The New Scientist Book Club has just finished reading Ursula K. Le Guin’s The Dispossessed. Most of our members enjoyed it, even if the sheer volume of ideas in the book made it a challenging read ...
The World as a Labyrinth” presents the artist’s ceramic cosmologies, enigmatic bronze narrative and visionary cosmic paintings.
What if a soft material could move on its own, guided not by electronics or motors, but by the kind of rudimentary chemical ...
This engineering exam, which is a gateway to some of the premium engineering colleges such as IITs, NITs and more, cover ...
A proper celebration of Dia de los Muertos requires pan de muerto. Some families might bake a few loaves and leave them at ...
This stunning photo of a full-circle rainbow is among the winners from a world weather photography competition. The Royal ...
October is Breast Cancer Awareness Month, and cancer awareness starts with general breast awareness. Dr. Julie Nangia, ...
Philly’s premier art museum drops a preposition, revives a griffin and introduces a cheeky new nickname that may make ...
First off, you swept the pavement outside your house; then you washed the bit around the doorstep in a semi-circular sweeping ...
The final failure of Project Sigil marks the end of a business delusion that cost Wizards of the Coast, and Dungeons & ...
In “Nexus,” Puryear shows that he may be America’s greatest living sculptor, a maverick who reshapes our sense of how art ...
Fukuoaka's osmotic power plant is supplied by local desalination facilities and uses a natural process to generate modest ...