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The Conversation

How to capture the violent tumult of our roiling universe, moment by moment

  • Written by The Conversation Contributor
imageAll is not calm in the cosmos.ESA/Hubble and NASA, CC BY

The hustle and bustle of daily life is a stark contrast to the tranquility of the night sky.

The stars are the same, year after year. So much so that many of the very names we use for the stars and constellations are thousands of years old. Ancient Greek and Arabic astronomers had almost...

Read more: How to capture the violent tumult of our roiling universe, moment by moment

Molecular architects: how scientists design new materials

  • Written by The Conversation Contributor
imageNano-architects design materials that can work together at very tiny scales, like these interlocking gears made of carbon tubes and benzene molecules.NASA

When Thomas Edison wanted a filament for his light bulb, he scoured the globe collecting thousands of candidates before settling on bamboo. (It was years before people were able to make tungsten...

Read more: Molecular architects: how scientists design new materials

How limiting women's access to birth control and abortions hurts the economy

  • Written by The Conversation Contributor

Reproductive health isn’t just about abortions, despite all the attention they get. It’s also about access to family planning services, contraception, sex education and much else.

Such access lets women control the timing and size of their families so they have children when they are financially secure and emotionally ready and can...

Read more: How limiting women's access to birth control and abortions hurts the economy

Kindergartners get little time to play. Why does it matter?

  • Written by The Conversation Contributor
imageHas play gone out of kindergarten?Navy Hale Keiki School, CC BY

Being a kindergartner today is very different from being a kindergartner 20 years ago. In fact it is more like first grade.

Researchers have demonstrated that five-year-olds are spending more time engaged in teacher-led academic learning activities than play-based learning opportunities...

Read more: Kindergartners get little time to play. Why does it matter?

From generations of infidelity and pain, Beyoncé makes 'Lemonade'

  • Written by The Conversation Contributor

Hell hath no fury like a woman scorned. But apparently a woman scorned is also the foundation of a creative tour de force.

On HBO this past Saturday – in a time slot generally reserved for feature films – Beyoncé released “Lemonade,” a series of music videos compiled into a short film that’s both eclectically...

Read more: From generations of infidelity and pain, Beyoncé makes 'Lemonade'

Trump culture: threat, fear and the tightening of the American mind

  • Written by The Conversation Contributor

For the past 10 months, Donald Trump has been a political enigma. Against the predictions of journalists, policy wonks and odds makers, a tabloid darling with no political experience and few coherent policies is now poised to be the Republican nominee for president.

Hundreds of journalists and political scientists have tried to explain...

Read more: Trump culture: threat, fear and the tightening of the American mind

More Articles ...

  1. Should we worry about arsenic in baby cereal and drinking water?
  2. Ireland in 1916: the Rising, the War and controversial commemorations
  3. The effect racist rhetoric has on young Latinos, and why all Americans should care
  4. Why Prince’s music will become more accessible after his death
  5. At Chernobyl and Fukushima, radioactivity has seriously harmed wildlife
  6. Forget Fukushima: Chernobyl still holds record as worst nuclear accident for public health
  7. Uber's $100 million settlement with drivers settles very little – here's why
  8. It bears repeating: how scientists are addressing the 'reproducibility problem'
  9. Your devices' latest feature? They can spy on your every move
  10. Why it's tough to find Prince's songs online – and other musicians are thankful
  11. Has climate change really improved U.S. weather?
  12. How Prince's quest for complete artistic control changed the music industry forever
  13. College is worth it. Who should pay for it?
  14. In today's most popular shows, Shakespeare's iconic characters live on
  15. Could Donald Trump change journalism for the better?
  16. How should we compensate poor countries for 'loss and damage' from climate change?
  17. Who was the first woman depicted on American currency?
  18. The rise and fall of Theranos: so many lessons in a drop of blood
  19. Should schools provide free breakfast in classrooms?
  20. Before fusion: a human history of fire
  21. Could gambling be the secret to saving when rates are so low?
  22. Why we need a 'moon shot' to catalogue the Earth's biodiversity
  23. How John Muir's incessant study saved Yosemite
  24. Why the charter school debate has moved beyond 'better' or 'worse'
  25. Do environmental regulations do more harm or good? Presidential candidates disagree
  26. Crackdown on corporate inversions highlights monstrosity of U.S. tax code
  27. When Americans thought hair was a window into the soul
  28. The cavity in health insurance coverage: oral health
  29. Five key takeaways from the New York primary
  30. Syrian refugees: will American hearts and minds change?
  31. Panama Papers: how do leakers leak?
  32. Oxycontin: how Purdue Pharma helped spark the opioid epidemic
  33. Can a burgeoning satanic movement actually effect political change?
  34. Why grammar mistakes in a short email could make some people judge you
  35. 'Should the U.S. take in more or fewer Syrian refugees?'
  36. A decisive New York primary for the Clintons – again
  37. Did you cheat on your taxes? Here's why your days may be numbered
  38. Brazil's thriving soy industry threatens its forests and global climate targets
  39. Where have 4.8 million Syrian refugees gone?
  40. Do you owe the IRS money? Here's what to do
  41. Why the Internet isn't making us smarter – and how to fight back
  42. Why the baby brain can learn two languages at the same time
  43. How the rich helped create 2016's angry populism
  44. The murky ethics of Gay Talese's 'The Voyeur's Motel'
  45. How could we build an invisibility cloak to hide Earth from an alien civilization?
  46. Free trade is once again tearing apart the Republican Party
  47. Russia: a global energy powerhouse that's much more than a petro-state
  48. How playing video games can change your retirement
  49. How cults exploit one of our most basic psychological urges
  50. How to protect nuclear plants from terrorists