The Latest from Big Think

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When your hollow bullet causes a prairie dog to explode on impact, that’s called a tap. The real prize, however, is a double tap. That’s when your single bullet kills […]
Physicist Lawrence Krauss finds creation stories depressing – not because they’re implausible, but because they extinguish curiosity and limit human agency. 
A scientist has created a new form of electronic ID that gives sites only the minimum amount of information needed for authentication. 
The neuroscience of creativity is flourishing. But will the popularity of this subject lead to better, or sloppier science?
If errors are inevitable in the pursuit of anything worthwhile, then our most important decisions are inevitably made in their aftermath. 
The Taboos of Alan Moore, Part 1 The world of V for Vendetta is both dystopia and the inevitable outcome of the Thatcher period Moore and artist David Lloyd worked […]
Years ago, when my friends and I were applying for competitive fellowships, awards, and school admissions, we had a macabre joke that there were times when we must have been […]
Sometime in the early 1930s, Henri Matisse hired a photographer to document his paintings at different stages of development. These photographs became signposts along the road toward what Matisse wanted […]
In a country where sports spending is all but nonexistent, two teams look to local businesses -- specifically, a brothel and a funeral parlor -- for funding.
The BBC is launching three pay-TV channels in the country, including CBeebies, which airs Teletubbies and other preschool programs.
In the wake of the awful events in Newtown, a "national conversation" seems to have started about both easy access to guns and the ways we deal (or don't deal) […]
As neuroscience, cognitive science, computer programming, and artificial intelligence progress, we’re understanding better and better how we learn. 
How can the government change the framework of choices that particular people are faced with so that their own small errors in risk perception don’t expose the whole of society?  
How much would you pay to prevent the death of a child, or anyone else, from gun violence?
Tea growers have won legal protection for the name, ensuring that, as with certain specially-produced wines and spirits, theirs is the only tea that gets to be called Darjeeling.
Reporters Without Borders has launched a site that "publishes content that has been censored or banned or has led to reprisals against its creator."
The town of Lens, in northern France, put out a massive effort to convince the Louvre to come. In addition to its art, it's bringing 750 jobs to the area.
As I mentioned earlier, I took part in a discussion panel at Skepticon V last month, How Should Rationalists Approach Relationships and Marriage? The video of that panel is now […]
I hate having to write posts like this, but it's too huge a story to ignore. Less than two weeks before Christmas, America is again reeling from a mass killing […]