All posts tagged: rewrites

Groundbreaking new theory rewrites quantum view of the Big Bang

Groundbreaking new theory rewrites quantum view of the Big Bang

A Gravity Theory That Could Rewrite the Universe’s First Moments The first fraction of a second after the Big Bang has always posed a problem. Physics can describe a great deal about the universe once it cooled and expanded, but the very beginning, when temperatures and energies were extreme, has remained harder to pin down. A new study from researchers at the University of Waterloo and the Perimeter Institute argues that the universe’s earliest growth spurt may not need the extra theoretical add-ons that many cosmologists have relied on for decades. Instead, the team says that rapid early expansion, known as inflation, could emerge from a more complete version of gravity itself. That matters because Einstein’s general relativity, despite its long record of success, is not enough on its own in such extreme conditions. It works well as an effective theory, but breaks down at very high energies and runs into problems such as singularities and mathematical inconsistencies. Ruolin Liu, a PhD student at Perimeter and Waterloo, and Dr. Jerome Quintin, a lecturer at l’École …

New psychedelic fungus rewrites origins of magic mushrooms

New psychedelic fungus rewrites origins of magic mushrooms

Get the Popular Science daily newsletter💡 Breakthroughs, discoveries, and DIY tips sent six days a week. The discovery of a new magic mushroom species in Africa is forcing mycologists to take another look at the famous psychedelic fungi’s evolutionary history. According to a study published today in the journal Proceedings B of the Royal Society, both the popular Psilocybe cubensis and a newly described species shared a common ancestor roughly 1.5 million years ago—but not in the region of the world many assumed. When you hear about “magic mushrooms,” it’s generally referring to P. cubensis. At moderate and high doses, the fungi cause sensory hallucinations and altered perceptions of time. Increasing evidence also indicates microdoses may have extremely beneficial therapeutic uses. While it thrives in tropical climates and famously prefers growing on cow dung, ecologists have long puzzled over how it spread across the Americas due to a very specific historical event. Cattle simply did not exist in that region of the world before European colonists brought it in the 16th century. Researchers have long …

Forgotten hand tool rewrites ancient Egyptian history

Forgotten hand tool rewrites ancient Egyptian history

Get the Popular Science daily newsletter💡 Breakthroughs, discoveries, and DIY tips sent six days a week. Nearly a century ago, archaeologists excavating a cemetery in Upper Egypt dating back to the late 4th millennium BCE discovered a small, unrecognizable artifact in the grave of an adult male. While experts confidently dated the item back to the Predynastic era, the roughly 2.5-inch-long object’s purpose was less clear. Researchers at the University of Cambridge eventually catalogued it as “a little awl of copper, with some leather thong wound round it,” and stored it in the institution’s Museum of Archaeology and Anthropology. However, careful reexaminations indicate the “little awl” is far more significant than originally believed—so much so that it may rewrite ancient Egyptian history. In a study published in the journal Egypt and the Levant, a team led by Newcastle University archaeologist Martin Odler argues the item is actually the region’s earliest known example of a bow drill. If true, this pushes the tool’s creation back by over 2,000 years. An original photograph of the artifact published …

Ancient bacterium discovery rewrites the origins of syphilis

Ancient bacterium discovery rewrites the origins of syphilis

Treponema pallidum bacteria cause diseases including syphilis Science Photo Library / Alamy Traces of a bacterium related to syphilis have been found in a bone from a person who lived in the mountains of Colombia over 5000 years ago. The discovery shows that this group of corkscrew-shaped bacteria was infecting humans thousands of years earlier than previously thought, before the rise of intensive agriculture, which many researchers consider a catalyst for the spread of pathogens. Today, three subspecies of the bacterium Treponema pallidum cause the diseases syphilis, bejel and yaws. The deep history of these ailments is murky, and researchers have debated where diseases like syphilis arose and how they became widespread. Ancient bacterial DNA and markers of infection on skeletal remains lend us some clues, but these are rare and can be ambiguous. So, when researchers studying the ancient DNA of 5500-year-old human remains in the Bogotá savannah detected the genome of Treponema pallidum in a human leg bone sample, it was a surprise. “This finding was completely unexpected, because the individual studied had …

