Our contemporary celebration of Valentine’s Day has been steered by greeting card companies, jewelers and all sorts of enterprising businesses. The idea for celebrating the concept of love is not ...
Love is a powerful interplay of brain chemistry, heart regulation, and evolution. On Valentine’s Day, we celebrate love’s ...
The Xavier University president called on students and Catholic universities to integrate the sciences and humanities in ...
As part of the Arts and Humanities Colloquium series, Colgate University Associate Professor of Chinese Jing Wang presented ...
On Wednesday, Feb. 26, Ball in the House, a renowned a cappella group, will perform "And Now I See: Racism, and American ...
O n a freezing night in January, several hundred people came to Boston’s Museum of Science for a town hall-style discussion ...
Bolstered by renowned texts and international trips, the Western Humanities sequence attracts many underclass students, while ...
John Green spoke at Notre Dame for the annual Ruskin Lecture, offering reflections on history, faith, climate change and the ...
His two early papers “What Numbers Could Not Be” (1965) and “Mathematical Truth” (1973) — the latter of which came to be called “the Benacerraf problem" — became instant classics and are discussed to ...
Imagine a place where you can experience entire universes. A space that will make you rethink the limits of human capability.
Mao Zedong, Socrates, Mickey Mouse, Ayn Rand, elephants, and echoes of Monty Python in a Dadaist animation film – that is one ...
An extraordinary aspect of our residencies is that you become part of the scientific community that is dealing with fundamental truths about reality.” ...