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Humans gave leprosy to armadillos – now they are giving it back to us

  • Written by John Stewart Spencer, Associate Professor, leprosy researcher, Colorado State University
An armadillo in the Florida Everglades. Heiko Kiera/Shutterstock.com

Leprosy is an ancient disease, the oldest disease known to be associated with humans, with evidence of characteristic bone pitting and deformities found in burial sites in India as far back as 2000 B.C.

It’s thus only natural that many might think the disease is a relic of...

Read more: Humans gave leprosy to armadillos – now they are giving it back to us

What philosophers have to say about eating meat

  • Written by Joan McGregor, Professor of Philosophy, Arizona State University
Is it ethical to eat meat?Ewan Munro, CC BY-SA

WeWork, a co-working and office space company, recently made a company policy not to serve or reimburse meals that include meat.

WeWork’s co-founder and chief culture officer, Miguel McKelvey, said in an email that it was the company’s attempt at reducing its carbon footprint. His moral...

Read more: What philosophers have to say about eating meat

Frente a movilización masiva para el aborto legal en Argentina, la Iglesia católica modera su tono

  • Written by Verónica Giménez Béliveau, Religion and Society Professor, Universidad de Buenos Aires
There's widespread popular support for legalizing abortion in Argentina. An abortion rights bill passed the lower house of Congress in April and faces a Senate vote on August 8. AP Photo/Jorge Saenz

Sólo en tres países de América Latina el aborto es totalmente legal: en Cuba desde 1965, en la Ciudad de México desde 2007...

Read more: Frente a movilización masiva para el aborto legal en Argentina, la Iglesia católica modera su tono

Facing a groundswell of support for legal abortion, Argentina's Catholic Church moderates its tone

  • Written by Verónica Giménez Béliveau, Religion and Society Professor, Universidad de Buenos Aires
Argnetina's pro-choice movement, which began in 2003, hopes that the Senate will vote in favor of legalizing abortion on Aug. 8, 2018.

Leer en español.

Abortion is completely legal only in three places in Latin America: Cuba legalized the practice in 1965, followed by Mexico City in 2007 and Uruguay in 2012.

Argentina, like the majority of...

Read more: Facing a groundswell of support for legal abortion, Argentina's Catholic Church moderates its tone

Violencia crónica de México afecta la salud mental, con consecuencias fatales: más suicidios

  • Written by Cecilia Farfán-Méndez, Postdoctoral Scholar at the Center for U.S.-Mexican Studies, University of California San Diego

México ha sufrido una de las tasas más altas de homicidios del mundo por más de una década, como consecuencia de la agresiva batalla del gobierno de 12 años contra los traficantes de drogas y otros grupos delictivos.

Casi 30.000 mexicanos fueron asesinados en el 2017 y 2018 podría superarlo. De acuerdo con...

Read more: Violencia crónica de México afecta la salud mental, con consecuencias fatales: más suicidios

Police kill about 3 men per day in the US, according to new study

  • Written by Frank Edwards, Postdoctoral Associate, Bronfenbrenner Center for Translational Research, Cornell University
There are multiple efforts to count police homicides in the U.S.a katz/shutterstock

Police in the U.S. kill on average more than 1,000 men per year, or about three men per day. According to our estimates, police are responsible for about 8 percent of all adult male homicide deaths in the U.S. each year.

These estimates come from our study,...

Read more: Police kill about 3 men per day in the US, according to new study

Brains keep temporary molecular records before making a lasting memory

  • Written by Kelsey Tyssowski, Graduate Student in Biomedical Science, Harvard University
Like the day's newspaper, the brain has a temporary way to keep track of events.TonTonic/Shutterstock.com

The first dance at my wedding lasted exactly four minutes and 52 seconds, but I’ll probably remember it for decades. Neuroscientists still don’t entirely understand this: How was my brain able to translate this less-than-five-minute...

Read more: Brains keep temporary molecular records before making a lasting memory

What makes a good friend?

  • Written by Alexis Elder, Assistant Professor of Philosophy, University of Minnesota Duluth
How should you choose your friends?Liderina/ Shutterstock.com

Good friendships seem worth celebrating. But for many of us, tensions can appear from time to time between being a good friend and doing “the right thing.” When faced with, for example, a situation where it’s tempting to lie to cover for a friend, it can seem as though...

