psychology
Many conversations start awkwardly and derail from there, but a few simple techniques can put them back on track.
Between the hedonic and eudaimonic life, there’s a happy medium to be found.
Omer Bartov, who spent decades studying the unspeakable horrors of genocide, shares how his studies have impacted his own mental health.
Is it better to be the oldest sibling, the youngest, or in the middle?
A sober look at a wild conspiracy theory that argues the Middle Ages never happened.
A controversial new philosophy paper tries to bring our moral prejudices to heel. Should it?
Acting “little and often” has huge consequences and they’re not always good — but awareness yields solutions.
Arieh Smith, a New York City-based polyglot who runs the YouTube channel Xiaomanyc, talks language-learning with Big Think.
The pseudoscience phrenology swept the popular imagination, and its practitioners made a mint preying on prejudices, gullibility, and misinformation.
How to figure out the right amount of time for any project.
It just takes one “yes.” Wharton professor Jonah Berger shares his three tips for getting what you want from others.
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The evidence that pollution causes cancer is weak. Lifestyle factors, like smoking, obesity, and alcohol, matter far more.
Instead of fear, his delusions bring him cheer. His psychiatrist embraces them.
When ancient humans stared into the darkness, they imagined monsters. Today, staring into the future, AI is the monster.
Stories of child prodigies and the naturally gifted hide the fact that success is built on more than talent alone.
Claims of a sudden infestation appear unfounded.
Acclaimed psychiatrist Bessel van der Kolk, author of “The Body Keeps The Score,” discusses the widespread existence of trauma and how it settles in our bodies.
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That completely useless thing you want to get rid of — it’s probably more important than you think.
After my father died, my journey of rediscovery began with the Czech language.
In our competitive world, fortune does not appear to favor the humble — but a strong counter-narrative is emerging.
There are many things in life that cannot be improved with greater effort. Sometimes, life requires that you step back.
AIs can imitate but not innovate — for now, at least.
Combining years of neurological research and mindfulness techniques, Dr. Heather Berlin helps us better understand how the body’s most complex organ can easily be misled into negative thinking – and how we can stop that from happening.
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While executive function matures between 18 and 20 years of age, the brain keeps changing long afterward.
Various environmental phenomena can play tricks on our brain.
We are wired to value things more when we work hard at attaining them — even if, objectively, they aren’t worth that much.
Survivorship bias occurs when we fail to consider how data was collected. To combat this, search for the “silent evidence.”
“Precarious manhood” is the belief that manhood must be earned and constantly defended. It has a poor outcome.
“Feedback is a gift,” is an easy bumper sticker to apply, but a harder philosophy to put into execution in your real life.
Your BS detector might not be as accurate as you think.