Improving memory and focus is essential for personal and professional growth. These books offer diverse techniques and insights into enhancing cognitive abilities. From ancient mnemonic systems to ...
Weighing in on a range of issues—from the Pahalgam attack and US tariffs to the political situation in Nepal and Bangladesh—Mohan Bhagwat asserted that social unity was the foundation of national ...
The world’s largest voluntary organisation, Rashtriya Swayamsevak Sangh (RSS), has turned 100 on Vijayadashami. On its centenary, RSS Sarsanghchalak Mohan Bhagwat spelled out both its learnings as ...
When we think of North America, we instantaneously think of sprawling cities, natural wonders, and modern tourist attractions. What we often ignore is the fact that this region and its diverse ...
On International Music Day, we speak to musicians, lyricists, music entrepreneurs and more to see what all the world of music is currently going through. 1. Shweta Bothra, lyricist and writer, Tu Meri ...
A Kumari or 'virgin goddess' is an ancient tradition in Nepal, under which a pre-pubescent girl, aged between 2 and 4, is anointed as a 'living goddess' who is worshipped by both Hindus and Buddhists.
MIT geochemists offer compelling evidence that ancient sea sponges were Earth's first animals, emerging over 541 million years ago. By analysing chemical fossils in rocks, researchers identified ...
India is renowned as the birthplace of Buddhism, a religion founded over 2,500 years ago by Siddhartha Gautama, better known as the Buddha. The teachings of Buddhism emphasize mindfulness, compassion, ...
Chemical fossils from 635-million-year-old rocks suggest sponges were among Earth’s first animals, reshaping the story of early life.
Chemical fossils are remnants of biomolecules from organisms long extinct but preserved in sediment over hundreds of millions of years.
Millions in India’s eastern city of Kolkata will draw on millennia-old traditions when they celebrate the Hindu festival of Durga Puja this week with ...
This now-extinct tongue was probably spoken somewhere in Eurasia as many as 8,000 years ago. But how do we know Proto-Indo-European must have existed?