A new anatomical understanding of how movement controls the body’s stress response system
In the name of emotional well-being, college students are increasingly demanding protection from words and ideas they don’t like. Here’s why that’s disastrous for education—and mental health.
The choice to leave academia does not have to mean life as a barista.
Women engage in indirect aggression and slut-shaming, even in clinical research studies. Why?
A man who served the regime recounts his efforts to bring it down.
A conversation with Vice President Joe Biden
A 160,000-mile quest to visit all 59 of the country's natural treasures
It can even be trained to read your lips.
One black woman tries to reconcile her faith with the institution’s history of discrimination.
Every year, hundreds of people attend the Oklahoma Full Auto Shoot, cultivating a love for assault weapons in an era of mass violence.
The health benefits are clear. The political benefits are newly relevant.
Last night, in Time Capsule #88, I noted the deafening silence of Republican officialdom, after Hillary Clinton delivered her calmly…
Narcissism, disagreeableness, grandiosity—a psychologist investigates how Trump’s extraordinary personality might shape his possible presidency.
Lenin underwater, a penguin weigh-in, monsoon flooding in India, an earthquake in central Italy, a deep blue lake in El Salvador, and much more.
The Islamic State is no mere collection of psychopaths. It is a religious group with carefully considered beliefs, among them that it is a key agent of the coming apocalypse. Here’s what that means for its strategy—and for how to stop it.
Hundreds of thousands were watched from above at the behest of the local police department. And the program operated for months in secret.
The U.S. president talks through his hardest decisions about America’s role in the world.
The town of Hogeway, outside Amsterdam, is a Truman Show-style nursing home.