The Atlantic
-
[:es]Genetic Intelligence Tests Are Next to Worthless[:]
[:es]And not just because one said I was below average.[:]
-
[:es]How the Enlightenment Ends[:]
[:es]Philosophically, intellectually—in every way—human society is unprepared for the rise of artificial intelligence.[:]
-
[:es]The Y Chromosome’s Still-Uncharted Regions[:]
[:es]The human genome has never actually been complete[:]
-
[:es]How Did Astronaut DNA Become ‘Fake News’?[:]
[:es]For a brief moment, NASA found itself at the center of a digital misinformation campaign.[:]
-
[:es]Urban Bird Feeders Are Changing the Course of Evolution[:]
[:es]More than 50 million Americans are conducting an unwitting experiment on a vast scale.[:]
-
[:es]Can Planet Earth Feed 10 Billion People?[:]
[:es]Three billion more middle-class appetites. How can they possibly be satisfied? But that is only part of the question. The full question is: How can we provide for everyone without […]
-
[:es]A New Way to Find the Tree of Life’s Missing Branches[:]
[:es]Scientists have devised a method to sequence more microbes, more quickly, which could lead to a better understanding of the origin of complex life.[:]
-
[:es]How Evolution Can Make Sense of the Stock Market[:]
[:es]To help model complex and frequently erratic financial systems, some economists are turning to biology.[:]
-
[:es]Stopping the Rise of Superbugs by Making Them Fight For Food[:]
[:es]A new strategy prevents parasites from adapting to drugs by intensifying the competition between them.[:]