Employee engagement is an ongoing struggle for many organizations. Numerous studies from employee research organizations have tied the engagement of employees to higher profits, efficiency, retention, and other benefits. However, […]
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Homeopathic manufacturers take advantage of sick and vulnerable populations in criminal ways—and the FDA is, after much absence, starting to crack down.
Sex is everywhere in Greek and Roman art.
Jennifer Doudna, the CRISPR co-creator, says that the genie of genetic engineering might be hard to put back in the bottle.
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In honor of St. Patrick’s day and Women’s History Month, we present 10 Irish American women who changed the world in their own way.
In his latest book, Selfie, Will Storr explores the history of self-obsession, and wonders how we can fix it.
The end of the year is nearly here, and all throughout the nation employees are beginning their holiday celebrations.. For many, the holidays are a chance to sit back, relax, […]
A story can literally transport you into a character’s body. But how long does it last?
Virtually every organization engages in some form of employee development and training. There are so many obvious benefits to training, such as ensuring that employees have specific skills or understand […]
What does it really mean when something is “Dickensian”? Or “Kafkaesque”? Sometimes these words are overused to the point where they lose their meaning. Here’s how these and 6 other words got their origin.
The good news is, most of the factors that go into good long-term health are in our control.
Unraveling the psychology behind gun ownership may offer fresh insight into the gun control debate.
New study says extroverts are more fatigued over time from social interaction than introverts.
“Our kids are ‘wired’ for control. Our role as adults is not to force them to follow the track we’ve laid out for them; it’s to help them develop the skills to find their own way…”
There’s no way to frame this as anything other than a disaster for humanity. This article was originally written one week ago, on the day the FY2019 budget was released […]
Philosophers aren’t known for their love lives, but a few have managed to be tragic romantics anyway.
Predatory journals are so busy scamming scholars that seven big ones appointed a dog posing as a PhD to review submissions.
The hole in the ozone is shrinking, for sure, but to assess the whole layer, you need to look at the whole Earth. Throughout the history of life on Earth, there’s […]
Every year, companies strive to acquire and retain top talent. The cost of recruiting a new employee compared to retaining a current one varies from one business to the next, […]
If you want to know how we get something from nothing, you’d better understand what we mean! When we look around at our world and Universe today, we talk and think […]
Once desire becomes suspect, sex is never far behind.
Yuval Noah Harari warns that the constant pursuit of happiness is neurotic—and technology isn’t helping.
Key logic in America’s founding documents is now too often neglected. Do you know what “the Declaration” lists as the first justification for America’s Independence?
Are noble 18th-century norms fit for 21st-century life? Especially when, as Yuval Harari says, liberalism’s “factual statements just don’t stand up to rigorous scientific scrutiny.”
It seems intuitive that the best way to interpret how others are feeling would be to both see and hear how they’re behaving. However, a new study suggests that’s dead wrong.
There is no end to philosophies on living a good life, just as there is no end to those wanting to sell you a program for doing so.
This conceptual framework is the most advanced representation of human emotions to date.
In 1936, a school girl named Phyllis wrote a letter to Albert Einstein to ask whether a person could believe in both science and religion. He was quick to reply.
Take a moment to stop rushing, and rebel against the cult of being too busy.
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