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History & Society
Trace how culture, power, and ideas shape societies across time.
Even with just a momentary view of our galaxy right now, the data we collect enables us to reconstruct so much of our past history.
Will "Sausage Party" survive the test of time?
Welcome to The Nightcrawler — a weekly newsletter from Eric Markowitz covering tech, innovation, and long-term thinking.
In 2021, residents of the top America could expect to live 20.4 years longer than residents of the bottom America.
We have very specific predictions for how particles ought to decay. When we look at B-mesons all together, something vital doesn't add up.
A new railway will switch the Baltic region's train gauge from Soviet to standard European — a megaproject with political, economic, and military dimensions.
For J.R.R. Tolkien, the single most important element of a fairy tale was the dramatic reversal of misfortune in the story's ending.
The Sombrero is the closest bright, massive, edge-on galaxy to us. JWST's new image, taken with MIRI, finally shows what's under its hat.
The nonprofit made a bold gamble on the limits of "fair use" — and federal courts have not backed their play.
In November 1974, astronomers used the radio telescope at Puerto Rico’s Arecibo Observatory to send a hello to the universe.
Scalars, vectors, and tensors come up all the time in physics. They're more than mathematical structures. They help describe the Universe.
Magnificent time-tested buildings are filled with lessons in resilience and stability — and the benefits for investment strategy can be huge.
The most massive early galaxies grew up faster, and have more stars, than astronomers expected, according to JWST. What does it all mean?
While we’re busy wondering whether machines will ever become conscious, we rarely stop to ask: What happens to us?