Strange as it seems to say it, a magazine devoted to science should not take sides in a political ... Tomorrow in our Time-Travel Thursdays newsletter, I will suggest a look at our archives, in which ...
The ocean feels infinite. If you were to start swimming from shore, it’s easy to believe—fitness and oxygen aside—that you ...
Scientific American urged readers to "Vote for Kamala Harris to Support Science, Health and the Environment." It's a ...
Meredith B. Jaffe's dad, Herb, would often speak to her of the 1938 Phantom Corsair, dreamed up by a grandson of the Heinz ...
Mumsnet CEO Justine Roberts spoke to WIRED about why licensing talks with OpenAI broke down and why her company is planning ...
Research shows 25% of web pages posted between 2013 and 2023 have vanished. A few organisations are racing to save the echoes ...
The Searchers
Dave Eggers is the author of “The Circle,” “What Is the What” and, most recently, “The Eyes and the Impossible,” winner of ...
The Scientific American magazine faced backlash on Monday after it announced ... "In one, the new president offers the ...
Many histories of Nazi Germany are accompanied by a photograph of two scientists measuring a man's facial features with a ...
From drunk worms to mammals that breath through their anuses, founder Marc Abrahams on the winners of this year's Ig Nobel ...
Executive order prohibits taxpayer dollars from being used for conversion therapy, and allows for discipline on therapists ...
Today, Logsdon says, you don’t hear many people arguing against the Artemis program. In contrast, Apollo wasn’t actually popular with the public. In 1961 more people opposed government-funded human ...