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Chapter one
Miracles
A Treatise on Miracles by History’s Most Famous Atheist
Are some things too good to be true?
A Cabinet of Curiosities
Wander through our interactive wunderkammer.
Mind-Control Helicopters and the Healing Power of Poop
Five unlikely breakthroughs in medical science today.
Why We Keep Playing the Lottery
Blind to the mathematical odds, we fall to the marketing gods.
Chapter two
Disasters
When Past Disasters Are Prologue
Past disasters help us prepare—and make us pay attention.
Outsmarting the CERNageddon
Can the Large Hadron Collider spawn black holes at full power? CERN investigates.
Hardly Never in Vegas
Fat Johnny Little and Salty Salt Sue make a break for the desert.
Their Giant Steps to a Cure
Battling a rare form of muscular dystrophy, a family finds an activist leader, and hope.
Chapter three
Discovery
Discovering the Expected
In the search for subatomic particles, it helps to know what you’re looking for.
Chasing Coincidences
Why it’s hard to recognize the unlikely.
The Decisive Moment
A photographer's quest for the unexpected.
An Unlikely Cure Signals New Hope for Cancer
How “exceptional responders” are revolutionizing treatment for the deadly disease.
Chapter four
Interpretation
Explaining the Unexplainable
When logic fails, stories and superstitions prevail.
Revisiting “Moneyball” with Paul DePodesta
Shattering preconceptions about players isn’t all about the numbers.
Science’s Significant Stats Problem
Researchers’ rituals for assessing probability may mislead as much as they enlighten.
Ingenious: Jim Davies
How the unlikely drives imagination.
The Odds of Innocence
How numbers can tip the scales of justice.
The Man Who Invented Modern Probability
Chance encounters in the life of Andrei Kolmogorov.
Chapter five
The Nautilus Quarterly
Curl Up With Nautilus
Own it forever. For $4 a month.
Songbirds in the Suburbs
House finches, Costco, and remaking the American wild.
The Death and Life of the Frontier
A voyage to the limits of the knowable.
What I’ve Learned About the Past 13,000 Years
A look back at a career spent looking back.
Paper Versus Pixel
The science of reading shows that print and digital experiences are complementary.
Related Facts So Romantic
“Reality provides us with facts so romantic that imagination itself could add nothing to them.” —Jules Verne
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