Benjamin Curtis, Nottingham Trent University We are losing our minds to Google. After 20 years, Google’s products have become integrated into our everyday lives,
Science
Children’s books are adding to science’s gender problem
Dr Susan Wilbraham, University of Cumbria and Elizabeth Caldwell, University of Huddersfield Astronaut Sunita Williams – not a ‘he’. NASA, CC BY-NC Ask young
Curbing disease transmission through genetically modified mosquitoes
Jason Rasgon, Pennsylvania State University Mosquitoes are some of the most deadly creatures on the planet. They carry viruses, bacteria and parasites, which they
पूँजीवाद को तबाह नहीं किया तो पूँजीवाद पृथ्वी को तबाह कर देगा !
कविता कृष्णपल्लवी ‘पृथ्वी दिवस’ के अवसर पर 22 अप्रैल को पूरी दुनिया में पर्यावरण को बचाने की चिंता प्रकट करते हुए कार्यक्रम हुए। 1970
When we lose weight, where does it go?
By Ruben Meerman, UNSW and Andrew Brown, UNSW The world is obsessed with fad diets and weight loss, yet few of us know how
Why do our veins look blue when our blood is red?
David Irving, University of Technology Sydney This is an article from I’ve Always Wondered, a series where readers send in questions they’d like an
What is space? The 300-year-old philosophical battle goes on !
by Emily Thomas Mountains. Whales. The distant stars. All these things exist in space, and so do we. Our bodies take up a certain amount
Why we should pay people to stop smoking
by Mai Frandsen Despite some of the strictest tobacco control policies in the world, recent data shows the decline in smoking in Australia has stalled.
Why onions make us cry (and why some don’t)
By Duane Mellor, Coventry University Mark Anthony in Shakespeare’s Cleopatra may have referred to “the tears that live in the onion”. But why do onions
Why religion is not going away and science will not destroy it (Peter Harrison)
In 1966, just over 50 years ago, the distinguished Canadian-born anthropologist Anthony Wallace confidently predicted the global demise of religion at the hands of