9 results found.
Science
Reporting from the University of Cambridge’s annual hackathon, Science Editors Zak Lakota-Baldwin and Marco Oechsner find a wealth of creative projects produced by a diverse group of students
Science
Cambridge’s scientific community saw many landmark events in 2018
Science
When the UK leaves Europe, Britain’s scientists will likely experience cuts to their funding and barriers to their mobility. At Cambridge, Nobel Prize Laureates are concerned about how this will impact research in the future.
Science
Wildlife is more than simply native birds and mammals. Zak Lakota-Baldwin discusses past follies of human interaction with the wild, arguing that we can place too much stock in superficial appearance
Science
Women account for 59 per cent of undergraduate degrees, but only 47 per cent of PhD graduates and just 21 per cent of senior faculty positions in Europe
Science
Using a plethora of Cambridge artifacts and museums as a basis, what are our unique factors that define our species?
Science
How can natural selection describe celebrities donating millions to charity? An exploration of why have humans broken the altruism trend seen in the wild
Science
From chimps to bats, how do we determine which organisms have the same degree of consciousness as us?
Science
Zak Lakota-Baldwin considers the development and definition of life, beginning with its start in a lab