How faith can provide a psychological safety net.
The post Thinking About God May Encourage Risk-Taking appeared first on Nautilus.
How faith can provide a psychological safety net.
The post Thinking About God May Encourage Risk-Taking appeared first on Nautilus.
In the near future, it may be the other way around.
The post Creative AIs Depend on Creative Humans appeared first on Nautilus.
When mitochondria stop communicating, the biological clock starts winding down.
The post Cells Across the Body Talk to Each Other About Aging appeared first on Nautilus.
You really can see the marine ecosystem in a grain of sand.
The post Beaches Are Blankets of Fish Poop appeared first on Nautilus.
Ambition is not the problem.
The post What Makes a Narcissist? appeared first on Nautilus.
In a recent paper in Journal of Economic Issues, I explore a particularly interesting variant on the problem of unexplored normativity, politicisation and its ethical consequences. Put simply, standard theory of tax evasion inadvertently treats everyone as a criminal. Moreover, while recent work on theory of “tax morale” seems different it is not as different as one might think. Both contribute to a world of biddable neoliberal subjects.
The post How tax theory in economics treats us appeared first on Progress in Political Economy (PPE).
Five new places scientists have uncovered plastics.
The post There’s Even Plastic in Clouds appeared first on Nautilus.
Health experts are working out the right dose for you.
The post How Much Nature Is Enough? appeared first on Nautilus.
Could quantum mechanics hold the key?
The post A Wild Idea to Solve the Mysteries of Black Holes appeared first on Nautilus.
Why scientists can’t quit chalk, even in the digital age.
The post The Magic of the Blackboard appeared first on Nautilus.