The Latest from Big Think

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Since dark matter eludes detection, the mission will target sources of light that are sensitive to it.
science breakthroughs
It was a particularly good year for biotech and medical technology. There were also notable advances in energy.
6mins
How did complex systems emerge from chaos? Physicist Sean Carroll explains.
The idea that "you" persist after death does not hold up to the current understanding of memory and identity.
What if you could just grow your own blood?
The concept of burnout is nothing new. But there are ways to prevent burnout and promote greater engagement with work. 
3mins
Deep secrets don’t explode. They do something worse, explains Michael Slepian.
Experts explain how lie detectors work, what happens in the brain when we tell lies and how accurate polygraph tests are.
Some solar cells are so lightweight they can sit on a soap bubble.
The shift from steam to electricity was inevitable — but some foresaw it earlier than others.
For nearly a century, physicists have argued over how to interpret quantum physics. But reality exists independent of any interpretation.
Of the world's 300 honey varieties, none is stranger and more dangerous than mad honey.
ice
Seneca thought the use of ice was a "true fever of the most malignant kind."
Close-up of two figures; one extends an apple towards the other near a tree trunk. The scene references the biblical story of Adam and Eve.
6mins
In 1965, six boys were stranded on an island. Fifteen months later, the survivors were rescued. How many were there?
John Templeton Foundation
In 2020, scientists took more than a kilo of moon rock and soil back to Earth for testing.
ophiuchus x-ray largest explosion cavity
Ever since the Big Bang, cataclysmic events have released enormous amounts of energy. Here's the greatest one ever witnessed.
cultivated meat
It will be able to produce 22 million pounds of cultivated meat annually.
We might be dining on insect-based Christmas pies with robot-harvested algae on the side.
great books
These five great books should prompt us to work on what needs fixing the most in the world: ourselves.