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The Conversation

Corporate climate scientists: advocates for science or protectors of status quo?

  • Written by The Conversation
imageExxon's about-face on climate science exposes the critical role of internal corporate scientists.jeepersmedia/flickr, CC BY-SA

Exxon is well-known as a key architect of the fossil fuel industry’s campaign against the regulation of greenhouse gases, an effort that took off in 1989 with the founding of the Global Climate Coalition.

It involved mo...

Read more: Corporate climate scientists: advocates for science or protectors of status quo?

Do brain interventions to treat disease change the essence of who we are?

  • Written by The Conversation
imageBrains are physical organs, but also the seat of something essential about us.Heads via www.shutterstock.com.

These days, most of us accept that minds are dependent on brain function and wouldn’t object to the claim that “You are your brain.” After all, we’ve known for a long time that brains control how we behave, what we...

Read more: Do brain interventions to treat disease change the essence of who we are?

A genetic test could predict future troubles for kidney donors – why not use it?

  • Written by The Conversation
imageWellcome Photolibrary, Wellcome Images, CC BY-NC-ND

Over 100,000 people in the US are waiting for a kidney transplant. Most of the kidneys that were transplanted in 2014 (about 17,000 transplants) are from deceased donors. Kidneys donated from living donors last longer, but the number of living donors has dropped over the past decade.

Ethnic and...

Read more: A genetic test could predict future troubles for kidney donors – why not use it?

Children who understand emotions become more attentive over time

  • Written by The Conversation
imageChildren may be absorbed in figuring out emotions of people important to them.Leonid Mamchenkov, CC BY

What is going on in the minds of young children when it seems they are daydreaming or appear to be scatterbrained?

A study that my coauthor, Susanne A Denham, and I conducted recently shows that inattentive children may sometimes be absorbed in...

Read more: Children who understand emotions become more attentive over time

Homeschooled children do not grow up to be more religious

  • Written by The Conversation
imageDoes homeschooling make children share the religious beliefs of their parents?IowaPolitics.com, CC BY-SA

An estimated two million children are being homeschooled in the United States. Scholars studying homeschooling often talk about the academic achievement of homeschoolers or their social skills.

But, as important as those things are, they are not...

Read more: Homeschooled children do not grow up to be more religious

Chip-enabled cards may curb fraud, but consumers will be picking up the tab

  • Written by The Conversation
imageUS credit cards are starting to get a new look. Reuters

Most of us have by now received new credit cards in the mail embedded with “EMV” (Europay-MasterCard-Visa) chips. Merchants across the country have been hastily investing large amounts of money in new EMV-compliant terminals.

This is because today marks the moment that retailers...

Read more: Chip-enabled cards may curb fraud, but consumers will be picking up the tab

More Articles ...

  1. How close are we to actually becoming Martians?
  2. Free speech is no excuse for Muslim-baiting
  3. Mining for metals in society's waste
  4. Shell's abandoned well and the myth of the Arctic oil land grab
  5. What happens when you try to read Moby Dick on your smartphone?
  6. Pakistani drone strikes should worry Obama
  7. The not-so-invisible damage from VW diesel cheat: $100 million in health costs
  8. Is cyberbullying all that goes 'over the line' when kids are online?
  9. Banks will help ensure Iran keeps promises on nukes
  10. Why do female comedians disappear after dark?
  11. Safer chemicals would benefit both consumers and workers
  12. Should older Americans live in places segregated from the young?
  13. Beer behemoths struggle to fend off craft brew craze
  14. The pope, the premier, the president – and the retreat of globalization
  15. Despite Shell's about-face, interest in Arctic oil grows
  16. Antibiotic overuse might be why so many people have allergies
  17. For the Islamic State, music is the 'alcohol of the soul'
  18. Graduate education is a mess. Shouldn't universities fix it?
  19. Jesuits as science missionaries for the Catholic Church
  20. How could VW be so dumb? Blame the unethical culture endemic in business
  21. Volkswagen scandal will send costly ripples through auto industry
  22. VW needs massive marketing campaign to regain consumer trust – and survive
  23. Boehner resigns: scholars see trouble ahead for GOP
  24. Testing ancient human hearing via fossilized ear bones
  25. Pope Francis goes to Washington – but speaks past the politicians
  26. In too many ways, America's poorest communities are just like prison
  27. The risk of UN's Sustainable Development Goals: too many goals, too little focus
  28. To cut costs, college students are buying less food and even going hungry
  29. Hungry? Food choices are often influenced by forces out of your control
  30. Rise of cryptocurrencies like bitcoin begs question: what is money?
  31. Clinton stance on XL Pipeline reflects muscle of climate activists
  32. Vaping as a 'gateway' to smoking is still more hype than hazard
  33. Drake, Meek Mill and beef's prime place in rap culture
  34. Poland, long accustomed to emigration, must now confront immigration
  35. Learning from PowerPoint: is it time for teachers to move on?
  36. Despite Volkswagen's cheat, clean diesel is good technology today and the future
  37. Republicans and Democrats alike have love-hate relationship with Pope Francis
  38. Why US and Chinese cities will make or break any global climate deal
  39. Why the pope has yet to overturn the church's colonial legacy
  40. Pope Francis' call to house refugees echoes church history
  41. The West is on fire – and the US taxpayer is subsidizing it
  42. Why do people feel 'a rose by any other name' wouldn't fit as well?
  43. An innovative form of cheating emerges in MOOCs
  44. Brian Williams returns to the air – and memory research says we should give him a break
  45. How an art history class became more engaging with Twitter
  46. Patterns are math we love to look at
  47. How native advertisements could be the solution to the internet's bad-ad problem
  48. It's not a lack of self-control that keeps people poor
  49. How Europe helped save Obama's historic nuclear deal with Iran
  50. #BlackLivesMatter and the myth of a postracial America