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Though it won by a seeming landslide, the results of Sunday's Duma election in Russia reveal rising discontent among the Russian population. The results are really a disaster for Putin.
Calls are rising in the West for tougher actions against Iran. Here's why Obama must strongly embrace a cold-war-style strategy of containment. Patient vigilance is called for.
Egypt's euphoria over the ousting of President Hosni Mubarak in February later gave way to a creeping realization that the regime had not been toppled at all. What lies ahead?
After long wallowing in slow growth, there is cautious optimism that Africa now has a real chance to follow in the footsteps of Asia, thanks partly to the commodities boom.
"A second-class intellect but a first-class temperament" was Oliver Wendell Holmes' assessment of Franklin Roosevelt, reflecting an old and widespread notion that the smartest and most ingenious person in the […]
During the REM stage of sleep, the brain's stress chemicals shut down while the mind processes the day's emotional experiences which we witness as dreams as we doze.
Apropos of my recent posts on whether Unitarian Universalism is welcoming to atheists, I just got the winter 2011 issue of UU World magazine. And guess who wrote the blurb […]
Scientists are beginning to understand more fully how exercise improves cognitive function. They believe a protein known as brain-derived neurotrophic factor is released when we work out.
Hallucinogens are increasingly being studied for legitimate therapeutic uses, such as dealing with post-traumatic stress disorder, addiction, chronic pain, depression even terminal illness.
Between the ages of five and eight month, infants develop surprisingly complex moral attitudes, considering the context of an action when determining whether it is right or wrong.
--Guest post by Kristen Moses, American University graduate student. On July 20, 2011, the UN declared a famine in two regions of southern Somalia due to the worst drought in […]
Studies show that more agreeable men and women are less likely to be put in management positions and earn less money than their bristly colleagues. Why are we biased against kindness?
Since March of this year, a series of extraordinary paper sculptures has appeared in various locations around Edinburgh, Scotland. Each location is a library or other institution devoted to the […]
Promiscuity in US high schools is at a twenty year low and teen birth rates have fallen by over one third from 1991 through to 2009. So why is it […]
by Tauriq Moosa When someone defies the odds, it’s common practice for him or her to attribute their ‘winning’ to what we might call tokens: a lucky jacket, a prayer, some […]
Ordinary people are taking control of their health data, making their DNA public and running their own experiments. Their big question: Why should science be limited to professionals?
A provision of the new health care law, which requires health insurance companies to spend 80% of the consumers' premium dollars they collect on actual medical care, has entered into force.
A new Pew survey reveals that as the economy shows signs of a modest recovery, public belief in climate change may be on the rise. Understanding how climate change perceptions […]
By producing medically useful amounts of endoderm cells from human stem cells, Canadian scientists have overcome a major hurdle in developing treatments for diabetes and liver diseases.