As income inequality widens, debates around redistribution policies are heating up. New research from the Universities of Zurich, Lille and Copenhagen reveals that support for these policies stems not only from individuals' financial situations but also from an inherent aversion to inequality.
Read Also
- The Alienware m16 R2 is on sale at Dell, and it’s a better pick than the x16
- Microsoft just released its ‘unified gateway to Windows’ for Mac
- Before Chappell Roan Became a Superstar, She Composed the Score for This Horror Short
- Research proposes theory to model interplay of personal and social beliefs
- Buying prescription glasses: What to judge when shopping
- Californians can now add their driver’s licenses to Apple Wallet
- Exploring the interplay between phosphate signaling and jasmonate pathways in tea plants
- Windscribe review: build your own plan with this unique VPN
- ‘I’m a Black Nazi!’: GOP Nominee in North Carolina Exposed Over Old Porn Site Comments
- The redesigned Dell XPS 14 laptop has a $450 price cut today
Latest phys
- Research proposes theory to model interplay of personal and social beliefs
- Exploring the interplay between phosphate signaling and jasmonate pathways in tea plants
- New material with wavy layers of atoms exhibits unusual superconducting properties
- Don't overlook microorganisms' role in planet health, scientists warn
- Researchers build AI model database to find new alloys for nuclear fusion facilities
- Greylag geese with similar personalities have higher hatching success, study suggests
- Simulated construction of plant-based fish meat with composite structure via 3D printing
- NASA's Chandra finds galaxy cluster that crosses the streams
- Schottky junction catalysts boost hydrogen production with non-precious metals in water electrolysis
- Can captive tigers be part of the effort to save wild populations?