Latest Articles

Latest Articles

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

11mins
Are you living at just 40% of your potential? Here's how to tap into your inner Navy SEAL.
Here are some of the most impactful scientific achievements in a year full of discoveries.
The ‘big discovery’ is nothing of the kind. We need a new planet-finding mission to probe the next frontier. Last week, NASA dropped a bombshell that it’s Kepler mission — the greatest […]
There have been some interesting "sightings" in the news these days.
5mins
Why do you check your phone 150 times a day? Is it a conscious choice, or have the attention merchants gotten into your head?
We often look at our impulses as a bother. Things to be overcome and controlled, but what if we are looking at them the wrong way?
The prevalence of Alzheimer’s disease is expected to triple over the next three decades, to nearly 14 million in the United States alone. 
Efficiency is an obsession for many organizations—whether they’re businesses, nonprofits, or government agencies. However, efficiency isn’t a metric in and of itself. Efficiency is always linked to another performance metric; […]
Those awful almost-changes they made? They could have avoided the whole problem by simply doing the math. Designed for artists, writers, and creatives* of all different persuasions, Patreon has become a […]
The government decides the risk of research into dangerous viruses is worth the reward.
BASE particle physicists have discovered a very precise way to examine antimatter.
7mins
What's changed since Anita Hill took on Clarence Thomas in 1991? The power of the accuser.
Some philosophers have tried to base morality on human nature, but what does biology say about that?
‘Total work’, a term coined by the German philosopher Josef Pieper just after the Second World War in his book Leisure: The Basis of Culture (1948), is the process by which human beings are transformed into workers and nothing else.    
A study of moose skull sizes on a remote island shows the effects of global warming.
We can “read” genes with ease now, but still can’t say what most of them “mean.” To show why we need clearer “causology” and fitter metaphors, let's scrutinize cars and their parts like we do bodies and genes.
If you haven’t finished your holiday shopping yet, consider these 10 gifts, good any time of year! One of the hardest things when it comes to holiday shopping is to find […]