What a popular theory of perception gets wrong.
The post We’re Not So Blind to Detail After All appeared first on Nautilus.
What a popular theory of perception gets wrong.
The post We’re Not So Blind to Detail After All appeared first on Nautilus.
How social media helped a scientist uncover a new, golden-haired species.
The post New Tarantula Discovered in Unexpected Place appeared first on Nautilus.
Researchers are rediscovering the forgotten legacy of a pioneering Black scientist who conducted trailblazing research on the cognitive traits of bees, spiders, and more.
The post Charles Henry Turner’s Insights Into Animal Behavior Were a Century Ahead of Their Time appeared first on Nautilus.
In a post-trip state, psychedelic researchers are finding, real healing begins.
The post Our Minds Remain Open When the LSD Wears Off appeared first on Nautilus.
Why people believe their own lies.
The post The George Santos Syndrome appeared first on Nautilus.
Something remarkable happens when this small sun zooms past its larger companion.
The post The Uncanny Sight of Waves Breaking on a Star appeared first on Nautilus.
This is to announce that the Past & Present Reading Group will be meeting to discuss, on a weekly basis, our next text which is: Aileen Moreton-Robinson, The White Possessive: Property, Power and Indigenous Sovereignty (Minneapolis: University of Minnesota Press, 2015).
The post Next Past & Present Reading Group Text appeared first on Progress in Political Economy (PPE).
Brain scans reveal what fuels novel thinking.
The post What Separates Highly Creative People appeared first on Nautilus.
Carlos Hiller paints the astonishing life of seamounts.
The post What an Artist Sees in the Deep Sea appeared first on Nautilus.
Our writer joins researchers in Mozambique to uncover how fire shapes Africa’s grand wilderness.
The post Fire on the Savanna appeared first on Nautilus.