The DEA Wants To Ban Scientifically 'Crucial' Psychedelics Because People Might Use Them
The agency claims DOI and DOC have "a high potential for abuse" because they resemble other drugs it has placed in Schedule I.
The agency claims DOI and DOC have "a high potential for abuse" because they resemble other drugs it has placed in Schedule I.
Life is a decentralized, horizontal network, not merely a centralized, hierarchical tree.
Collecting and analyzing newborns' blood could allow the state to surveil people for life.
Even if EcoHealth's "basic research" in Wuhan didn't cause the pandemic, it certainly failed in its mission to stop it.
A widely cited study commits so many egregious statistical errors that it's a poster child for junk science.
Plus: A listener asks if there are any libertarian solutions to rising obesity rates.
The Biden administration says its new guidance will make pandemic research safer. Critics say it suffers the same flaws as past, failed gain-of-function regulations.
Sen. Rand Paul explains why FOIA litigation shouldn’t have been necessary to find this out.
The panel's recommendation, based on several concerns about two clinical trials, is a serious setback for a promising PTSD treatment.
A government scientist is the latest official whose attempts to evade the Freedom of Information Act have landed him in hot water.
Breakthrough Institute co-founder Ted Nordhaus on climate science and climate change anxiety.
Plus, an AI-generated version of the same article
About 20 years ago, many American bees did die. Then that steadily diminished—but hysteria in the press continued.
A physicist considers whether artificial intelligence can fix science, regulation, and innovation.
A flawed scientific model continues to hinder the nuclear power industry and shape policy, holding us all back.
How did an obviously fabricated article end up in a peer-reviewed journal?
Can artificial intelligence overhaul the regulatory system?
When does a sufficiently advanced algorithm start to mimic our conception of God?
While the governor framed the legislation as necessary to protect Floridians from "the global elite," he's the real authoritarian.
Jesse Singal questions the science of "gender-affirming care."
Weather and climate disaster losses as a percentage of U.S. GDP have not increased between 1990 and 2019, a new study finds.
Science can detect increasingly small particles of plastic in our air and water. That doesn't mean it's bad for you.
Science can detect increasingly small particles of plastic in our air and water. That doesn't mean it's bad for you.
A new movement promoting scientific, technological, and economic solutions to humanity's problems emerges.
Ethan Mollick, Wharton School professor and author of Co-Intelligence, discusses AI's likely effects on business, art, and truth seeking on the latest episode of Just Asking Questions.
Only 22 of the 476 studies in The Anxious Generation contain data on either heavy social media use or serious mental issues among adolescents, and none have data on both.
Activists oppose research on how to safely deploy an emergency cooling system for the planet.
After botching COVID test approvals, the Food and Drug Administration wants power over thousands of other tests.
After the Alabama Supreme Court ruled in February that frozen embryos were children, legislators scrambled to protect in vitro fertilization clinics.
The Royalty Transparency Act passed unanimously out of the Senate Homeland Security and Governmental Affairs Committee yesterday.
In The Experience Machine, philosopher and scientist Andy Clark offers an updated theory of mind.
The jury found no real damages, but gave a sizeable punitive award that could be challenged on appeal.
More like total eclipse of the fun.
"You need meat, OK? We're going to have meat in Florida," DeSantis said during a press conference.
Officials admitted at COP28 that they are not "on track" to achieving climate goals. And they are not likely to be any time soon.
AEI's Tony Mills and British biochemist Terence Kealey debate whether science needs government funding.
Health reporter Emily Kopp and biologist Alex Washburne discuss new documents that detail plans to manipulate bat-borne coronaviruses in Wuhan on the latest episode of Just Asking Questions.
AEI's Tony Mills and British biochemist Terence Kealey debate whether science needs government funding.
In vitro gametogenesi could allow same-sex couples, post-menopausal women, and couples experiencing infertility to have children.
The points about marijuana's risks and benefits that the department now concedes were clear long before last August.
Republican lawmakers criticized the former NIH official for playing "semantics" about lab leaks and gain-of-function research during closed-door congressional testimony this week.
A City on Mars is a counterbalance to the growing optimism over space exploration.
The year's highlights in blame shifting.
The world will not come to its end in 2030 because of climate change.