Big Think

A visual history of the universe that fits on your wall

Introducing Big Think’s first-ever poster — a stunningly detailed infographic of the universe from its earliest moments to the present day.

Cathedral of bones: Inside the world’s largest, deepest, and oldest whale graveyard

In a lightless canyon at the bottom of the Indian Ocean, Earth has been quietly collecting dead whales. Scientists have just discovered the archive.

The 3-part habit loop your brain is running 40 percent of the time

Charles Duhigg explains why trying to eliminate a bad habit is neurologically futile, and what to do instead.

A new scale for spotting UFO reports worth investigating

This 11-point scale aims to reduce the number of "false alarm" sightings so scientists can focus on harder-to-explain reports.

How AI is quietly changing what we think the human mind is
Neuroscientist Anil Seth on the deep differences between human minds and artificial ones.

Shai Tubali

A digital illustration of a human brain outlined in white, composed of circuit-like lines, set against a black background with scattered white dots resembling stars.
Black text on a light background reads "Explore our LIBRARY" with "Explore" in large font and "our LIBRARY" in smaller, uppercase font underneath.

What would you like to learn more about? We have thousands of videos from the world’s biggest thinkers to help you dive deeper into any subject.

Pause the busyness of life to reflect on ourselves, our relationships, and the Universe.
A silhouette of an adult holding a young child, both faces partially visible, embodies the tenderness of parenting against a soft, gradient blue and beige background. Do parents know best? 3 experiments that tried to replace moms and dads
The family might be a terrible way to raise kids. But it's the best we have.
Two beach umbrellas, one striped and one red, shade a folding chair with a towel draped over it on the sandy beach—inviting you to rest and unwind by the shore. 3 reasons why holidays aren’t making you more relaxed
If you're going to relax, don't do it halfway.
A silhouette of a seated person with colorful gaming achievement icons, such as trophies and badges, where their head would be, on a green background. How gamification can ruin your life
The cartoon owl wants to have a word.
A classical painting depicts Kairos, a winged, bearded man with curly hair, holding a pair of golden scales against a light blue background. Kairos: The ancient Greek art of knowing when to act
A white rabbit appears up ahead. What do you do?
Intimate interviews with the world’s biggest thinkers.
A man wearing glasses and a navy blazer speaks while gesturing with his hands against a plain white background.
9mins
The trick that offloads intrusive thoughts so your brain can actually work
David Epstein, author of Range and Inside the Box, breaks down what's actually happening inside the brain when we multitask, and why "just focusing" is a solution that doesn't hold up to reality.
A man wearing glasses and a dark blazer gestures with his left hand while looking forward against a plain light background.
19mins
The unpopular truth about the myth of the lone genius
David Epstein argues that the myth of the lone genius is a story we tell, but the actual history of innovation is far more interesting.
A man with short blond hair and a beard wearing a black blazer over a maroon shirt sits against a plain light background, facing the camera.
21mins
The 6 triggers of aversion and how to defeat each one
In goal setting, Chris Bailey argues the problem isn't discipline; it's the system itself.
The Universe is out there, waiting for you to discover it.
The grid features 15 images of distant galaxies, each labeled with identifiers and redshift values from z=4.75 to z=8.92. Captured by JWST, these celestial wonders include intriguing little red dots scattered across the vast cosmos. The most overlooked fact about JWST’s Little Red Dots
When JWST opened its eyes, it spied a huge number of Little Red Dots. What we saw inside was a puzzle, but what's missing could solve it.
Illustration of the universe’s timeline from the Big Bang to the present, showing key events in cosmic evolution with labeled galaxies, stars, and cosmic structures. A single illustration reveals the entirety of cosmic history
After a period of cosmic inflation came to an end, the hot Big Bang commenced. 13.8 billion years later, we arrived. Here's how we got here.
A supermassive black hole caught turning on reveals a mesmerizing cosmic dance, with bright streams of light and colorful gases swirling around it against a starry backdrop. Ask Ethan: How are black holes active if nothing escapes from them?
Once you cross over to the inside of an event horizon, you can never come out again. But then, how do black holes emit all sorts of things?
transit spectroscopy PLATO 10 big questions about the search for life beyond Earth
The Universe took a great many steps to create not just life, but intelligent life, here at home. What can we say about life beyond Earth?
Big ideas. Thoughtful conversations. One book at a time.
The book cover for "Empire of Ink" by Alex Wright features an illustration of a vintage printing press with workers, bold red text, and subtle nods to the 1835 moon hoax woven into its design. The 1835 “moon hoax” that turned fake news into big business
