Sotomayor, Barrett discuss their lives in Supreme Court’s spotlight
Washington University in St. Louis
‘Our senses as sources of value’
With his new book project, philosopher Casey O’Callaghan, a faculty fellow at the Center for the Humanities in Arts & Sciences, taps a range of sources — from scientific literature to philosophical theories to memoirs — to explore how our senses shape what matters to us.
Sotomayor sees good in colleagues despite differences
Chancellor Andrew D. Martin
Why We’re All Forgetting Things Right Now
Zachariah Reagh, assistant professor of psychological & brain sciences
Here’s why you should let your mind wander — and how to set it free
Erik Dane, associate professor of organizational behavior
Architecture, biology and ‘Cellular Transformations’
architecture has imitated the imagery of biology and nature without awareness of the underlying mechanisms,” argue Ram Dixit and Sung Ho Kim in “Cellular Transformations: Between Architecture and Biology.”
With Roe endangered, Democrats divide on saying the word ‘abortion’
Zakiya Luna, associate professor of sociology
What Is A War Crime And How Are War Criminals Punished?
Leila Sadat, the James Carr Professor of International Criminal Law
A nurse’s death raises the alarm about the profession’s mental health crisis
Jessica Gold, MD, assistant professor of psychiatry
St. Louis’ Murder Total Has Fallen, but Some Killings Went Uncounted
Peter Joy, the Henry Hitchcock Professor of Law
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