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Fear
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Acclaimed actor and director Jesse Eisenberg, who understands job-related anxiety, advocates for channeling these emotions toward desired outcomes, sharing methods from his diverse film industry experience to help manage fear, foster community in leadership, and pursue goals authentically.
The outrageously accomplished magician-inventor-author chats to Big Think about fear, multitasking, and successful work-life reinvention.
When your life’s truth and the reality you live become out of sync, you risk falling into an "anxiety spiral."
9mins
"Humans, like most mammals, tend to shut down in really frightening situations for which they have no training or prior experience. Researchers call it negative panic. People do nothing. They shut down."
"Amid the chaos, he remembered his life being eerily calm as he knew it wasn’t if, but when they would be hacked to pieces. He just kept kicking."
Recent research sheds light on how the brain overgeneralizes fear, causing people to be afraid of harmless situations.
The challenges of setting out in a new direction can be overwhelming — but we can learn to navigate the inflection moments.
6mins
Former SNL star Jay Pharoah answers our most challenging questions about life, self-esteem, and changing his mind.
Unlikely Collaborators
The evidence that pollution causes cancer is weak. Lifestyle factors, like smoking, obesity, and alcohol, matter far more.
When ancient humans stared into the darkness, they imagined monsters. Today, staring into the future, AI is the monster.
If someone can make you feel insecure, incomplete, and inadequate, they then can present themselves as the solution you need.
You are much more likely to die in a car crash than from terrorism. Yet, philosopher Eran Fish says fearing terrorism more is justified.
7mins
Why the best negotiators are nice, not tough.
6mins
History’s most remarkable leaders had this one trait in common. We can harness it too.
Over time, different structures in the brain come to play unique roles in the storage and retrieval of long-term memories.
The research could aid the development of more effective treatments for conditions such as post-traumatic stress disorder (PTSD).
The findings of a recent study may help explain why some people are quicker to forget fearful memories.
Patients with amygdala damage rejected the widely accepted answer to the infamous "trolley problem," saying that it "hurts too much."
Science and the sacred both allow us to retain our sense of wonder, even as disaster seems to swirl around us.