Spin size rewrites the Kondo effect

Spin size rewrites the Kondo effect

Quantum effects in Kondo lattices can determine whether a system behaves magnetically or non-magnetically, opening new avenues for designing future quantum materials and technologies. The Kondo effect – the interaction between localised spins and conduction electrons –plays a central role in many quantum phenomena. However, in real materials, the presence of additional charges and orbital degrees of freedom makes it difficult to isolate the essential quantum mechanism behind the Kondo effect. In these materials, electrons don’t just have spin; they also move around and can occupy different orbitals. When all these extra behaviours mix together, it becomes hard to focus only on the spin interactions responsible for the Kondo effect. A research team led by Associate Professor Hironori Yamaguchi of the Graduate School of Science at Osaka Metropolitan University have sought to overcome this barrier. The Kondo necklace model and its potential for exploring new states The Kondo necklace model, proposed in 1977 by Sebastian Doniach, simplifies the Kondo lattice by focusing exclusively on spin degrees of freedom. This model has long been regarded as …

CDC Quietly Rewrites Its Vaccine-Autism Guidance

CDC Quietly Rewrites Its Vaccine-Autism Guidance

Authored by Maryanne Demasi via The Brownstone Institute, For the first time in a generation, the US Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) has rewritten its official position on whether vaccines can cause autism. This is a change that could reshape one of the most politically charged and emotionally fraught debates in modern medicine. In a website update published on 19 November 2025, the agency now states that the long-standing claim “vaccines do not cause autism” is “not an evidence-based claim” because scientific studies “have not ruled out the possibility that infant vaccines cause autism.” The page also acknowledges that “studies supporting a link have been ignored by health authorities.” It’s difficult to overstate the significance of these statements. For nearly two decades, they would have been unthinkable for a federal public health agency. The timing is equally striking. The change arrives at a moment when the political and scientific landscape around vaccine safety is undergoing a marked shift inside the Trump–Kennedy administration. For months, critics have accused Health Secretary Robert F. Kennedy Jr and several …

New York Times Rewrites History Again With Nikole Hannah-Jones

New York Times Rewrites History Again With Nikole Hannah-Jones

Authored by Jonathan Turley, Former New York Times reporter and Howard University professor Nikole Hannah-Jones has long been controversial as a writer who expressly rejects objectivity and neutrality in journalism. That was most evident in her “1619 Project,” which was ridiculed by historians and law professors in claiming that slavery was the driving force behind American independence. Nevertheless, the project was awarded the Pulitzer Prize despite glaring historical errors. Yet, this month, Hannah-Jones is back on the pages of the New York Times again rewriting history. This time, she is praising cop-killer and 1960s revolutionary Assata Shakur. Hannah-Jones has been a lightning rod in her writings, from declaring “all journalism is activism” to spreading conspiracy theories against the police. Yet, mainstream media, including the Times, has run interference for Hannah-Jones, including the dean of the University of North Carolina trying to shut down criticism by reminding a reporter that they must all defend Hannah-Jones. Hannah-Jones’s latest project of historical revision is a sorrowful memorial to Shakur, which shows the same disregard for facts in favor of a preferred narrative. …

Big tech AI marketing rewrites the future of education

Big tech AI marketing rewrites the future of education

Big tech AI in education narratives aren’t neutral information sources – they’re persuasive texts designed to shape how we think. Through carefully chosen words, packaged in slick websites, “research” reports and glossy marketing materials, companies like Google and Microsoft don’t just inform us about AI. They shape how we think about it. Much of this happens below our immediate consciousness, making it hard to notice, let alone question. And that matters. How we understand AI’s role in education will ultimately shape decisions in schools and influence policy. Edtech marketing isn’t always easy to spot. It’s wrapped up in authoritative-looking research, school success stories, teacher training materials and blog posts fronted by thought leaders with impressive credentials. Presented across multiple formats, these messages feel accessible, trustworthy and even benevolent. But the variety and polish also mask the commercial imperative woven through these carefully crafted stories, disarming readers into assuming they’re encountering neutral, informative educational resources. Huge profits Neutrality is impossible when huge profits are at stake. The global AI in education market is set to grow …