sociology
“I need to think about the future. Will you help me?”
The most feared sexually transmitted disease (STD) of the last half-millennium was usually named after foreigners, often the French.
The language you speak plays an important role in how you evaluate truth.
When reading critiques that inflate the uncertainty of science, ask these 7 questions.
The decline of global poverty is one of the most important achievements in history, but the end of poverty is still very far away.
The problems that Americans face are often too complex for fact-checking alone.
It is often assumed that AI will become so advanced that the technology will be able to do anything. In reality, there are limits.
Humans seemingly have opposing desires to fit in and to be unique. The interplay between these might drive the evolution of fads.
The results of a recent study counter some common claims found in anti-immigration narratives.
Dating apps have made it easier than ever to find a partner. Paradoxically, the ease of finding matches means some remain perpetually single.
From 1974 to 1978, the chimps of Gombe Stream National Park in Tanzania were at war with each other, the first time conservationists saw chimps engage in calculated, cold-blooded killing.
A recent study offers new insights into the so-called marriage wage premium.
The majority of countries are democracies. But how many people enjoy democratic rights?
Mental health, healing and pulling together were key themes of 2021, according to the world’s most popular search engine. Google processes billions of requests every day and its Year in Search […]
Research reminds us that mild cognitive impairment isn’t necessarily a prelude to dementia.
For relatives who live far apart, holiday rituals may be the glue that holds the family together.
France is split in two by its very own “desert,” the Empty Diagonal. The area’s depopulation is fairly recent, and Paris is to blame.
Society incorrectly blamed a “population bomb” for problems that had other causes. A wrong diagnosis produces ineffective solutions.
Cities overstimulate our senses and are full of people we don’t know. Maybe humans were meant for this.
Think leisure is pointless?
Universal basic income can secure basic independence for citizens, something which modern states have failed to do, argues author Louise Haagh.
This map of Hutterite colonies in North America says something about religion and evolution — and more precisely, speciation.
The modern antiracist movement is harming the very people it claims to help, according to the linguist John McWhorter.
Like it or not, we are the descendants of busybodies.
Employees are quitting at record rates – a trend that shows no signs of stopping.
The belief that lying is rampant in the digital age just doesn’t match the data.
The two-year pilot program will be a test of harm reduction strategies.
Winner takes all, losers die, and participants have no choice but to play.