Latest Articles

Latest Articles

The newest essays, interviews, and features from Big Think.

nasa merge black hole
Newton thought that gravitation would happen instantly, propagating at infinite speeds. Einstein showed otherwise; gravity isn't instant.
A portrait of a man in a red coat, hinting at Copernicanism through symbolism.
Looking at our planet with post-Copernican eyes has the power to change how we relate to it and each other.
A map of the world with a circle around it.
To this day, one cult believes that Lemuria was real, and that its people left us the sacred wisdom to revive their advanced civilization.
A weird tale of realism set in The Lord of the Rings universe.
The One Ring has its own agency and sentience — and it opens up a wonderful philosophy of things beyond our comprehension.
A man is holding up a small device for seizure detection.
Subtle clues emerge ahead of the attack via changes in scent.
Big bang diagram consensus crisis
There are a few clues that the Universe isn't completely adding up. Even so, the standard model of cosmology holds up stronger than ever.
An illustration of a light bulb with chess pieces around it.
Research consistently points to a set of leadership skills that are high-impact, difficult to develop, and not easily replicated by technology.
oldest trousers
The design was as intricate as that of modern-day, factory-fabricated denim jeans, and just as durable. The ancients had fashion.
An elderly woman sitting on a chair and talking on the phone.
Interventions can make the most difference when Alzheimer’s is detected early.
A collage highlighting disinformation with a fake ear.
Philosopher Lee McIntyre discusses the dangers of disinformation, how such falsehoods spread, and what we can do about it.
A still of Janet Leigh screaming in Alfred Hitchcock's 'Psycho' beside an image of Alfred Hitchcock holding a finger to his mouth as if shushing someone.
Pure cinema is about removing redundancy so that even the smallest detail serves a purpose in relation to the bigger picture.
stars omega centauri globular cluster
With ~400 billion stars in the Milky Way and 6-20 trillion galaxies overall, that makes for a lot of stars. But not as many as you'd think.
A girl in a blue jacket raises her hand in class, demonstrating language proficiency and recall.
Language influences how you visually process the world, which in turn influences your memory of it.
Two men sitting in an orange jail cell.
Simple "nudges" to remind people to show up for court could help keep thousands out of jail.
A swirling, bright galaxy or nebula in deep space with a luminous center and spiraling blue and purple hues against a dark starry background.
12mins
Quantum wormholes are mathematically possible — but might also be physically impossible. Physicist Janna Levin explains Hawking’s famous information paradox.
A woman in a wheelchair looking at a computer screen.
The brain implant lets her talk four times faster than the previous record.
The region of Catalonia has been at odds with greater Spain for over 300 years. The prospect of autonomy remains a distant and fading dream.
A man standing on a beach under the mysterious milky.
Experts say it’s likely space junk—and there’s plenty more where that came from.
Today's popular weight-loss drugs could soon be joined by brain stimulation and gene therapies.
field of streams milky way tidal dwarf
The biggest, brightest galaxies are the easiest to spot, but the tiniest ones teach us about how the Milky Way assembled and grew up!