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How a masculine culture that favors sexual conquests gave us today's 'incels'

  • Written by Ross Haenfler, Associate Professor, Grinnell College
Students march on the campus of the University of California, Santa Barbara to honor the six victims of a mass killing after a young man went on a rampage after being bitter over sexual rejection.AP Photo/Jae C. Hong, File

After the recent shooting at the Santa Fe, Texas, high school, the mother of one of the victims claimed that the perpetrator...

Read more: How a masculine culture that favors sexual conquests gave us today's 'incels'

Why won't scientific evidence change the minds of Loch Ness monster true believers?

  • Written by Artūrs Logins, Visiting Postdoctoral Researcher in Philosophy, University of Southern California – Dornsife College of Letters, Arts and Sciences
If you're convinced Nessie's real, would science unconvince you?AP Photo/Norm Goldstein

You may have noticed a curious recent announcement: An international research team plans to use state-of-the-art DNA testing to establish once and for all whether the Loch Ness monster exists.

Regardless of the results, it’s unlikely the test will change...

Read more: Why won't scientific evidence change the minds of Loch Ness monster true believers?

¿Marchar o migrar? Para los jóvenes en Venezuela, esa es la pregunta

  • Written by Emilio Osorio Alvarez, Professor of Migration and Population Studies, Universidad Central de Venezuela
Los que se han quedado en Venezuela están allí para luchar. Hugo Londoño/flickr, CC BY

Read in English.

Las marchas contra el gobierno de Nicolás Maduro están en su tercer mes, con personas manifestándose diariamente por las calles de Caracas, Maracaibo, San Cristóbal, Valencia y muchas otras ciudades....

Read more: ¿Marchar o migrar? Para los jóvenes en Venezuela, esa es la pregunta

Trump may believe in the rule of law, just not the one understood by most American lawyers

  • Written by David Mednicoff, Chair, Department of Judaic and Near Eastern Studies, University of Massachusetts Amherst
AP

Donald Trump’s June 4 tweet suggesting he could pardon himself in the event that Special Counsel Robert Mueller’s investigation brings charges drew outrage among critics, part of mounting and long-standing concern about the president’s disrespect for “the rule of law.”

Many prominent lawmakers, law professors and jour...

Read more: Trump may believe in the rule of law, just not the one understood by most American lawyers

How corruption slows disaster recovery

  • Written by Juliet S. Sorensen, Harry R. Horrow Professor in International Law, Northwestern University
Hurricane Irma demolished Sint Maarten in the Dutch Antilles, in September 2017. The island has yet to recover.AP Photo/Carlos Giusti

The 2018 hurricane season has now begun. It’s a good time to think about lessons learned from last year’s historic storms.

Hurricane Irma, which raged across the Caribbean from late August to early...

Read more: How corruption slows disaster recovery

Free-range parenting gets legal protection in Utah – but should the state dictate how to parent?

  • Written by David Pimentel, Associate Professor of Law, University of Idaho
Americans differ over when children can be left unattended.EvgeniiAnd/www.shutterstock.com

Americans have long debated what constitutes good parenting. In 1928, John B. Watson advised parents to “never hug or kiss” their children. In 1946, Benjamin Spock urged parents to trust their instincts.

A recent trend in this ongoing debate has...

Read more: Free-range parenting gets legal protection in Utah – but should the state dictate how to parent?

When did humans first learn to count?

  • Written by Peter Schumer, Professor of Mathematics and Natural Philosophy, Middlebury College
Where did our written numbers come from?Nikita Rogul/shutterstock.com

The history of math is murky, predating any written records. When did humans first grasp the basic concept of a number? What about size and magnitude, or form and shape?

In my math history courses and my research travels in Guatemala, Egypt and Japan, I’ve been especially...

Read more: When did humans first learn to count?

With federal funding for science on the decline, what's the role of a profit motive in research?

  • Written by David R. Johnson, Assistant Professor of Higher Education, University of Nevada, Reno
Money doesn't grow in flasks – scientists have to find funds outside the lab.chuttersnap/Unsplash, CC BY

What is the place of a profit motive in the production of knowledge at public universities?

The Trump administration’s initial budget request presented in 2017 offered one answer to that question. According to the American Association...

Read more: With federal funding for science on the decline, what's the role of a profit motive in research?

