The Most Astounding Fact (Neil deGrasse Tyson). Prepare to have your emotional faculties tickled.
(via Ali C.)
Behold, the king of the Jews.
Dumbass.
(via rainbow-llama)
Footage Of A Female Brain During Orgasm
A video of the female brain as it approaches, experiences and recovers from an orgasm. Watch as the body’s most complex organ goes from a quiet red to a scorching hot yellow-white, as synapses fire and oxygen levels change. Fireworks!
The Guardian reports that the clip was pieced together using images from a functional magnetic resonance imaging (fMRI) scanner. The lady in question, Nan Wise, 54-year-old PhD student and sex therapist, laid down in the scanner and stimulated herself. “It’s my dissertation,” Wise told the Guardian. “I’m committed to it.”
Evolution of ‘Stache
Linger A Little Longer by Jay Watson
Designed with a thermochromatic finish, this table and bench set responds to the heat any object, body part (but no the heat of the night) and leaves a ghostly, x-ray like watermark which lingers until cooling back down to room temperature. Very cool concept though I worry about leaving an imprint of my junk (it might scurr people).
(via: Design Milk / ianbrooks)
I am against religion because it teaches us to be satisfied with not understanding the world.
(via nokaywhatever)
If I were an enzyme, I’d be DNA helicase so I could unzip your genes. (Tee Shirt from Zazzle.com)
13-Year-Old Makes Solar Power Breakthrough by Harnessing the Fibonacci Sequence
While most 13-year-olds spend their free time playing video games or cruising Facebook, one 7th grader was trekking through the woods uncovering a mystery of science. After studying how trees branch in a very specific way, Aidan Dwyer created a solar cell tree that produces 20-50% more power than a uniform array of photovoltaic panels. His impressive results show that using a specific formula for distributing solar cells can drastically improve energy generation. The study earned Aidan a provisional U.S patent - it’s a rare find in the field of technology and a fantastic example of how biomimicry can drastically improve design…
Five Extinct Animals That Would Be Way Cooler to Clone Than a Woolly Mammoth
Japanese scientists announced that they would begin trying to clone a woolly mammoth, effectively bringing the beast back from extinction and making normal elephants seem really lame. Mammoths are cool, granted. But they’re soooo cliché. Here are five extinct animals that would be way better to clone back from the dead than a woolly mammoth.
10 Ways We Get the Odds Wrong
Is your gym locker room crawling with drug-resistant bacteria? Is the guy with the bulging backpack a suicide bomber? And what about that innocent-looking arugula: Will pesticide residue cause cancer, or do the leaves themselves harbor E. coli? But wait! Not eating enough vegetables is also potentially deadly.
These days, it seems like everything is risky, and worry itself is bad for your health. The more we learn, the less we seem to know—and if anything makes us anxious, it’s uncertainty. At the same time, we’re living longer, healthier lives. So why does it feel like even the lettuce is out to get us?
The human brain is exquisitely adapted to respond to risk—uncertainty about the outcome of actions. Faced with a precipice or a predator, the brain is biased to make certain decisions. Our biases reflect the choices that kept our ancestors alive. But we have yet to evolve similarly effective responses to statistics, media coverage, and fear-mongering politicians. For most of human existence, 24-hour news channels didn’t exist, so we don’t have cognitive shortcuts to deal with novel uncertainties.
Still, uncertainty unbalances us, pitching us into anxiety and producing an array of cognitive distortions. Even minor dilemmas like deciding whether to get a cell phone (brain cancer vs. dying on the road because you can’t call for help?) can be intolerable for some people. And though emotions are themselves critical to making rational decisions, they were designed for a world in which dangers took the form of predators, not pollutants. Our emotions push us to make snap judgments that once were sensible—but may not be anymore.






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