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Love 2.0: How to Move On
For many of us, navigating the end of a relationship is one of the hardest things we will ever do. This week, we conclude our Love 2.0 series with psychologist Antonio Pascual-Leone, who shares the most common mistakes we make when it comes to splitting up, and techniques that can help us ease the pain. Then, our latest edition of Your Questions Answered. Cognitive scientist Phil Fernbach returns to respond to listeners’ thoughts and questions about the “illusion of knowledge
sciart0
Oct 25, 20251 min read
"Terror Management Theory" (TMT): an introduction, ...and a bit beyond. (UII w/Claude)
DM Are you familiar with "terror management theory," and if so, please provide your understandings and perspectives. I am indeed familiar with terror management theory, and I'd be happy to walk you through this fascinating psychological framework. Terror management theory, often abbreviated as TMT, emerged in the 1980s from the work of social psychologists Sheldon Solomon, Jeff Greenberg, and Tom Pyszczynski. The theory attempts to answer a profound question: how do human bei
sciart0
Oct 24, 202529 min read
For those who think you're more productive with less sleep
Sleeping less doesn’t make you more productive. It just makes you more tired.
sciart0
Oct 23, 20251 min read
The war on whimsy
America is facing a war on whimsy, and we are losing ground daily. A monster pervades this nation, stealing sleep from schoolkids, tearing down national treasures and locking us in our homes to toil behind computer screens: efficiency. We have marched to the anthem of productivity since the Industrial Revolution; we think of children working away with coal-slathered faces in factories and believe we have evolved as a society. But I posit that as soon as we pilfered the chisel
sciart0
Oct 22, 20251 min read
Creativity in the Age of AI
In a new book, Wharton's Jerry Wind and his co-authors argue that creativity is a learnable skill that becomes more powerful when paired with intelligent machines.
sciart0
Oct 22, 20251 min read
The "37% rule": How many people should you date before settling down?
When making any tough decision, the key is not to be overly exploratory or exploitative.
sciart0
Oct 21, 20251 min read
The Parental-Happiness Fallacy
Where commentary on moms’ satisfaction goes wron g
sciart0
Oct 21, 20251 min read
‘You’re Going to Lose Your Mind’: My Three-Day Retreat in Total Darkness
The author spent days in a room with no light. Who would he be when he emerged?
sciart0
Oct 21, 20251 min read
Connecting the dots in an uncertain world
Business professor Christian Busch makes the case that serendipity is a skill, resulting from a mindset that allows you to see and act on opportunities in seemingly unrelated facts or events.
sciart0
Oct 21, 20251 min read
Empathy: The glue we need to fix a fractured world
Stanford psychologist Jamil Zaki explains that whether we are dealing with business, politics, or personal matters, it’s possible — and advantageous — to train ourselves to be more empathic.
sciart0
Oct 21, 20251 min read
The China Tech Canon
How does the paideía of the Chinese tech elite differ from their counterparts in Silicon Valley?
sciart0
Oct 21, 20251 min read
Are Personal and Societal Compassion in the U.S "Circling the Drain?" (UII w/Claude)
DM As many wise people have shared, across a variety of contexts, human social attentiveness and caring (aka: compassion) diminishes as a function of "distance" (broadly defined in numerous ways, not only physical). In other words, self-care and immediate family care typically reside at our "care epicenter," ...while our "extended concern, attention and care" for all others suffers varying degrees of decline, thus encompasses incremental reduction of moral social thought, ac
sciart0
Oct 19, 202566 min read
TRADITIONAL CRITICISM IS IN TROUBLE. HERE’S WHAT’S REPLACING IT.
Demand for cultural commentary is higher than it’s ever been—but now that commentary is coming from unconventional new sources.
sciart0
Oct 19, 20251 min read
Why We Work, and What We'll Do in a Post-Work Future
Technology is coming for jobs. Here is why we need to plan, not panic. KEY POINTS Technology has always affected work but the next wave of technology may be different. Work fulfills not only essential physical needs for us but also psychological needs. Even if a work-free world offers physical abundance, we may still experience psychological poverty.
sciart0
Oct 19, 20251 min read
THE NARCISSISM OF THE ANGRY YOUNG MEN
What to do about the deadly misfits among us? First, recognize the problem.
sciart0
Oct 19, 20251 min read
A WARNING FOR THE MODERN STRIVER
An instructive new biography of Peter Matthiessen chronicles his many paradoxical attempts to escape who the world expected him to be.
sciart0
Oct 19, 20251 min read
Good Gravy: Doing work that is meaningful should be all we really need
Recognition for the work and other good things that we do in our lives is something we all hope to receive at some point. I've had many great bosses and mentors who were very good at offering the occasional pat on the back for a job well done. I've also had those who either could not or would not offer any kind of recognition for a job well done, no matter the circumstances. We've all been there.
sciart0
Oct 18, 20251 min read
‘The Book of Memory’ Review: Ghosts Inside Us
Our personalities are strongly formed by memories. Among the most significant may be those whose details have faded.
sciart0
Oct 18, 20251 min read
Can Science Reckon With the Human Soul?
A paradigm shift is coming as evidence emerges that we are more than our brains. Related : Plausibility of consciousness' continuity beyond death (UII w/Claude)
sciart0
Oct 17, 20251 min read
A forthcoming train-wreck: humanity vs. AI? (UII w/Claude)
DM Good morning. It seems the most important skill required to gain the full benefit (... even threshold value) from A.I. LLMs is "rigorous inquiry," ...which is typically propelled by wide-spectrum, insatiable curiosity. Conversely and paradoxically, this seems the least available (and respected?) skill within the general population; and perhaps even amongst most professionals. Furthermore, future trends seem unfavorable: ... as fast, easy, superficial brain food is increasi
sciart0
Oct 17, 202542 min read
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