The Latest from Big Think

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The U.S has begun an undeclared war in Libya, and it’s not clear what exactly it hopes to achieve by its actions.
Propelling a spaceship with photons would be like trying to energize a spaceship with a flashlight.
That's what this study shows.  Actually, the study is pretty modest--not to mention Finnish.  But the expert doesn't hesitate to draw global implications from it. One conclusion:  The Left is more […]
Mark Malloch Brown, a former Assistant UN Secretary General and former UK Foreign Office Minister has today claimed in The Independent newspaper in London that the the 'great diplomatic triumph' […]
HIV is four times more prevalent among young girls in Kenya than among boys of the same age because they are having sexual relationships with much older men.
What could the future of search and information distribution look like? Here are two very exciting possibilities.
The New York Times paywall is costing the newspaper $40-$50 million to design and construct, Bloomberg has reported. And it can be defeated through four lines of Javascript.
While 100 million users is an impressive milestone for LinkedIn, though its active users are below this number. As it prepares for a public offering, growth in users will be important.
The Newspaper Guild has called on bloggers to form an 'electronic picket line' around the Huffington Post and boycott further posts until the HP changes its business model.
In Canada, older, affluent well-educated people merely follow the social media conversation on blogs, Facebook and Twitter that is created by young, upwardly mobile immigrants.
It's no longer enough just to influence people, social media strategists now strive to poke the influencers. Key objectives include: “activate my key opinion leaders”.
A 21st-century education must surely look different. We must address new knowledge (technology & digital media) and new challenges (globalization & community fragmentation).
The days of interrupting people while they are being entertained in order to blast out your marketing messages are over. Today, we need to actually "engage" with audiences.
To truly enable a Digital Society, People have to be the focus of the services offered. People that want access to their world anywhere, at any time from any device.
Legislation that papers over creepy online advertisements might make the problem less visible, but it won't make our privacy foundations solid.
Humanities courses are starting to be deeply influenced by a new array of powerful digital tools and vast online archives. Undergraduates are experiencing Shakespeare in 3-D!
What does it mean for our digital future when the Internet has become a giant game where the goal is to acquire as many fans and followers as quickly as possible, across as many social platforms as possible? 
I almost let it slip by, but Jon Frimann reminded me that this week marks the one-year anniversary of the start of what came to be the biggest volcanic event […]
In the tradition of Jay-Z and Jean-Michel Basquiat, YouTube users create brilliant "vernacular moments"—moments filled with pure expressivity that don't bother to think of themselves as art.
To stay relevant in the job market, older job applicants need to prove that they embrace rather than shun technology. What better way to do this than on Twitter or Facebook, asks TheLadders.com founder Mark Cenedella.