A new federal initiative aims to accelerate scientific discovery by uniting artificial intelligence with large federal ...
Women's hidden extra work, positive tipping points and new thinking on autism – there's much to chew on in this year's best ...
Comic books love to reuse ideas. It’s only natural that the Big Two publishers reuse plot points and tropes now and again.
If you enjoyed Beth Gardiner’s feature about big oil’s bet on plastics, here are more books curated by Scientific American ...
Why do humans invent so many cool things?What’s so special about walking on two legs?And the big one everyone’s clearly ...
With “Crick: A Mind in Motion,” the British biologist Matthew Cobb aims for the tricky “middle path”: a life vivid enough to ...
From microscopes to geodes, New Scientist staff share their top Christmas present ideas in a gift guide unlike any you’ve seen before ...
Ars Technica: The Voyager Golden Record is perhaps the best known example of humans attempting to communicate with an alien ...
Topology has real implications in the world. For example, topological techniques can be brought to bear on calculating the trajectories of spacecraft, and missions have been saved by the efforts of ...
Oliver Libby's "Strong Floor, No Ceiling" offers a radically moderate plan to restore the American Dream through strategic subtraction and bipartisan solutions.
Alan Lightman and Martin Rees’s book, The Shape of Wonder: How Scientists Think, Work, and Live (2025), describes the lives of scientists; what inspires them, how they spend their time, how they ...
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