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The Doomsday Clock now stands at 89 seconds to midnight, signalling an unprecedented threat of global catastrophe.
A Bulletin short fiction contest Announcing the Bulletin‘s new short fiction contest… Over the decades, the Bulletin of the Atomic Scientists has published the smartest minds in the fields it covers, ...
July 14-16 gathering to create recommendations for policymakers and leaders to reduce the threat of nuclear war ...
The Nobel Prize, considered one of the world’s most prestigious awards, is given annually to individuals who have contributed ...
Setsuko Thurlow, who survived the atomic bombing of Hiroshima, Japan, in 1945, says we're walking through "a very dark time," ...
The UK will test its emergency alarm system for the first time in two years, as the Government warns Britain to prepare for ...
Information about Iran's nuclear programme is highly secretive, but experts say the bombings may not have been a huge setback ...
Those who keep up on current events know that talk of nuclear war continues today, and that’s why “Two Minutes to Midnight and the Architecture of Armageddon,” a new exhibit about the Doomsday Clock ...
There are 12,000 nuclear weapons in the world, many of which are controlled by AI. We are close to a catastrophe.
When I asked John Savage, the retired co-founder of the Department of Computer Science at Brown University, what the ...
The U.S. scientists who tested the first atomic bomb, July 16, 1945, took the ultimate gamble of setting the atmosphere on ...