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The newest essays, interviews, and features from Big Think.
If you don’t have pristine, dark skies, you might never connect to the Universe. But there’s hope. “Before we devised artificial lights and atmospheric pollution and modern forms of nocturnal entertainment […]
A college course on how to recognize "bullshit" addresses fake news, memes, clickbaiting and misleading advertising.
If you think we're talking about someone else, don't be so hasty. One study highlights how the vast majority of people choose ignorance over knowing.
Risks abound for those plucky few willing to put their lives on the line to populate the Red Planet.
A "forbidden research" conference at MIT tackles areas of science constrained by ethical, cultural and institutional restrictions.
Meet the Cornell scientist who figured out the link between fracking disposal wells and Oklahoma’s earthquakes.
An incredible story, the current controversy, and the hope for the future. Our Universe was born pristine, with no stars, galaxies, molecules or even stable atoms, some 13.8 billion years […]
Loop quantum gravity gets the ancient atomist back into the loop, showing how black holes might explode, and that the Big Bang might be a Big Bounce.
If Scotty beams you up for a trip around the Sun, here’s how to handle it. “I really didn’t have to work, shall we say, with Star Trek. It was a […]
4mins
There's a new verb in town: cognify. We have far too much baggage with the word 'intelligence' so to fully embrace the second industrial revolution we need to start talking about artificial cognification.
3mins
In comedy there is always the temptation to go for the easy jokes – but now, more than ever, comedians have to challenge themselves.
4mins
Here are two cutting-edge neuroscience technologies that may enable us to treat conditions like blindness, epilepsy and Alzheimer's.
Spontaneous talk on surprise topics. Historian Yuval Noah Harari, bestselling author of Sapiens and Homo Deus, on the dizzying ethical questions that surround what's coming next – from superhuman cyborgs to algorithms that know us better than we know ourselves.
What if we told you that, right now, your phone was making a map of your interior surroundings — whether you're at work or at home — and sending that data to places unknown?
Hydrogen is #1, Helium is #2. Who’s number 3? Hint: it’s not #3 in the periodic table! “It is the function of science to discover the existence of a general reign […]
Scientists release observation data from 1,600 stars in hopes the public can help find planets that orbit stars outside our solar system.
4mins
What if the vision wasn't just to have politicians who are science literate, but actual scientists running the joint – would it be any better than it is now?