What Industrial Societies Get Wrong About Childhood

Age-based classes are not the only way to learn—and may not be the most effective. | Continue reading


@nautil.us | 2 years ago

Time Is Contagious

How to control the subjective experience of time. | Continue reading


@nautil.us | 2 years ago

Moving Beyond Mimicry in Artificial Intelligence

What makes pre-trained AI models so impressive—and potentially harmful. | Continue reading


@nautil.us | 2 years ago

Under Anesthesia, Where Do Our Minds Go?

To better understand our brains and design safer anesthesia, scientists are turning to EEG. | Continue reading


@nautil.us | 2 years ago

Why Are So Many Monsters Hybrids?

The captivating horror of category violation. | Continue reading


@nautil.us | 2 years ago

How Are the Bees?

The collapse of our pollinators may no longer be headlines, but we’re still killing their buzz. | Continue reading


@nautil.us | 2 years ago

Are You a Naïve Realist?

Do you think you see the world objectively and others are biased? | Continue reading


@nautil.us | 2 years ago

How Do We Get People Who Believe in Pseudoscience to Trust Science?

It’s time to ask a scientist. | Continue reading


@nautil.us | 2 years ago

Thinking Like a Scientist Will Make You Happier

Physicist Jim Al-Khalili explains how to get out from under the cloud of misinformation. | Continue reading


@nautil.us | 2 years ago

Planetary Scientist Is Always Reaching for Something Big – Science Connected

Persistence, says Lindy Elkins-Tanton, has led to her success in science. | Continue reading


@nautil.us | 2 years ago

Gravitational Waves Continue to Astound

Seven years after their discovery, the ripples in spacetime have opened new windows on the universe’s deepest secrets. | Continue reading


@nautil.us | 2 years ago

The Self-Driving Car Is a Red Herring

Ghost roads of robot workhorses will power cities through the shocks of the 21st century. | Continue reading


@nautil.us | 2 years ago

Unlocking Mom’s Brain

Maternal care offers a window on our social instincts. | Continue reading


@nautil.us | 2 years ago

Portrait of the Human as a Young Hominin

How the world looked when we were Australopithecus. | Continue reading


@nautil.us | 2 years ago

The Attack of Zombie Science

They look like scientific papers. But they’re distorting and killing science. | Continue reading


@nautil.us | 2 years ago

Mysteries Are to Be Embraced, but Also to Be Solved

Science doesn’t rob the world of wonder. It amplifies it. | Continue reading


@nautil.us | 2 years ago

Were It Not for Cosmic Good Fortune, We Wouldn’t Be Here – Science Connected

Why Earth wasn’t swept into the dustbin of space. | Continue reading


@nautil.us | 2 years ago

Doctor Strange and the Multiverse in Science

The multiverse of pop culture owes its existence to a testable scientific hypothesis. | Continue reading


@nautil.us | 2 years ago

Learning Chess at 40

What I learned trying to keep up with my 4-year-old daughter at the royal game. | Continue reading


@nautil.us | 2 years ago

How Much Is the Ocean Worth?

Putting a price tag on the ocean might just save it. | Continue reading


@nautil.us | 2 years ago

We Better Think Twice About What We Say to ET

Extraterrestrials could take our intergalactic message in entirely the wrong way. | Continue reading


@nautil.us | 2 years ago

“I Have to Admit, I Have a Low Opinion of Human Beings”

Why the father of neuroscience, toward the end of his career, preferred to study ants. | Continue reading


@nautil.us | 2 years ago

He Fast-Forwarded Evolution into the Future

Forty years ago, a paleontologist pictured Earth millions of years from now. His vision is a wake-up call for us today. | Continue reading


@nautil.us | 2 years ago

What Lurks in a Drowned Forest in Alabama?

