The Latest from Big Think

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There is an economic imperative to have higher engagement at work, so why has it not changed?
3mins
Why do we have so little engagement in work these days? Companies need to be about values.
Thanks to three solar panels and a large lithium ion battery pack, the stations can capture and store enough power to charge six phones at once and have plenty to spare.
Is this overkill: $30 billion for 40,000 border agents, 700 miles of fencing and aerial drones to guard the U.S.-Mexico border.
The world just lost a brilliant and fearless journalist. Michael Hastings did more in his short life than most people do in an entire lifetime. As information continues to come […]
You can zoom in to the image and view an area of the Red Planet's Gale Crater in unprecedented detail. 
The race to build the world’s first 3D-printed house is on. Italian civil engineer Enrico Dini (the subject of an upcoming documentary called “The Man Who Prints Houses”) has plans to print […]
When Fisher v. University of Texas is decided in the next few days, Justice Anthony Kennedy may cast the decisive vote ending affirmative action as we know it. Unless he doesn't. 
A new US Forest Service study shows that through removing fine particles in the air, urban forests save an average of one life every year per city. In New York City alone, eight lives are saved annually on average.
WESTERN commentators translate the Zhongguo Meng as "Chinese Dream," thereby patronizing China’s socio-cultural originality and marketing it as a franchise of the "American Dream". But are the two civilizations really […]
I find your use of the word "offensive" to be offensive.
Monsanto executive Robert T. Fraley was awarded The World Food Prize for his work in developing genetically modified crops. 
George Will used an apt phrase to describe the policy options toward Syria. When faced with universally bad choices, he opined, “Don’t just do something. Stand there.” Better to do […]
The spacecraft currently in residence near Saturn will position itself to capture what our planet looks like from almost 900 million miles away. It's the first-ever intentional photo session from deep space, which means we have time to dress up. 
Eric Swalwell is believed to be the first Congressman to vine a vote. 
Scientists have detected fracturing of the ocean floor near the Iberian peninsula, signaling the movement of tectonic plates that could eventually close the distance between North America and continental Europe.
Researchers at Japan's National Institute of Informatics have developed goggles that jam facial recognition systems. 
One way or another: This week the agency announced an ambitious plan to locate and monitor any asteroid -- even the relatively small ones -- that could pose a danger to the planet.
In an act of defiance against poachers and traffickers, the government will destroy five tons of seized ivory worth millions on the open market.
Steven Mazie has a post on the front page today about Ben Bernanke's Princeton commencement speech this year, and his call to the graduating class to "share their luck with […]