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Contrary to some media reports, the chance of 2013 TV135 colliding with Earth is only 1 in 63,000 according to NASA.
Religion is said to either encourage thinking or at least “encourage” science in some nebulous ways.
The image above is a composite of images taken by NASA's Cassini spacecraft looking down on Saturn and its rings.
If you’re not in Europe, Africa or the Middle East, don’t worry, you can still watch a live webcast of the penumbral lunar eclipse via the Slooh space camera starting […]
We as a culture have invested the words of this book with amazing authority even though we don't know what these words are and what they mean.
For most of our history, humans have been extraordinarily ignorant about sex. Today, there is still much about sex that we either don't know or don't agree on.
Steve Case points out that some things, like media, have changed a lot since the first Internet revolution. And yet, there are many, many more industries that have not changed all that much, and are ripe for disruption.
"It never hurts to dream impossible dreams," Booker told Big Think, as "you never know they might come true." So if he could have one superpower it would be "control over time," Booker said. "Because that's really my only enemy.
This past summer the British government indicated it would be moving forward to finally grant a pardon for Alan Turing, but not for the 49,000 other gay men, including Oscar Wilde, who were convicted under the 1885 Criminal Law Amendment Act.
The Spanish word berrinches means "tantrum," but it also refers to "spoiled little rich kids, blind to their privilege and the effects of their misbehavior."
That respect that people had for each other's office, Chris Matthews says, is completely missing today. It doesn't have to be that way.
Why are people sometimes more emboldened in their beliefs after being exposed to corrective information?
Frances Townsend, a former Homeland Security Advisor to United States under George W. Bush, brought rosary beads to Saudi Arabia, not realizing that she was committing a crime punishable by death.
Greg Lemond is the first (and only) American to have won the Tour de France, a feat he accomplished three times, and accomplished cleanly.
Why are humans so aberrant? It’s because our neurons are lousy processors, so we need big, fat brains to make clever us.
The image above shows the convergence of an anti-GMO protest outside Central Park and the overflow of superheroes and superhero lookalikes in New York City.
Leadership is a team sport. If you want to build anything of significance, you need to engage others.