museums

Sound Notions

The Science of Survival

A traveling exhibit predicts the future

I've seen 2050. It's an interactive exhibition animated by four noseless characters with British accents.

Buz, Eco, Tek, and Dug (the orthography of the future is apparently destined to be streamlined) each have unique views on how the human race can best careen forward. And they each have an "S," presumably for Survival, on their futuristic garb.

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Birds Do It, Bees Do It . . .

An otherwise risqué exhibit offers surprising new insight into the evolutionary imperative of sex

Sex and science usually steer clear of one another, and rightfully so. Most people don’t want their sex clinical and most researchers don’t want their science emotional. Yet lately the science of sex seems to have entered the public discourse in a big way. Olivia Judson (author of Dr Tatiana's Sex Advice To All Creation) blogs for the New York Times; and Bonk, a book about scientific research into the how's and why’s of sex, is a best seller.

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Science + Design = Art

A new exhibit at New York’s MoMA showcases a teddy-bear vaccine, virtual reality gear and more

Starting next week, nanophysics and biomimicry get celebrated alongside sculpture and painting at the Museum of Modern Art in New York City. Design and the Elastic Mind, MoMAs most science-centric exhibition to date, explores recent collaborations among scientists and designers. The results—teddy bears impregnated with the chicken pox virus, lollipops that deliver a visual explosion with every lick—are sometimes far out.

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November 2009: Astronaut 3.0

Inside NASA's astronaut bootcamp and the grueling new training regimen for deep space. Plus, ten young geniuses shaking up science today, one writer's quest to analyze every man-made chemical in her body and more.

Check out the issue's full contents online here

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