Read more: What makes a good friend?

Why stretching is (still) important for weight loss and exercise

  • Written by David Prologo, Associate Professor, Department of Radiology and Imaging Sciences, Emory University
Many athletes stretch before and after exercise, but they may not be gaining benefits from doing so.ESB Basic/shutterstock.com

There seems to be a lot of confusion regarding the value – or lack thereof – of muscle stretching to accelerate recovery after exercise. “Stretching clears out your lactic acid,” and other similar...

Read more: Why stretching is (still) important for weight loss and exercise

More Articles ...

  1. Why adjusting capital gains for inflation makes economic sense
  2. Brazilian evangelicals, swinging hard to the right, could put a Trump-like populist in the presidency
  3. How Trump's trade war affects working-class Americans
  4. #MeToo movement finds an unlikely champion in Wall Street with the new ‘Weinstein clause’
  5. Mapping Brazil's political polarization online
  6. Can you be Christian and support the death penalty?
  7. What colleges must do to promote mental health for graduate students
  8. Ancient arts are inspiring modern electronics
  9. Why 'Nigerian Prince' scams continue to dupe us
  10. It's harder than you might expect for charities to give back tainted money
  11. Here's what we know about CRISPR safety – and reports of 'genome vandalism'
  12. Does Monsanto's Roundup cause cancer? Trial highlights the difficulty of proving a link
  13. Trump administration and California are on collision course over vehicle emissions rules
  14. ¿Por qué duelen tanto las cortadas con papel?
  15. Lawyers defending immigrant children in detention are relying on a court case from the 80s
  16. Will the Supreme Court overturn Roe v. Wade? And if it does, what happens to abortion rights?
  17. Rising suicides in Mexico expose the mental health toll of living with extreme, chronic violence
  18. Genetic testing: Should I get tested for Alzheimer's risk?
  19. What is a blockchain token?
  20. A high-adrenaline job: 5 questions answered about fighting wildfires
  21. No sufra desvelos: existen muchas soluciones para dormir mejor
  22. Print-your-own gun debate ignores how the US government long provided and regulated firearms
  23. From gun kits to 3D printable guns, a short history of rogue gun makers
  24. Bird DNA helps explain Amazonian rivers' role in evolution
  25. Alan Alda living with Parkinson's – a neurologist explains treatment advances
  26. New sanctions on Russia and Iran are unlikely to work. Here's why
  27. The infantilization of Western culture
  28. Overhydrating presents health hazards for young football players
  29. The demise of US nuclear power in 4 charts
  30. Parts of the Pacific Northwest's Cascadia fault are more seismically active than others – new imaging data suggests why
  31. Is Trump profiting from his office in violation of the Constitution? Judge allows emoluments case to move ahead
  32. What the early church thought about God's gender
  33. Why I use Harry Potter to teach a college course on child development
  34. Citizenship through the eyes of those who have lost the right to vote
  35. Niños centroamericanos siguen migrando a EEUU porque huyen de la muerte
  36. Iran and America: A forgotten friendship
  37. A new look at racial disparities in police use of deadly force
  38. The lifesaving power of gratitude (or, why you should write that thank you note)
  39. American farmers want trade partners not handouts – an agricultural economist explains
  40. More Republicans in the news? That's not media bias
  41. Designing a 'solar tarp,' a foldable, packable way to generate power from the sun
  42. What Richard Dawkins doesn't get about the Muslim call to prayer
  43. For many Muslim grocery shoppers, a shifting definition of 'halal' 
  44. A perfect storm of factors is making wildfires bigger and more expensive to control
  45. ¿Para qué sirven las fronteras?
  46. Imran Khan hopes to transform Pakistan but he'll have far less power than past leaders
  47. Yes, humans are depleting Earth's resources, but 'footprint' estimates don't tell the full story
  48. Could your gut microbes hinder your cancer treatment? A new first-in-human trial investigates
  49. Why fewer kids work the kind of summer jobs that their parents used to have
  50. I’m an economist riding a bike across America, defying what the data says about cycling's safety