Introducing 21 Ways COVID Changed the World
The pandemic didn’t bring us together, but it did show us what we need to change the most
Jen Schwartz is a senior editor of features at Scientific American who covers how people are adapting, or not, to a rapidly changing world. Credit: Nick Higgins
The pandemic didn’t bring us together, but it did show us what we need to change the most
We need to agree on the evidence—so we can disagree on what to do in light of it
We wrap up our preelection series with Scientific American senior editor Jen Schwartz, who talks about the possible effects of the election results on technology development and use.&..
Simulation games help newsrooms prepare for covering a chaotic election season
Some of the cringiest articles in Scientific American’s history reveal bigger questions about scientific authority
In their own voices, health care workers from across the country reflect on coping with the coronavirus
Scientific American senior editor Jen Schwartz talks with WHO officials Maria Neira and Agnès Soucat about climate and health and with Rachel Kyte, special representative to the U.N...
By harnessing “female energy,” Christiana Figueres convinced humanity to take on climate change
A worst-case cyberwarfare scenario for the 2020 American presidential election
Searching for reality in unreal times
An investigation into one of the biggest misconceptions in male fertility
When the discussion of reproductive health is dominated by the political will to control it, gaps in medical research get overshadowed
When Americans go to the polls, will hackers unleash chaos?
When Americans go to the polls, will hackers unleash chaos?
Former FEMA chief Craig Fugate talks about sea level rise, big data, and bias
The FEMA program will continue to be financially unviable until it uses the latest research to help fix its broken system
Coastal communities struggling to adapt to rising seas are beginning to do what was once unthinkable: retreat
When it comes to the unsustainable development of the American coastline, New Jersey owns the honor of being the first and worst. But one town in the state is experimenting with moving a cluster of people out of harm’s way and turning the newly open land into a flood buffer to protect the rest of the community...
It has nothing to do with science itself
Support science journalism.
Thanks for reading Scientific American. Knowledge awaits.
Already a subscriber? Sign in.
Thanks for reading Scientific American. Create your free account or Sign in to continue.
Create Account