Research methods are continually advancing, and the Covid-19 pandemic once again demonstrated the ingenuity and adaptability ...
How can people with diametrically opposed views suddenly stand shoulder to shoulder in protest? Researchers from Copenhagen, ...
A new study uncovers how psychological distance fuels conspiracy beliefs and how bringing politics closer can help rebuild ...
Liberty is not a luxury good. It is necessary for civilization to thrive and the end of liberty will also be the end of ...
Tufts’ current and former political science professors Jeffrey M. Berry, James M. Glaser and Deborah J. Schildkraut published ...
At the beginning of the pestilence and when it ends, there’s always a propensity for rhetoric. ... It is only in the thick of ...
A transformation of climate politics will come when the majority on the margins becomes a self-aware political force. The ...
Eisgruber has spoken at events in Princeton, New York, Chicago, Washington, D.C., Cambridge, Mass., and other cities, and has brought his message to a range of news outlets.
A Critique of Hobbesian Premises through the Lenses of Game Theory and Evolutionary Biology The “state of war” proposed by Thomas Hobbes in Leviathan is examined, with emphasis on the extreme ...
Nepal’s Gen Z briefly demonstrated the power of a “political hive mind,” coordinating a leaderless, rapid, and intelligent mass movement that overwhelmed the state after the violent response to their ...
40 years ago — on November 18, 1985 — a new comic strip appeared in the newspaper: Calvin and Hobbes. Hobbes was a stuffed tiger, but in the mind of 6-year-old Calvin he was a wryly observant ...
In this Q&A, Richard Aslin shares his thoughts on the real meaning of “academic freedom” and why members of the higher education community have reason to be cautiously optimistic.
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