A new documentary series is a startlingly intimate look at chimps.
The post The Surprising Empathy of Netflix’s “Chimp Empire” appeared first on Nautilus.
A new documentary series is a startlingly intimate look at chimps.
The post The Surprising Empathy of Netflix’s “Chimp Empire” appeared first on Nautilus.
A precise new method of measuring gravitational waves is re-opening the book on general relativity.
The post A Supermassive Test for Einstein’s Famous Theory appeared first on Nautilus.
A crucial link that sustains the Amazon rainforest is at risk of running dry.
The post The Amazon River in the Sky appeared first on Nautilus.
Police forces are choosing humans over algorithms to make some identifications.
The post Human Super-Recognizers See Faces Better Than AI appeared first on Nautilus.
In my latest article (open access) for Review of International Studies I examine Indigenous resistance to neo-extractive development in Latin America and ask what this means for International Relations (IR). I contend that Indigenous resistance can disrupt traditional thinking in IR via an ‘insurrection of subjugated knowledge’.
The post Challenging the Coloniality of Space in International Relations appeared first on Progress in Political Economy (PPE).
Your expectations form the way you experience the world.
The post Reality Is Your Brain’s Best Guess appeared first on Nautilus.
When science shares freely, industry—much more than the public—reaps the rewards.
The post The Public Cost of Private Science appeared first on Nautilus.
Sperm whales learn patterns of clicks and other social behaviors from their clans.
The post Do Whales Have Culture? appeared first on Nautilus.
Inside the celebrated novelist’s first and only nonfiction essay.
The post Cormac McCarthy Took Us Beneath the Surface appeared first on Nautilus.
Face-altering images are encouraging selfish behavior.
The post How We’re Becoming Bigger Jerks Online appeared first on Nautilus.