Myths give us our sense of personal identity, answering the question, ‘Who am I?’ A myth is a way of…
This post is a paper review for educational purpose.
On Tuesday, April 11, a baby was born to three parents.
Advances in bioengineering seem to be telling us that we are approaching the Brave New World of designer babies. With the emergence of CRISPR and the potential to edit anything in the human…
Pounds. Per. Square. Inch.
Singular narrows advance towards the scar, piton’s birth,sixteen thousand…
‘Time waits for no one’
When you look at a black hole, does it look back at you?
Bouman, Katie, a 29-years-old computer scientist, now assistant professor of…
The first photo to ever be taken of a black hole was revealed on April 10th. The photo…
Tell me about it… scientists create a virtual telescope the size of the Earth itself and the internet’s response is…
Science just moved a huge step forward by a team of astronomers who released the first image of a black hole on Wednesday after years of data analysis.
The black hole, officially dubbed as Powehi, took over 200 researchers working more than 10 years…
This is awesome stuff! I Really appreciate it! Though, one thing I believe the article could be bolstered by is citations (or, since this is a web copy, simply links to citations). I am very curious to see the papers that you’ve made reference to above!
Sure, but at least in the lottery case, we have a “before the fact” state and an “after the fact” state. We’re here. Our entire analysis and supposition is after the fact. But, I suppose it’s hard to decide when we should treat a rare event as an indication of something or not.
I don’t know why you expect media to answer any scientific issues. It is not their job, unfortunately. Media, news included, subscribes to the rules of pure entertainment. Nowadays it is all driven by the ability to get some of your attention, and to satisfy the thirst for entertainment of their reader group, by validating what that group already…