Gary Vaynerchuk, CEO of VaynerMedia, explains how to find branding success by making “boulders” out of “pebbles.”
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The spikes in their mouths would have helped them catch squid or fish.
A simple semantic device — invented by a forgotten senator — can help us break “the curse of knowledge.”
Vijay Tella — CEO of enterprise orchestration unicorn Workato — joins Big Think Business for an exploration of our “agentic” future.
Chip Conley — founder and CEO of JDV Hospitality and Airbnb’s former Head of Global Hospitality and Strategy — maps out an inclusive path from hindsight to wisdom.
We all employ heuristics to help us deal with the world. But when we make a hasty generalization, we risk making a big error in our thinking.
From AI to health and the metaverse, this year’s CES promised new tech that will change lives long after the excitement of the latest TV wears off.
50 years ago, Herman Chernoff proposed using human faces to represent multidimensional datasets. It was a good idea in theory — but a disaster in practice.
These 10 best practices can help organizations develop high-quality and engaging training videos for employees.
Maybe the brain isn’t “classical” after all.
Rather than sending serial killer art to auctions, it should be sent to abnormal psychologists for research.
We have become the greatest threat to ourselves and to life on this planet. We need a set of agreed-upon safeguards to preserve our future.
You really can get by with a little help from your friends — if you also look beyond your personal to-do list.
Learn to spot the scientists who are searching for the truth rather than money, ego, or fame.
Journaling helped Marcus Aurelius cultivate the emotional intelligence necessary to steer Rome through turbulent times.
Finding out how the Universe grew up was the biggest science goal of JWST. This ultra-early proto-galaxy cluster is one amazing discovery.
What began as an annoyance ended as a Nobel Prize-winning discovery about the Big Bang and the origin of the Universe.
In the future, you might voluntarily share your social media data with your psychiatrist to inform a more accurate diagnosis.
What most people don’t realize is that everyone’s imagery is different.
To answer any physical question, you must ask the Universe itself. But what happens when the answers aren’t around anymore?
From gamification to VR, here are 10 ways to make learning fun and engaging.
The tonal Native American language differentiates words based on pitch and makes Spanish conjugation look like child’s play.
The detection of two celestial interlopers careening through our solar system has scientists eagerly anticipating more.
Some constants, like the speed of light, exist with no underlying explanation. How many “fundamental constants” does our Universe require?
Research shows how temperature can be used to manipulate circadian rhythms.
Nobody actually knows what will come of AI. But we can console ourselves with the knowledge that nobody has ever really known anything about the future.
Survivorship bias occurs when we fail to consider how data was collected. To combat this, search for the “silent evidence.”
The idea that the news can make you sick has a long history.
While becoming a monk is an evolutionary dead end for the individual, celibacy reaps benefits for the group as a whole.
In general relativity, white holes are just as mathematically plausible as black holes. Black holes are real; what about white holes?