The Latest from Big Think

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A new study of 46,034 brain scans suggests women's brains are more active than men's.
Design thinking, or applying the principles of creative design and reasoning to business challenges in a way that focuses on the needs of people, is gaining momentum as the new […]
In his book, The Attention Merchants, Tim Wu claims we now worship celebrities like deities. This can lead to all sorts of problems.
All 24 cantons would meet at St Stephen's cathedral in Vienna
Black holes shouldn’t be this big, much less this big so many billions of years ago. Yet here we are. “Ultramassive black holes — that is, black holes with masses exceeding 10 billion […]
Renowned linguist and public intellectual MIT Professor Noam Chomsky offers his take on the Trump administration and its troubles with Russia.
Another week, another fine selection of comments. 
Hyperloop One completes a first-ever full-track test of hyperloop transportation. 
Facebook catches two AI chatbots talking in their own strange language.
Dementia is a broad term that covers several types of neurodegenerative disorders which affect a person’s ability to think, learn, recall memories, and perform everyday activities. This deterioration of the […]
The bad news, the possibility of epidemics. The good news, it may help slow global warming.  
U.S. scientists have successfully repaired DNA in a human embryo for the first time.
The speed of light is a universal constant, but that doesn’t necessarily mean that light always travels at that speed, does it? “There was a young lady named Bright,Whose speed was […]
Spontaneous talk on surprise topics. Oxford historian Peter Frankopan on two millennia of the flow of germs, ideas, commerce, and more from East to West and vice versa.
There’s surprisingly little evidence that proves recommended courses are the best treatment.   
A study surveyed 821 people to find the funniest words in the English language.
Silicon Valley needs more diversity of thought and well-rounded thinkers. An interview with Scott Hartley, author of The Fuzzy and The Techie: Why the Liberal Arts Will Rule the Digital World.