- Want to solve a complex problem? Applied math can help
- Inadequate compensation for lost or downgraded protected areas threatens global biodiversity: Study
- Only 5 women have won the Nobel Prize in physics—recent winners share advice for young women in the field
- Madagascar's mining rush has caused no more deforestation than farming, study finds
- Scientists explore microbial diversity in sourdough starters
On the origin of "Teme"
Submitted by Paul Tiffany (not verified) on Thu, 05/28/2009 - 14:47The Teme Foundation takes it's moniker from a beautiful idea by Susan Blackmore. Her TED talk is a fabulous introduction to Dawkin's memetics:
What Teme is to me
Submitted by Varun Sharma (not verified) on Mon, 05/25/2009 - 12:39Throughout history, society has advanced thanks to the strenuous efforts of many gifted scientists. These individuals have enabled you to read what I'm writing today and other countless 1st World amenities. Yet despite their contributions and number, many individuals do not have the necessary tools to fulfill their endeavors. In particular, undergraduates are heavily underutilized.
Teme is friendly
Submitted by Paul Tiffany (not verified) on Mon, 05/25/2009 - 02:13The Teme Foundation is undergraduates for undergraduates. Teme's founders believe the unrelenting enthusiasm and empathy of the world's future leaders must be a clarion call in fight against existential threats. Ours, unlike any other generation, matured in the dawn of the computer age. Our relationship to technology is one fundamentally different from that of our ancestors. Irradiated with technological influence, we are our grandparents' mutant tech support superheros.
- « first
- ‹ previous
- 1
- 2
- 3