Search
Latest Articles
The newest essays, interviews, and features from Big Think.
Jenny Holzer works in words. Her art flows from the endless river of language that surrounds us. She dips her hands into that river and pulls out a tiny handful […]
Twin blasts ripped through the Ugandan capital of Kampala Sunday while the rest of the world watched Spain claim the World Cup title. A group called al-Shabaab has claimed responsibility […]
“No one has the right to live without being shocked. No one has the right to spend their life without being offended.” This was English author Philip Pullman’s response (speaking […]
7mins
Companies need to get better at explaining the benefits of their sustainable products.
5mins
Most businesses end up recognizing that it’s easier to implement sustainability measures than to talk about them.
12mins
A conversation with the Executive Editor of Greenbiz.com.
Did you hear the one about the cryonics enthusiast who married the hospice worker? It sounds like the setup for a dark joke, but that’s exactly what Robin Hanson and […]
Despite widespread fears of a “double dip” recession, Wall Street is hiring again in droves, a sign that the financial industry anticipates a strong economic recovery. According to The New […]
Feminist attorney Gloria Allred is no stranger to high-profile cases—she’s best known for representing women and families in big-money lawsuits against the likes of Tiger Woods, Aaron Spelling, O.J. Simpson, […]
Sakineh Mohammadi Ashtiani, a woman from Tabriz, Iran, whose sentence of execution by stoning was the subject of an international campaign, has received a reprieve from the Iranian Government. Over […]
I rarely watch Meet The Press since Tim Russert died, and even then, I wasn’t all that regular a viewer. David Gregory, Russert’s replacement, may be a smart guy, but […]
"The Dodd-Frank financial reform bill is a complex, disorderly, politically motivated, and not well thought out reaction to the financial crisis," says Nobel Laureate Gary Becker.
"The class warfare we need is a conservative class warfare," says Ross Douthat at The New York Times. Making everyone pay their debts and fewer middle class taxes is his battle plan.
"Knowing more than one language is an asset in the global economy. Schools should be helping all students, English learners as well as English-only speakers, expand beyond one tongue."
"For the first time, research shows that American creativity is declining. What went wrong—and how we can fix it?" Newsweek says a more active approach to teaching creativity is needed.
The promotion of math and science in Muslim countries would serve American interests better than starting wars, says an Obama science advisor and Nobel Laureate Ahmed Zewail.
The first age-friendly city in the world, New York City is opening a new branch of urban planning: environmental gerontology. The idea is to make cities more accessible to our elders.
Al Jazeera reports on the highly disproportionate allocation of public funds in Jerusalem. Palestinian neighborhoods suffer from lack of infrastructure while Israeli ones do not.
The cap-and-trade market that successfully reduced acid-rain emissions is threatened by new federal regulations, says The Wall Street Journal. Could cap-and-trade work as well for carbon?
"Money doesn’t buy happiness all on its own purchasing power, but rather happiness comes indirectly from the higher status money provides." Relative income is what counts, says new research.