The major transformation in the where of modern workplaces is about to collide with a transformation in who is doing that work.
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Some physicists are besot with the multiverse, but if we can’t detect these other universes, how seriously should we take them?
How efficiently could quantum engines operate?
It’s been 100 years since we discovered that the Universe was expanding. But if it’s expanding, then what is it expanding into?
Big Think talks to Konrad Feldman — founder of advertising tech innovator Quantcast.
Public mass shooters almost always have worldviews shaped by the “3 Rs”: rage, resentment, and revenge.
Albert Camus was a Franco-Algerian philosopher with some great insights on the meaning of life, why you should look to this life and not the next, and why suicide is a poor choice.
For nearly 25 years, we thought we knew how the Universe would end. Now, new measurements point to a profoundly different conclusion.
Benjamin Oakes — CEO of buzz-worthy biotech company Scribe Therapeutics — joins Big Think for a chat about innovation, human endeavor, and more.
The Big Bang was hot, dense, uniform, and filled with matter and energy. Before that? There was nothing. Here’s how that’s possible.
“Superhabitable” planets might be real, but Earth is probably as good as it gets.
By the end, even his mom wanted him gone.
As we pursue the leadership difference we seek, we attract fuel and generate heat. The trick is to avoid burnout.
Venerated astrophysicist Carl Sagan entertained the possibility.
There may be a symmetrical interdependence between order and chaos.
Jung thought these autonomous entities live in your unconscious mind — often at a cost.
We bring multifaceted selves to our interactions, and in these interactions co-create each other again and again.
Many contrarians dispute that cosmic inflation occurred. The evidence says otherwise.
Ever since the start of the hot Big Bang, time ticks forward as the Universe expands. But could time ever run backward, instead?
Two fundamentally different ways of measuring the expanding Universe disagree. What’s the root cause of this Hubble tension?
When the Universe was first born, the ingredients necessary for life were nowhere to be found. Only our “lucky stars” enabled our existence.
Could anyone still meet the Theoretical Minimum?
The sonnenrad is a Heathen symbol composed of 12 repeated runes.
Late-night shows, developed during the “golden age” of TV, are no longer as relevant in the age of streaming services and Donald Trump.
Omer Bartov, who spent decades studying the unspeakable horrors of genocide, shares how his studies have impacted his own mental health.
Historical analyses reveal that crises almost always yield surprising benefits.
The observation that everything we know is made out of matter and not antimatter is one of nature’s greatest puzzles. Will we ever solve it?
Team storming — as defined by psychologist Bruce Tuckman — can be fractious. Done right, the benefits are immense.
Big Think spoke with AI expert Nick Jennings about the future of regulating fast-evolving AI.
The old certainties of “business as usual” have been crushed by disruption — here’s a strategy for resilience.