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3-D Printed Statues in Central Park Shine a Light on Women Scientists
by Mary Ellen Hannibal
The Mathematical Structure of Particle Collisions Comes Into View
by Charlie Wood
To Protect Coral Reefs, Protect Fishes and Birds
by Miles W. Griffis
Why We’re a Lot Better at Fighting Cancer Than We Realized
by Christie Wilcox
Taking to the Stars
by Science Philanthropy Alliance
Yes, Life in the Fast Lane Kills You
by Philip Ball
The Best Burger Place Is a Lab
by Thomas King
Dr. Robbert Dijkgraaf
by Michael Segal
The Supervolcano Under Yellowstone Is Alive and Kicking
by Shannon Hall
How Much Should Expectation Drive Science?
by Claudia Geib
On “Learning the Trees”
by Liz Craig-Olins
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1 Does Theranos Mark the Peak of the Silicon Valley Bubble?
John Carreyrou talks to Nautilus about the lessons of a $1 billion fraud.
BY Michael Segal -
2 The Smaller the Theater, the Faster the Music
Composer Philip Glass talks time with painter Fredericka Foster.
BY Philip Glass & Fredericka Foster -
3 What Time Feels Like When You’re Improvising
The neurology of flow states.
BY Heather Berlin -
4 A New View of Time
Introducing the Nautilus Time Project.
BY Beth Jacobs & Lee Smolin -
5 She’ll Text Me, She’ll Text Me Not
The science of waiting in modern courtship.
BY Aziz Ansari & Eric Klinenberg -
6 When Bad Things Happen in Slow Motion
Is there more to our experience of time than the foibles of memory?
BY Ivan Amato
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1 Why Living in a Poor Neighborhood Can Change Your Biology
The sheer stress of an environment contributes to obesity and diabetes.
BY Andrew Curry -
2 Does Theranos Mark the Peak of the Silicon Valley Bubble?
John Carreyrou talks to Nautilus about the lessons of a $1 billion fraud.
BY Michael Segal -
3 The Smaller the Theater, the Faster the Music
Composer Philip Glass talks time with painter Fredericka Foster.
BY Philip Glass & Fredericka Foster -
4 What Time Feels Like When You’re Improvising
The neurology of flow states.
BY Heather Berlin -
5 When Bad Things Happen in Slow Motion
Is there more to our experience of time than the foibles of memory?
BY Ivan Amato -
6 We Need to Save Ignorance From AI
In an age of all-knowing algorithms, how do we choose not to know?
BY Christina Leuker & Wouter van den Bos
Facts So Romantic
Science has a powerful voice in today’s culture.
So what is it saying?
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Numbers How Rising Education for Women Is Shaping the Global Population
In their 1968 book The Population Bomb, biologists Paul Ehrlich and his wife Anne foretold a Malthusian future of famine and disease if humanity failed to control its growth. The…
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Culture 3-D Printed Statues in Central Park Shine a Light on Women Scientists
Forged in metal or chiseled in stone, statues almost always depict dead men. A recent analysis of 12 major American cities turned up only six physical representations of women. Only one…
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Ideas This Vision Experiment Resolved a Centuries-Old Philosophical Debate
Imagine you are looking at a manhole cover a few paces away on the street. It looks circular, but this is because of some impressive perceptual machinery in your mind. The pattern of light…
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Culture The Anonymous Culture Cops of the Internet
Giant tech companies and governments largely determine what content is and isn’t allowed online, and their decisions impact billions of people: 55 percent of internet users worldwide…
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Ideas Why Your Brain Hates Slowpokes
By Chelsea Wald
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Culture Is Coloring Within the Lines the New Meditation?
By Shannon Hall
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Culture Why Does Mass Hysteria Affect Mostly Women?
By Regan Penaluna
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