Jung thought these autonomous entities live in your unconscious mind — often at a cost.
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You’ve spent almost a decade gaining extremely specialized skills. But that’s ok; your value is greater than you realize.
A next-generation instrument on a delayed rover may be the key to answering the question of life on Mars.
The long-standing debate over whether dinosaurs were more like birds or lizards is drawing to a close.
The fruits of long-term thinking will reveal themselves in five or ten or 30 years, when you’ve created the future you’ve always wanted.
No amount of success can overcome imposter syndrome without a mindset geared toward growth.
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Our greatest tool for exploring the world inside atoms and molecules, and specifically electron transitions, just won 2023’s Nobel Prize.
Society-changing ideas form through a three-stage process, argues author Michael Bhaskar.
Is the multiverse real? It’s one of the hottest questions in all of theoretical physics. We invited two astrophysicists to join the debate.
Every year, scientists like George Church get better at editing the genomes of human beings. But will genome editing help or hurt us?
With change management training, learning and development leaders can help their talent avoid the common pitfalls that stall transformation.
We are prone to false memories. One reason is that we are biased toward remembering tidy endings for events, even if they didn’t exist.
Welcome to The Nightcrawler — a weekly newsletter from Eric Markowitz covering tech, innovation, and long-term thinking.
What’s the point of all that money?
Memory, responsibility, and mental maturity have long been difficult to describe objectively, but neuroscientists are starting to detect patterns. Coming soon to a courtroom near you?
The U.S. economy is creating thousands of new jobs each month–and overwhelmingly, most of them go to people with education beyond high school.
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The road to happiness is indirect and full of frustration.
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Next year is the perfect time to have better conversations!
Three fundamental forces matter inside an atom, but gravity is mind-bogglingly weak on those scales. Could extra dimensions explain why?
Find it easier to sort out your friends’ problems than your own? This paradox is for you.
The information we have in the Universe is finite and limited, but our curiosity and wonder is forever insatiable. And always will be.
When someone attempts to make you afraid of something that hasn’t happened instead of a true, present danger, suspect this nefarious ploy.
Science is for everyone, even those possessing strongly held beliefs that seem to conflict with the best available evidence.
It is wrong to think that these three statements contradict each other. We need to see that they are all true to see that a better world is possible.
It’s not a gambit. It’s not fraud. It’s not driven by opinion, prejudice, or bias. It’s not unchallengeable. And it’s more than facts alone.
Holograms preserve all of an object’s 3D information, but on a 2D surface. Could the holographic Universe idea lead us to higher dimensions?
A bat and a ball cost $1.10 in total. The bat costs $1.00 more than the ball. How much does the ball cost?
The last 70 years have taken us farther than the previous 70,000. But can we accomplish more than creating a record saying, “We were here?”