UnDisciplined: How long can apes remember each other’s faces?
Laura Lewis met a bonobo named Louise as part of a study on the capacity of bonobos to remember...
25:55
UnDisciplined: How long can apes remember each other’s faces?
Laura Lewis met a bonobo named Louise as part of a study on the capacity of bonobos to remember...
25:55
What is it like to leave an evangelical church?
Like many Americans, Sarah McCammon grew up in a deeply evangelical family, where she was plagued...
23:00
UnDisciplined: Is there more undiscovered life in the Great Salt Lake?
Until recently, nematodes weren’t known to live in the Great Salt Lake. And, in fact, very little...
25:55
UnDisciplined: What’s ‘fair’ when it comes to climate action?
When humans debate climate policy, the questions asked are often posed in terms of what will work...
25:55
UnDisciplined: Are food companies responsible for the epidemic in diabetes, cancer and dementia?
Ultra-processed food and the companies that produce them contribute significantly to the epidemic...
25:55
UnDisciplined: Why do humans use the past to inform the future?
Memory is not a rigid, static picture of what came before. Rather, it’s a nebulous, ever-changing...
25:55
UnDisciplined: Robots, AI and the future of human connection
There is precedent for humans connecting with other living things, like getting attention, love,...
25:54
UnDisciplined: Should species be named after horrible people?
When an Austrian bug collector discovered a new species of beetle in the 1930s, he bestowed upon...
25:55
UnDisciplined: Can you still travel the roads that Julius Caesar built?
Long before Julius Caesar became one of the most powerful rulers in the world, he was a...
25:55
UnDisciplined: What have we learned from 50 years of the Endangered Species Act?
A new book by Lowell Baier is not just a history of The Endangered Species Act, but an...
25:55
UnDisciplined: Were Utah’s pioneers slave owners?
Slavery in the United States is often thought to be an institution of the American South, but...
25:55
UnDisciplined: Navigating the future of the global water crisis
Water crises are nothing new. Indeed they’ve influenced the very course of human history again...
25:55
UnDisciplined: How bugs may help us get to Mars
If we are going to go to Mars, we’re going to need to bring a lot of things that we need to live...
25:55
UnDisciplined: How inclusivity benefits men and women on the autism spectrum
Autism Spectrum Disorder exists on a continuum of behaviors, capabilities, and deviations from...
25:58
UnDisciplined: Rethinking sexual harassment prevention in the workplace
Almost all large organizations — from government entities to universities to private businesses —...
25:58
The recent disaster in Maui was the deadliest U.S. wildfire in more than a century, and it has...
25:57
UnDisciplined: Why you should become a 'student of seed'
Consider for a moment what our world would look like without seeds.
25:58
There are no openly gay players in any of the five major men's sports leagues in the United...
25:57
UnDisciplined: The surprising side of climate change - why you don't have to fear the future
There's a force that people don't think much about — the existential terror of accepting the...
25:55
UnDisciplined: How the Great Salt Lake is becoming hostile to life
As the Great Salt Lake has shrunk in recent years, it has become an increasingly hostile place to...
26:38