The astronomer Fatoumata Kébé has written a book where she combines scientific data with ancient fables and legends
Our memory will be impaired by the lack of connections in the temporal cortex, since almost everything has been relegated to a key combination on a digital device.
It all started when Newton placed a glass prism in front of the only ray of light entering a dark room.
The function of a cell cannot be separated from the other cells of our body, although the idea of the cell as an isolated atom still persists.
The event of the Titan submersible takes us to that other submersible designed by Jules Verne in his novel 'Twenty Thousand Leagues Under the Sea', and which was named after a cephalopod mollusk: 'Nautilus'.
The force of gravity controls the evolution and destiny of the entire universe. The scientific popularizer Marcus Chown tells it in a didactic way in his book 'Gravity'
Reality has its own internal movement, an invisible scaffolding that supports it following a precise method and is subject to laws where quantitative accumulation is qualitatively transformed.
In a recently published book we are told how, in the early sixties, a research project on psychedelic substances was carried out at Harvard University.
Long before Herman Melville imagined revenge in the form of a white whale, Albrecht Dürer sailed to Zeeland to see a whale for the first time in his life. The English writer Philip Hoare tells us the story in his book 'Albert and the Whale'
Applying psychological theories to the story, Hemingway will tell his stories from what is not written. In this way, it will put into practice the Iceberg Theory stated at the time by the psychologist Gustav Fechner.