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Paul Ratner
Contributing Writer
Paul is a writer, filmmaker, and educator. He has written for years for Big Think and other outlets on transformative scientific research, history, and current events. His award-winning films like the true-life adventure "Moses on the Mesa" and the science documentary "The Caveman of Atomic City" have played at film festivals around the world. Paul also organizes numerous unique educational events, renowned film festivals, and competitions for thousands of people. He has degrees from Cornell University (BA) and Chapman University (MFA). You can follow Paul's work at paulratnerimagines.com, on Instagram, and Facebook.
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Could famous sinkings and disappearances in the Bermuda Triangle have been prevented by advanced contemporary technology?
One achievable solution can stop the epidemic of school shootings in the United States without restricting the guns of law-abiding citizens.
Harvard University's popular course on Buddhism returns with an interactive feature and great content.
The Bermuda Triangle, one of the most mysterious places on Earth, doesn't have an official map and the U.S. Coast Guard is why.
A sea region has become the top place for maritime accidents, accounting for almost half the shipping disasters in the world.
Experts caution about the dangers of the current technological revolution at the annual gathering of the World Economic Forum in Davos, Switzerland.
Harvard's Steven Pinker makes the case that excessive political correctness can be damaging to society and lead to the growth of radical opinions.
The New England Patriots are a magnet for conspiracy theories, spawning a new one right before the Super Bowl LII.
Intelligence of the male partner affects the strength and longevity of the relationship, find researchers.
Experts discuss the security challenges facing the world in 2018 at a panel of the World Economic Forum in Davos, Switzerland.
As NFL linemen keep getting bigger, are they also risking their health? Here's how the offensive lines of the New England Patriots and Philadelphia Eagles stack up.
Researchers find that magic mushrooms can keep people from developing authoritarian views and more connected to nature.