bigthinkeditor

bigthinkeditor

If your company were taking steps to reduce its carbon footprint and promote sustainable practices, you’d probably be shouting it from the rooftops, right? Actually, says Greenbiz.com editor Joel Makower, […]
A story in this Sunday’s New York Times Magazine focuses largely on Jared Cohen, who at 28 is the youngest member of the State Department’s policy planning staff. He and […]
What is the future of the workplace? Is new technology making the traditional office more efficient or is it making it extinct? Which innovations provide real solutions? These are some […]
While Old Spice’s “Smells Like a Man, Man” viral marketing campaign is an enormous success—the Old Spice Channel on YouTube has received 6,589,665 views and gained 94,580 subscribers—the ad campaign […]
A single gene has been found to be shared in nearly all living animals—"including sea anemones, worms, insects, marine invertebrates, fish and humans."
The Israeli parliament may soon offer a legal definition of who is actually Jew, giving the country's Orthodox rabbis control of all conversions in Israel.
While mobile technology was supposed to liberate us from our desks, Rebecca Traister writes that they now make us feel like we never have any free time.
"France has no interest in becoming a multicultural society—or, to put it traditionally, a mosaic society or a tapestry of loosely bound communities," writes Jane Kramer. "It is not the Ottoman empire."
The Dodd-Frank Financial Reform Bill gives regulators the power to break up too-big-to-fail banks. The first time this is done it will send a powerful message, says Simon Johnson.
British gerontologist Aubrey de Grey and nine other co-authors are urging the United States and other nations to "set up a Project Apollo-scale initiative to avert the coming 'global aging crisis.'"
Today marks the first time anyone has ever brought an axe to an interview here at Big Think! The Reverend Dr. David Adamovich, a.k.a. The Great Throwdini, just stopped by […]
The tremendous environmental disaster that has resulted from the oil spill in the Gulf of Mexico is a singular event, but Seventh Generation CEO Jeffrey Hollender thinks it’s emblematic of […]
"Human rights advocates fear that political reconciliation with the Taliban could erase the fragile progress made in improving the situation of Afghan women over the past nine years."
"Biography may have little to tell us about why a novelist writes well, but it can sometimes be helpful in understanding why a novelist writes badly." TNR discusses E.M. Forster's sexual naiveté.
A bank tax on high-risk financial trading is an idea worth implementing, says Michael Scott Moore at Miller-McCune. The tax would create a fund for if and when a bank needed a bailout.
"Comments on news stories are, in a sense, our new civic space, but minus all the social rules." The Atlantic says subscription services could clean up online comment sections.
"The country's new wave of directors are rejecting Bollywood's glitz for grittier, real-life themes." The Independent looks at the new social-political consciousness in post-Bollywood films.
"China's astonishing urbanization could bring a new era of supercities, but its cultural norms probably won't eclipse American dominance." The foreign minister of Singapore on the rising state.
The FCC's infamous profanity ban has been struck down by the Second Circuit Court of Appeals. The L.A. Times welcomes the ruling as an important shift in priorities.
"Doing business in a way that takes environmental economics into account is a good idea; aping climate policy and its mechanisms is not." The Economist assesses the value of nature.