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  • Brian Talbot
    In certain political and religious circles, the notion of moral relativism 鈥 that there is no objective 鈥渞ight鈥 or wrong, only individual opinions 鈥 is not just anathema, not merely abhorrent. It is the very root of decadence and the collapse of
  • Associate Professor of Psychology and Neuroscience Tor Wager, director of 蜜桃传媒破解版下载 Cognitive and Affective Neuroscience Lab. Photo: Stephen Collector/The New York Times/Redux
    What you don鈥檛 know won鈥檛 hurt you, goes the old canard, but what you believe can make a difference when it comes to pain relief, and not just in a subjective way. When you expect that a drug or placebo will relieve pain, and it does, it鈥檚 not simply a matter of fooling your brain.
  • When biomass burns, including during wildfires, it releases a pollutant that can cause health problems at high concentrations. Photo credit: NOAA.
    When biomass burns, including during wildfires, it releases a pollutant that can cause health problems at high concentrations. Photo credit: NOAA.A smoke-related chemical may be a significant air pollutant in some parts of the world, especially in
  • 15-year-old Zach Huey, in black shirt, and his twin brother, Nate, have been studied since the age of 4 by researchers at the Institute for Behavioral Genetics at the University of Colorado Boulder. CU photo by Glenn Asakawa.
    Nate and Zach Huey are identical, 15-year-old twins, who, like most twins, are somewhat dissimilar. But the twins but have much in common. Both like Japanese comic books called Manga. Both read voraciously and have a vocabulary that shows it. And both have been studied since the age of 4 by researchers at the Institute for Behavioral Genetics at the University of Colorado Boulder.
  • Stefan Leyk
    When most people think of maps, they think National Geographic, Rand McNally or 鈥 more likely these days 鈥 Google. Maps show us where places and objects are and sometimes, what they look like.They can be two-dimensional or three-dimensional, and
  • Former CU-Boulder postdoctoral researchers Amy Miller ( blue coat) and Katie Suding (black coat) are shown here with other members of a research team conducting a study involving nitrogen deposition on the tundra of the Niwot Ridge Long-Term Ecological Research site west of Boulder. (Photo courtesy William Bowman, INSTAAR)
    Former CU-Boulder postdoctoral researchers Amy Miller ( blue coat) and Katie Suding (black coat) are shown here with other members of a research team conducting a study involving nitrogen deposition on the tundra of the Niwot Ridge Long-Term
  • Leaf Van Boven
    When former U.S. Rep. Patricia Schroeder tearfully announced in 1987 that she would not seek the nomination for president, many analysts suggested that such a display of emotion made her unqualified. But what if all our tightly held stereotypes about 鈥渆motional鈥 females and stoic males are wrong?
  • Bozena Welborne, who earned her Ph.D. from CU-Boulder last year, is now an assistant professor of political science at the University of Nevada, Reno.
    Imagine, if you will, a meeting of minds between Ayn Rand and Mohammed鈥ublic surveys in recent years consistently have found that concerns about 鈥渞adical Islam鈥 are higher among conservative Christians in the United States than among many other
  • Thomas Andrews
    Thomas Andrews has a knack for framing American history unconventionally. In his award-winning book 鈥淜illing for Coal,鈥 Andrews traced the central role of coal in Colorado鈥檚 economic growth, environmental change and social conflict. Now he鈥檚 turning
  • George Clooney, center, and Janet Robinson, to his left, pose in Telluride with members of Robinson's CU-Boulder class, part of Libby Arts Residential Academic Program.
    [video:http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ox9Y2NiNIl4]This video, posted on YouTube, captures a CU student perspective of the Telluride University Seminar at the Telluride Film Festival. This video was created by CU student William Jones, with
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