Jim Trefil, a physicist and Robinson Professor at George Mason University, explains to Mason President Gregory Washington the importance of a scientific worldview. The author of more than 50 books and one of the developers of the modern theories about quarks as a fundamental component of the universe, Trefil is helping pioneer a new way of teaching science and says you don’t have to be in a lab to learn. ‘You live in a world full of science. Oh, and just FYI, Trefil says, ‘There is life even if you’ve been rejected by Playboy.’
What will become of the Amazon?
Catherine Read, mayor of Fairfax City, Va., is outspoken, unfiltered
A view from the pulpit
Where the bodies are buried
Are we headed for an internet apocalypse?
The critical importance of shared humanity
The tension between war, justice, and peace
Nikyatu Jusu is elevating the horror genre
Former FBI Deputy Director Andrew McCabe: ’I don’t have any regrets’
The metaverse, crypto, and the evolution of the internet
Everything is business
Black Dance: Housing the past and the present
Missy Cummings: Artificial intelligence is artificial and not intelligent
Describing history through the eyes of ordinary people
The absurd fallacy of a hierarchy of human value
Are the midterm elections the most consequential in our time?
His sound is renowned
What it means to build peace
Cori Bush: Action must be the reaction
Russia’s war in Ukraine tied to corruption, organized crime
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