The Latest from Big Think

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Obviously it makes a lot of sense to be eating insects.
Twice as many people means twice as much consumption.  But it might mean three times as much innovation and we can see that throughout history.
On May 28, a four-decades old ban on the import of these products will be relaxed, allowing Americans to experience culinary traditions dating back centuries.
CERN and TED-Ed have collaborated on a great animation that explains the basics of the Higgs boson. 
One of the goals of this neuro-theological research is to try to find ways of identifying the negative as well as the positive effects and to try to ultimately have people turn to a more positive way of looking at religious and spiritual ideas.
"Look out Facebook!" Tweeted Rupert Murdoch on the occasion of Facebook's one-year anniversary of its botched IPO. 
In Samuel Beckett’s Waiting for Godot, two friends, Vladimir and Estragon, endlessly wait by a tree in the moonlight for the arrival of someone they both claim to know but […]
The robots, which have seen action in Afghanistan and Iraq, will be part of a broad-spectrum security and surveillance effort designed to make the next World Cup "one of the most protected sports events in history."
When the Tate Britain recently revealed the latest rehanging of their astounding collection of British art, many long unseen works found a new place in the galleries, but one long-standing […]
The Solar Electric Scooter can be charged by leaving it in bright sunlight or plugging it into a power outlet or external charger.
New software titled Cara ("Face" in Spanish) can turn any camera into an intelligent eye that analyzes and produces anonymous data on who it sees.
If being moral is so easy, can we dispatch with religion altogether?
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I am optimistic that religion is not strictly needed. But I cannot be a hundred percent sure because there is no human society where religion is totally absent so we […]
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Fourth Graders seem to be able to do so much more than we give them credit for or even imagine they can.
The future of medicine is predictive, personalized, preventative and is moving from being episodic and reactive to continuous and proactive.
John Hunter uses Sun Tzu's The Art of War to help students develop habits of mind that include collaboration and peaceful conflict resolution. 
Researchers believe this cave painting may turn out to be over 40,000 years old, old enough to outdate modern humans. 
If you’re an empathetic or a kind-hearted person, how do you protect yourself? 
Currently, the technology known as "Active Denial" only operates from a large truck, but a report indicates that Raytheon is developing a version that police officers can use to disperse crowds.
There’s a lot of hype that goes into the disruptive innovations and then there’s a froth and foam that’s associated with that.