#WB Science
Are viruses alive?
February 28, 2026
Viruses
The definition of life is not absolute; it is a human classification built around a cluster of biological properties such as metabolism, reproduction, and evolution.
What ancient human species first realized it was going to die?
February 18, 2026
Ancient Humans Spirituality
The awareness of personal mortality likely emerged gradually in the genus Homo, becoming probable by the time of Homo heidelbergensis and unmistakable in Neanderthals and ...
Why do scientific models work if they aren’t literally true?
February 18, 2026
Philosophy of Science THINK WELL TST FRAMEWORK
Scientific models succeed not because they are perfectly true, but because they reliably capture patterns in reality. Trust scientific models for what they do well, ...
What is Deception Research?
February 11, 2026
Philosophy of Science THINK WELL TST FRAMEWORK
Deception research shows that authority-driven situations often override personal judgment, replacing morality with obedience.
Why do complex systems fail when proportionality is removed?
January 28, 2026
Science
Complex systems remain stable only when responses scale appropriately to the problem they are addressing.
Could the CMB be proof of an inifinite universe?
January 27, 2026
Unification
The Cosmic Microwave Background isn’t the edge of space in an infinite universe—it’s the oldest light we can see, marking a boundary in time, not ...
Why is Planck time important?
January 26, 2026
Unification
Planck time marks the boundary where our best current physical theories stop describing reality reliably.
Did Copernicus prove that Earth moves around the Sun?
January 21, 2026
3. Field Math Astronomy Philosophy of Science
Nicolaus Copernicus did not prove heliocentrism—he built a model that explained the sky better than any alternative available at the time.
What does neuroscience say about “identity?”
January 14, 2026
Animals Science TO LIVE WELL
Science says you are physically changing all the time and the story you tell about yourself is less a fixed thing and more a maintained ...
Is “the speed of light” really the best name for the universe’s maximum speed?
December 31, 2025
Epistemology Philosophy of Science TST FRAMEWORK
The “universal speed limit” isn’t about light: it’s the limit for causation within our universe, even as space itself expands faster.
Did Fred Hoyle coin the term Big Bang as an insult?
August 6, 2025
Big Bang
Fred Hoyle gave the Big Bang its famous name while arguing against it. He later said it was more of a jab than an actual ...
Trivia: Did Einstein or Galileo discover the Relativity Principle?
February 26, 2025
Big Bang Relativity
In shaping modern cosmology, Galileo articulated the relativity principle in 1632, Newton made gravity universal in 1687, and Einstein revealed gravity as the curvature of ...
Why hasn’t Voyager been damaged by space dust?
February 19, 2025
Astronomy
Space feels dangerous, but its extreme emptiness makes collisions incredibly rare.
Will the night sky have stars nearly forever?
February 5, 2025
Cosmology
Our constellations feel permanent, yet aren't. The stars themselves, bound together in our galactic neighborhood, will light our night sky for nearly forever.
Are dogs and wolves the same species?
January 29, 2025
Animals
Yes. Dogs and wolves are the same species biologically, with dogs classified as a domesticated subspecies of the gray wolf.
When did play evolve in mammals?
January 22, 2025
Mammals
Play evolved many times in evolution as a survival tool. Mammalian-like play emerged about 190 million years ago.
Is the 8.7-million-year-old Anadoluvius a human ancestor?
January 15, 2025
Ancient Humans
Anadoluvius turkae is a reminder of just how messy evolution is. The discovery highlights the diversity of great apes during the Miocene and how different ...
Do aliens enjoy playing like we do on Earth?
January 1, 2025
Evolution OVM Spirituality
Embrace play in your life. It's not just human, it's life. Play evolve many times on Earth in various animals. If life elsewhere follows patterns ...
Is science tainted by bias?
January 1, 2025
Cognitive Biases Philosophy of Mind Philosophy of Science
Always remember that even science is touched by human bias. Its strength lies in being a self-correcting process. You too can self correct.
Is the Fermi Paradox still relevant?
January 1, 2025
Cognitive Biases Cosmology Futurism
It is a useful abductive reasoning model but challenges us to confront the limits of our technology, imagination, and perspective.



