America’s penny press transformed journalism in the 1830s, using hoaxes, sensationalism, and mass circulation to create a blueprint for modern media.
A grayscale illustration of a muscular figure with curly hair, viewed from behind, appears to be dissolving into scattered particles on a white background, evoking the somber beauty of an angel down. The literary invention that places you in the chaos of war
In his Pulitzer Prize-winning novel, Angel Down, Daniel Kraus uses a single unbroken sentence to convey the psychological toll of being a soldier in World War I.
Book cover of "Socially Wired: How Culture Shapes Our Brains" by Matthew W. Schelke, featuring a colorful neural network illustration on a light background that highlights the connection between brain and meaning. The overlooked brain system shaping our motivations
Our motivations and sense of self may be more deeply shaped by our connections and social history than we think.
The word "nihilism" in bold black font, evoking the mood of literary classics, is scratched out with rough, black scribble marks. 5 literary classics that grapple with the void of nihilism
From mysterious villages to absurdism at the gallows, these books explore the origins, consequences, and possible responses to nihilism.
Learn business from the world’s biggest thinkers.
Two scenes: Top shows climbers on an ice-covered terrain, embodying fun and success. Bottom captures an airplane in flight against a clear sky. Play it again: The causal link between fun and resilience
Fun in business is no laughing matter — it can create a golden strategic advantage and bring serious success in the long term.
Four workers assemble a large wooden tank using scaffolding and ladders at an outdoor construction site, with stacks of materials in the background. The 250-year-old company that survived by refusing to lay people off
What would your company do if it lost all its customers at once?
Book cover for "How Change Really Works" features multicolored lines radiating from a center, with one red line forming an arrow. The design reflects the dynamic process of transformation. Authors' names are displayed at the bottom. The 3 stories every leader needs to inspire successful transformations
Directives rarely inspire change. The most effective leaders use stories to make transformation memorable, resonant, and actionable.
A man stands in front of a collapsed wooden building with debris scattered around in an outdoor setting. How helping your rivals makes you harder to beat
A counterpoint to zero-sum thinking from Japan.
The world, seen sideways.
A color-coded map of the United States shows state-by-state data ranging from red (lower values) to green (higher values), with a scale from 102.6K to 133.0K. Follow the money: Mapping millionaire migration across America
Since 2018, around 103,000 millionaires moved out of California — and 133,000 millionaires moved in to Florida
Children in vintage clothing play on a seesaw and gather nearby in a park setting with adults, trees, and classic playgrounds in the background. How playgrounds reinvented childhood
The modern playground was more than a place to play — it was a blueprint for a new kind of upbringing.
Four maps of Ireland from 1800, 1850, 1900, and 2000 show a steady decline in areas where Irish is spoken natively, marked in green, nearly disappearing by 2000. The Irish language is having a moment — and running out of time
Gaeilge is trending culturally. So why is it, according to census data, also dying?
World map showing global oil reserves, rare earth elements deposits (yellow dots), and major shipping routes and chokepoints, with oil reserves highlighted by pink circles of varying sizes. The Strait of Hormuz is today’s energy chokepoint. China is tomorrow’s.
As the global economy moves beyond oil, the strategic importance of the world’s most critical hydrocarbon chokepoint is likely to decline rapidly.
Where science meets the human story.
Illustration of Earth overlaid with a grid and energy types from the Kardashev Scale: Type I, II, and III, representing planetary, stellar, and galactic energy usage. A physicist explains what the Kardashev scale gets wrong
The famous framework ranks civilizations by energy use — but ignores a critical factor that can halt their progress.
A split image explores the nature of life, with a gray rock on a dark background on the left and a colored microscopic view of a cell—hinting at intelligence—in vivid detail on the right. Why organisms are more than machines
Sixty years ago, a little-known philosopher challenged how science understands life. His perspective is finding new relevance in the age of artificial intelligence.
Three planets are silhouetted against deep space with a bright red star and nebula clouds in the background. Aerial aliens: Why cloudy worlds might make detecting life easier
Astronomer Lisa Kaltenegger spoke with Big Think about how "the colors of life" could leave detectable traces on distant planets.
A cylindrical space habitat with green landscapes and rivers, viewed from inside; two moons and a bright sun-like object are visible through large windowed sections. The next great leap in evolution may lie beyond Earth
NASA’s Caleb Scharf talks with Big Think about life’s long experiment in expansion.