Former President Donald Trump and Vice President Kamala Harris are tied in Nevada in latest Emerson College polling.
This year's presidential election is presented in stark terms of right and left, Trump on the right and Harris on the left.
Experts say widespread distrust of government is being fused with the proliferation of online conspiracy theories.
The beliefs we hold develop from a complex dance between our internal and external lives. Our personal-level cognition and ...
Tesla CEO Elon Musk's political shift to the right on the social network he owns, X (formerly Twitter), could be dragging the ...
Neocolonialism has led to an imbalance in the production of knowledge and a clunky imposition of frameworks and models of ...
U.S. House Speaker Mike Johnson, a Louisiana Republican, on Wednesday saw his latest bid to fund the government fail, taken ...
Scientific American magazine made its second presidential endorsement in its history, backing Vice President Kamala Harris.
What Scientific American is doing is a disgrace. When the last shreds of its credibility disappear and its readership inevitably declines, it will have only itself to blame.
Strange as it seems to say it, a magazine devoted to science should not take sides in a political contest ... Biden and Trump supporters to look at two versions of the prestigious journal Nature—one ...
The scientific clerisy fret about eroding public trust in science, but what do they expect when they act like political ...
Scientific American urged readers to "Vote for Kamala Harris to Support Science, Health and the Environment." It's a ...