Wonder
Ciência, saúde, o mundo natural. A descoberta e as Escrituras começam na atenção. Estas reflexões unem o que estamos aprendendo sobre o mundo criado aos textos que há séculos perguntam o que isso significa.

A sala em pé gritou 42 segundos por um remédio contra câncer de pâncreas
No ASCO em Chicago, oncologistas que seguram a esperança com rédea curta ficaram em pé e gritaram por 42 segundos por uma pílula que dobrou a sobrevida no câncer de pâncreas.

O fígado de um porco manteve o corpo de um homem funcionando por cinco dias
Pedro certa vez sonhou com isso num terraço. Dois mil anos depois, médicos em Nanning atravessaram a porta que aquele sonho deixou aberta.

Uma carta do papa sobre IA é lida na The Atlantic na mesma semana
Uma encíclica romana sobre agentes de IA acabou no mesmo ciclo de notícias que ensaios da The Atlantic. O Eclesiastes já tinha algo a dizer sobre isso muito antes de chamarmos qualquer coisa de tecnologia.

Webb Reads Light From the Universe's First Morning
A telescope reads light from the universe's first morning, and an old promise about water finds a new shape.

The Body Counts the Crowd
A worm stops reproducing when its colony hits 3,000. Genesis hands humanity a population command with one verb most readers race past.

The Brain Keeps What Motherhood Wrote
A bond you might assume is renewed each morning by feeling turns out to be filed somewhere the body does not easily lose.

Who Was Their Neighbor?
A new study finds American conservatives are dying younger than liberals. The reasons are partly about trust, and partly about who never had a doctor to begin with.
A Beating Heart Refuses Cancer
Primary tumors appear in fewer than 1% of hearts. A new Science paper says the reason is mechanical: the muscle is too busy to be colonized.

What Jesus Pointed At
For two thousand years, "consider the birds" has worked as a comforting metaphor. A new Nature study shows it was always pointing at a real chain.

What the Genome Kept
A new paper in Nature names a category of molecules that have been in the human genome the whole time. Most have no known function. The body keeps revealing layers.
The Sleeping Brain Was Listening
Under propofol, the hippocampus kept guessing the next word in a podcast. Something in the patient was reading sentences nobody could report having heard.
Doubled, Not Defeated
A new drug roughly doubles survival in metastatic pancreatic cancer. The scriptural question is what to do with added time when it has been given to you.

The Surgery That Made the Knee Worse
A ten-year trial found one of the world's most common knee surgeries is not just useless. It accelerates the damage it was meant to repair.

The Way That Seemed Right
A 7-week-old in Maryland began seizing. A baby in Kentucky vomited and went lethargic. The shot their parents declined had been routine for seventy years.
The Seed Is Listening For Rain
MIT engineers measured a buried seed reacting to the sound of falling water. The pressure on its hull is closer to a jet engine than a whisper.

The Ear That Was Always a Gift
The FDA approved the first gene therapy for deafness. A mother heard her son startle at her laugh. Whether the silence needed curing is a question the deaf community has not stopped asking
A Cell Without a Brain Remembers
A single-celled organism learns, stores the lesson in molecules, and hands it down at cell division. Memory is older than the nervous system.
The Alphabet of Life Has Nineteen Letters
Researchers used AI to redesign a bacterium that runs on 19 amino acids instead of 20. The tension is what it means to edit a code we did not write.
Deep-Ocean Heat Creeps Toward Antarctica
Machine learning analysis of 40 years of ocean data reveals warm water is migrating toward Antarctic ice shelves, threatening structures that hold back 58 meters of sea level rise.
Plastic Crossed the Last Barrier
Researchers found micro- and nanoplastics in 99.4 percent of brain tumor samples. The particles appear to correlate with faster tumor growth.
The Blind Received Their Sight
Gene therapy gave sight to children born blind. The breakthrough echoes a gospel account. The cost is $425,000 per eye.
What the Fire Left Standing
Georgia wildfires have destroyed 122 homes across 54,000 acres. What survived was not made of wood.

The Molecules We Cannot Read
NASA found 21 organic molecules on Mars, seven never seen there before. The building blocks of life are present. Whether life was present remains unknown.
Your Outrage Is the Delivery System
A new study finds that moral anger lowers the threshold for sharing unverified information. People don't lose the ability to discern truth. They stop caring.

The Cure Exists. The Children Die.
Malaria vaccines work, but 610,000 people died last year because funding and distribution failed to reach those most at risk.

The Brain Accepted What We Printed
Engineers printed artificial neurons that living brain cells treat as their own. The detail that made it work was the one they tried to remove.

Voyager 1 Keeps Going by Letting Go
NASA sacrificed one of Voyager 1's last instruments to keep the 49-year-old probe alive, trading capability for endurance at the edge of known space.

A 25-Year Quest to Restore Sight
The first gene therapy to cure inherited blindness took a quarter century. The scientists who built it started with what they couldn't see.

Sweden Returns to Books and Paper
Sweden spent a decade putting screens in every classroom. Now it is spending $200 million to take them out. The reversal raises a question about how children actually learn.
When the Cure Works but Doesn't Heal
A landmark review finds Alzheimer's drugs clear the plaques but leave patients unchanged. Families still paying for hope.