The next miracle drug might be hiding in a primeval undersea forest. | Continue reading


@nautil.us | 2 years ago

How to Quiet Your Mind Chatter (2021)

To break the tape loop in your head, talk to yourself as another person. | Continue reading


@nautil.us | 2 years ago

What Regret Tells Us

The feeling you could have made a different choice only arises because you have free will. A graphic explanation. | Continue reading


@nautil.us | 2 years ago

A Viral Twitter Thread Reawakens the Dark History of Anthropology

I’m an anthropologist and rarely have I seen such a harmful mix of inaccuracies and stereotypes about Indigenous people. | Continue reading


@nautil.us | 2 years ago

The Return of New York Harbor’s Oysters

This entrepreneur plans to revive the famous urban ecosystem with a billion oysters. | Continue reading


@nautil.us | 2 years ago

As Creation Stories Go, the Big Bang Is a Good One

How science is like mythology when it pushes the boundaries of the known. | Continue reading


@nautil.us | 2 years ago

Neuroscience Gets in the Way of Appreciating Art

To this philosopher, art is the best method for exploring who and what we are. | Continue reading


@nautil.us | 2 years ago

The Power of Narrative

Global solutions, like the greening of the world’s financial system, begin with the right story. | Continue reading


@nautil.us | 2 years ago

The Genius of Fishing with Tidal Weirs

Native and non-native scientists have come together to counter overfishing with an ancient practice. | Continue reading


@nautil.us | 2 years ago

The Ocean Is Having Trouble Breathing

A drop in oxygen levels is putting ocean ecosystems on life support. | Continue reading


@nautil.us | 2 years ago

I Rewired My Brain to Become Fluent in Math

The building blocks of understanding are memorization and repetition. | Continue reading


@nautil.us | 2 years ago

I Couldn’t Get over My Brother’s Death

Everybody told me my grief would relent in a year. It only got worse. Was there something wrong with me? | Continue reading


@nautil.us | 2 years ago

The Portentous Comeback of Humpback Whales

Humpbacks are returning to pre-whaling populations with a warning about ocean ecosystems. | Continue reading


@nautil.us | 2 years ago

Robots Show Us Who We Are

What can we learn from machines with imagination and culture? | Continue reading


@nautil.us | 2 years ago

Math’s “Oldest Problem Ever” Gets a New Answer

A new proof significantly strengthens a decades-old result about the ubiquity of ways to represent whole numbers as sums of fractions. | Continue reading


@nautil.us | 2 years ago

Four Years On, New Experiment Sees No Sign of “Cosmic Dawn”

When astronomers tried to confirm a signal from the birth of the first stars after the Big Bang, they saw nothing. | Continue reading


@nautil.us | 2 years ago

The Kekulé Problem

Where did language come from? | Continue reading


@nautil.us | 2 years ago

The Impact of Meteorites on Earth

Life as we know it was seeded by rocks from outer space. | Continue reading


@nautil.us | 2 years ago

Painkillers That Don’t Kill

Scientists are getting closer to designing safer, more targeted pain drugs to replace opioids. | Continue reading


@nautil.us | 2 years ago

The Book No One Read – Why Lem's Futurism Deserves Attention

Why Stanislaw Lem’s futurism deserves attention. | Continue reading


@nautil.us | 2 years ago

The Math of the Sandpile

To understand self-organization in nature, behold the sandpile. | Continue reading


@nautil.us | 2 years ago

Is Physical Law an Alien Intelligence?

Alien life could be so advanced it becomes indistinguishable from physics. | Continue reading


@nautil.us | 2 years ago

Deep Learning Is Hitting a Wall

What would it take for artificial intelligence to make real progress? | Continue reading


@nautil.us | 2 years ago

It’s time to admit quantum theory has reached a dead end

It’s time to admit quantum theory has reached a dead end. Can we please go back to the math? | Continue reading


@nautil.us | 2 years ago

Even Worms Feel Pain

An evolutionary biologist argues that animals could feel more pain than humans. | Continue reading


@nautil.us | 2 years ago