Latest Articles

Latest Articles

The newest essays, interviews, and features from Big Think.

Americans who had subliminal exposure to the national flag before being asked their political views expressed more of a tendency to vote Republican than those who hadn't.  
French philosopher Raphaël Enthoven meditates on the nature of reverie. Rather than firing neurons, daydreaming is 'a sweet drug that plays with fire' and 'the world before concepts'.
Recent research shows that when people experience heightened physical and emotional states, they are more likely to share information over the Internet. Sometimes too much. 
Amidst all of the market babble and financial gobbledegook that poured from both ‘analysts’ and ‘practitioners’ following last week’s global market meltdown, came a shaft of light. It took the […]
Bought by the MoMA in 1948, the same year it was painted, Andrew Wyeth’s Christina’s World entered the American art pantheon seemingly once it was dry. For more than half […]
With a diminishing space program, is science and technology forced to take a back seat?
I wanted to make a quick post on the some new volcano news as I'll likely be a little sporadic with my posts next week. I have my last trip […]
Research has shown that a happy workplace is a more productive workplace. Shawn Achor details how this discovery should impact the way we think about leadership and management.
This blog is for everyone who sat through a first-year economic class wondering why their professor couldn’t come up with better examples than guns and butter and for teachers of […]
Psychologists are trying to level the culinary playing field. They want to improve the experience of eating healthy foods by determining how growers can breed them to taste better.
This week, a group of Japanese researchers from Kyoto University said they had figured out a way to turn embryonic stem cells into the more specific type of stem cell that makes sperm.
Margaret Gatz, a psychologist at the University of Southern California, Los Angeles, explains what 25 years of research have taught her about reducing the risk of dementia. 
As gadgets that measure health metrics have come onto the market, often linked to the Internet or a smartphone, a new movement in self-monitoring has been born. 
Dr. Alberto Costa, who devoted his career to researching Down syndrome when his daughter was born with the disorder, believes that treatment is as important as prevention.
Such a protracted legal process is required to make health claims about certain foods that the only the pharmaceutical industry is trusted as the arbiter of what is healthy. 
We live in a culture that valorizes over-busyness. In so many workplaces, the hero is the one who is putting in the long hours. Why isn’t the hero the person who can get amazing work done and leave at a reasonable time?
The world's leaders, financial and political, are disappointed in us. Around the globe, they've cut spending on our schools and roads and parks, raised our retirement ages, taken aim at […]
When Amy Chua released her memoirs of mothering her children, she created a national debate over parenting. She also meant to shine a light on America's undeserved self-confidence. 
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There’s a Brain Drain Race going on between the world’s economic leaders – a scramble to snap up the "best and the brightest" immigrants from poor and emerging nations. As […]
Yingluck Shinawatra, sister of ousted former Prime Minister Thaksin Shinawatra, faces the opposition of palace and military factions who see her brother as a usurper of royal privileges.