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Knowledge comes from death’s release: Blackstar recalls David Bowie’s influence on goth

  • Written by The Conversation Contributor
imageA still from the music video for Lazarus.Columbia

David Bowie’s newest album, Blackstar – released shortly before the artist’s death – has skyrocketed to the top of the charts.

It’s also become a subject of intense scrutiny by critics and fans: What was the reclusive singer’s state of mind as he approached the...

Read more: Knowledge comes from death’s release: Blackstar recalls David Bowie’s influence on goth

Is Bernie Sanders really a socialist? And how could he like Denmark?

  • Written by The Conversation Contributor
imageSanders on the stumpMary Schwalm/Reuters

The latest opinion polls suggest that Hillary Clinton’s lead over Vermont Senator Bernie Sanders is slipping. A New York Times/CBS poll described Clinton’s lead as “melting away.” Reputedly 48 percent of Democratic primary voters across the country support Clinton, with 41 percent...

Read more: Is Bernie Sanders really a socialist? And how could he like Denmark?

Basic income for all could lift millions out of poverty – and change how we think about inequality

  • Written by The Conversation Contributor
imageA basic income may distribute the peanuts a little more fairly. Peanut piles via www.shutterstock.com

The idea of a basic income for every person has been popping up regularly in recent years.

Economists, think tanks, activists and politicians from different stripes have toyed with the idea of governments giving every citizen or resident a minimum...

Read more: Basic income for all could lift millions out of poverty – and change how we think about inequality

The fourth industrial revolution: what does WEF's Klaus Schwab leave out?

  • Written by The Conversation Contributor
imageDigital and physical worlds are predicted to become inseparable in the fourth industrial revolution.DNA Films

In April 2000, Bill Joy famously wrote in Wired Magazine:

Our most powerful 21st-century technologies – robotics, genetic engineering, and nanotech – are threatening to make humans an endangered species.

At the time, Joy was an...

Read more: The fourth industrial revolution: what does WEF's Klaus Schwab leave out?

If we want medicine to be evidence-based, what should we think when the evidence doesn't agree?

  • Written by The Conversation Contributor
imageWeighing the evidence. Maggie Villiger, CC BY-ND

To understand if a new treatment for an illness is really better than older treatments, doctors and researchers look to the best available evidence. Health professionals want a “last word” in evidence to settle questions about what the best modes of treatment are.

But not all medical...

Read more: If we want medicine to be evidence-based, what should we think when the evidence doesn't agree?

How do you build a mirror for one of the world's biggest telescopes?

  • Written by The Conversation Contributor
image20 tons of Ohara E6 borosilicate glass being loaded onto the mold of one of the GMT's mirrors.Ray Bertram, Steward Observatory, CC BY-ND

When astronomers point their telescopes up at the sky to see distant supernovae or quasars, they’re collecting light that’s traveled millions or even billions of light-years through space. Even huge...

Read more: How do you build a mirror for one of the world's biggest telescopes?

Four quotes from the sixth GOP presidential debate, explained by experts

  • Written by The Conversation Contributor
imageTrump and Cruz during the GOP debate, round 6. North Charleston, South Carolina January 14, 2016. REUTERS/Randall Hill

Editor’s note: Seven candidates took part in Thursday’s mainstage presidential debate in North Charleston, South Carolina – the sixth debate between the GOP candidates. Donald Trump, Texas Senator Ted Cruz, Ben...

Read more: Four quotes from the sixth GOP presidential debate, explained by experts

To cut emissions faster, U.S. should ditch tax credit-based subsidies for renewable energy

  • Written by The Conversation Contributor
imageA solar array goes up in New York. Is this the best place to locate solar, given the relatively clean New York state grid? Lucas Braun, CC BY-SA

Congress last month extended valuable tax credits to producers of electricity from wind turbines and solar photovoltaic panels, a move that came as a relief to an industry that has experienced rapid growth...

Read more: To cut emissions faster, U.S. should ditch tax credit-based subsidies for renewable energy

Under the spell of a generator's thrum, a Faulkner masterpiece was born

  • Written by The Conversation Contributor
imageIn order to support his young family, William Faulkner took a job shoveling coal at a power plant on Ole Miss's campus.Mussklprozz/Wikimedia Commons, CC BY-SA

A few hundred feet south of the University of Mississippi’s famed Grove – site of bucolic commencement ceremonies and college football’s most unique tailgating experience...

Read more: Under the spell of a generator's thrum, a Faulkner masterpiece was born

More Articles ...

  1. Race and racism after Obama: where do we go from here?
  2. Are Powerball drawings and 'Quick Pick' numbers really random?
  3. Attack on unions shows why we need a new social contract governing work
  4. If being too clean makes us sick, why isn't getting dirty the solution?
  5. In a driverless future, what happens to today's drivers?
  6. Obama's final State of the Union: scholars react
  7. Odds are $1.5 billion Powerball winner will end up bankrupt
  8. What Marco Rubio's heels say about fashion – and height – in American politics
  9. Thinking innovatively about the risks of tech innovation
  10. Can businesses succeed in a world of corruption (without paying bribes)?
  11. What is the right response to North Korea's fourth nuclear test?
  12. Are plugs for pizza a breach of journalistic ethics?
  13. Can schools punish students for off-campus, online speech?
  14. Explainer: Why can't anyone tell me how much this surgery will cost?
  15. Could online 'slacktivists' actually help Making a Murderer's Steven Avery?
  16. That's what zhe said: mx-ing up the language of gender
  17. Congress' bipartisan Christmas gifts will lead to ballooning deficits
  18. Federal control of western land: two perspectives
  19. What makes a 'smart gun' smart?
  20. US–Saudi relations and the search for leverage
  21. The twisted roots of U.S. land policy in the West
  22. Can we curb the opioid abuse epidemic by rethinking chronic pain?
  23. What Pantone's colors of 2016 mean for the future of design
  24. How the homeless population is changing: it's older and sicker
  25. The Paris Agreement: the first _local_ global environmental pact
  26. Can 10,000-character tweets boost Twitter's flatlining user growth?
  27. Hong Kong copyright battle tests U.S. candidates' commitments to free speech
  28. Quest to find bitcoin's founder highlights currency's biggest threat: the taxman
  29. Far more microplastics floating in oceans than thought
  30. It's too late for a two-state solution in Israel-Palestine
  31. Playing 'serious games,' adults learn to solve thorny real-world problems
  32. A small Norwegian city might hold the answer to beating the winter blues
  33. Malheur occupation in Oregon: whose land is it really?
  34. Affordable Care Act's push to consolidate health care to curb costs may backfire
  35. How 3D printing threatens our patent system
  36. At UC San Diego, retired professors are mentoring first-generation college students
  37. Why isn't learning about public health a larger part of becoming a doctor?
  38. Obama's executive order on guns is mostly political theater
  39. More Mexicans are leaving the US than coming across the border
  40. The secret to all great art forgeries
  41. Why stories matter for children’s learning
  42. As El Niño rains arrive, Los Angeles shunts precious water to sea
  43. Can pharmacists help fill the growing primary care gap?
  44. How dangerous people get their guns
  45. Pleasure is good: How French children acquire a taste for life
  46. What North America can expect from El Niño
  47. Outlook for 2016: middle-class woes, hopeful on wages, the fear factor
  48. Five things you should know about the Iowa caucuses
  49. Was 2015 such a terrible year? And what will 2016 look like?
  50. 2015, the year that was: education