material is both stronger and lighter than those used to make conventional power plant turbines.
We’re all assigned a label at some point in our lives. You might be the smart one, the creative one or the lazy one. But is that designation really an […]
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If all massive objects emit Hawking radiation, not just black holes alone, then everything is unstable, even the Universe. Can that be true?
A member of a species that kills trees, this mushroom is not the first to be called the Humongous Fungus — and perhaps not the last.
Delirium is one of the most perplexing deathbed phenomena, exposing the gap between our cultural ideals of dying words and the reality of a disoriented mind.
Barry Ritholtz — market commentator, founder of Ritholtz Wealth Management, and podcast host — shares what really trips investors up.
Duke sociologist Dr. Christopher Bail on the tech’s potential to foster empathy in an age of division.
Whether you run the clock forward or backward, most of us expect the laws of physics to be the same. A 2012 experiment showed otherwise.
Meta and NYU’s robot can navigate and clean rooms it’s never seen before.
For centuries, even after we knew the Sun was a star like any other, we still didn’t know what it was made of. Cecilia Payne changed that.