I go to El Salvador despite the danger because the kids there need my medical expertise

  • Written by Christopher Hartnick, Professor of Otolaryngology at the Massachusetts Eye and Ear Infirmary; Director of Operation Airway, Harvard University
Salvadorans have been fleeing violence in their communities for years. AP Photo/Salvador Melendez

As the founder and director of Operation Airway, a nonprofit that treats kids with breathing problems, I have led teams of surgeons and other medical professionals on missions across the world for the past decade. Our team, equipped with bags of...

Read more: I go to El Salvador despite the danger because the kids there need my medical expertise

Only 1 in 4 women who have been sexually harassed tell their employers. Here's why they're afraid

  • Written by Margaret E. Johnson, Professor of Law and Co-Director, Center on Applied Feminism, University of Baltimore
Studies suggest few women formally complain about sexual harassment in the workplace. andriano.cz/Shutterstock.com

On May 30, a grand jury indicted Harvey Weinstein on charges he raped one woman and forced another to perform oral sex on him. And new allegations and lawsuits against the movie producer continue to pile up.

Since the earliest reports...

Read more: Only 1 in 4 women who have been sexually harassed tell their employers. Here's why they're afraid

More Articles ...

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  2. Robert Kennedy, improbable liberal hero
  3. Why the Supreme Court's 'gay wedding cake' ruling won't resolve religious freedom issues
  4. A los presidentes latinoamericanos les encanta Twitter (y esta no es una buena señal)
  5. La publicidad artesanal de Vietnam, un recuerdo que está en peligro de extinción
  6. La publicidad artesanal de Vietnam, un recuerdo de está en peligro de extinción
  7. Limits on Chinese graduate student visas may protect US intellectual property but drive away talent
  8. 22 percent of men without college don't have jobs. Here's why they're being left behind
  9. 22% of men without college don't have jobs. Here's why they're being left behind
  10. How the American Bible Society became evangelical
  11. Satellite imagery is revolutionizing the world. But should we always trust what we see?
  12. Spending time alone in nature is good for your mental and emotional health
  13. Not just a place to live: From homelessness to citizenship
  14. When will Google defend democracy?
  15. The slippery slope of dehumanizing language
  16. Eating disorders are hard to overcome, but ditching diets is crucial
  17. Does pain expected equal pain felt? Ask a kid
  18. En Colombia, la coca triunfará sobre el café (o la miel) por una simple razón comercial
  19. En Colombia, la coca triunfará sobre el café (o la miel) por una simple razón comercial
  20. New hurricane season jeopardizes Caribbean recovery: 5 essential reads
  21. Understanding hurricane risks: 5 essential reads
  22. For many South Korean Christians, reunification with the North is a religious goal
  23. Why Florida Democrats can't count on the so-called 'black vote'
  24. Falsehoods, Sandy Hook and suing Alex Jones
  25. Do bouncers at clubs enforce dress codes equally across races?
  26. Disappointed donors can't count on getting their charitable money back
  27. Blood in your veins is not blue – here's why it's always red
  28. SpongeBob's Bikini Bottom is based on a real-life test site for nuclear weapons
  29. For NFL players, social media is key to winning PR battle over anthem protests
  30. What's behind Italy's crisis and why it matters
  31. Teenage depression: If a parent doesn't get treatment for a child, is that abuse?
  32. Why Puerto Rico’s death toll from Hurricane Maria is so much higher than officials thought
  33. Deportado dos veces, este hombre lucha para salvar a su familia
  34. Deportado dos veces, este hombre lucha para ayudar a la supervivencia de su familia
  35. Juul: Why a trendy e-cig is causing a social – and public health – commotion
  36. Immigration agents X-raying migrants to determine age isn't just illegal, it's a misuse of science
  37. Why poverty is rising faster in suburbs than in cities
  38. In praise of doing nothing
  39. How can criminals manipulate cryptocurrency markets?
  40. Will Silicon Valley's new company towns end up as failed utopias?
  41. Missouri's dark money scandal, explained
  42. How the US benefits when it educates future world leaders
  43. The sage grouse isn't just a bird – it's a proxy for control of Western lands
  44. Why ABC reacted so swiftly to Roseanne's racist tweet
  45. Triclosan, a common antimicrobial in toothpaste and other products, linked to inflammation and cancer in the gut
  46. Organs-on-chips: Tiny technology helping bring safe new drugs to patients faster
  47. Most CEOs aren't abandoning neutrality on Trump – yet
  48. Many Republican mayors are advancing climate-friendly policies without saying so
  49. Colombia's presidential runoff will be a yet another referendum on peace
  50. US fertility is dropping. Here's why some experts saw it coming