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The newest essays, interviews, and features from Big Think.
22mins
A conversation with the Chief Investment Strategist at Legg Mason Capital Management.
4mins
The best communication happens naturally amongst friends, so Zappos encourages employees to spend time together outside of the office.
5mins
Hsieh says he hires and fires people based on whether they fit with his company's core values—independent of their potential value or job performance.
3mins
"Would I want to hang out with these people if we weren’t forced to work together?" is a guiding barometer for the Zappos CEO.
In 2007, papermaker Stora Enso commissioned six leading designers – Paula Scher, Marian Bantjes, Christoph Niemann, Bruce McCall, Michael C. Place and Winterhouse – to create a series of posters around […]
My mother was the valedictorian of her senior class in high school over fifty years ago. She doesn’t remember exactly what she said at graduation, but she does remember having […]
20mins
A conversation with the World Chess Champion, 1975-1985.
William James was about the only philosopher who didn’t end up a pettifogging nit-picker or overbearing egomaniac with delusions of genius. So says New Humanist's Jonathan Rée.
Spiegel damns the latest G-20 summit as one of "yet more vague promises", and says national interests have once again become more important than the big picture.
Facebook's Open Graph protocol is a shot across Google’s bow, but will the power of the “like” exceed that of the link, asks Mathew Ingram.
A porn-only internet domain, where addresses have the suffix xxx not www, could help end "accidental pornography", according to Guardian columnist Barbara Ellen.
Our main budgetary issue is expected growth in entitlements spending, which is one key reason the retirement age should be raised to near 70. Gary Becker sets out the case.
The design of the human jaw actually makes it 40-50 percent more efficient than for all great apes, Australian researchers have found.
Are some of our elegant symbols of modernity — smartphones and so on — fueling slaughter and rape in Congo? The New York Times on the campaign for “clean” minerals.
Is financial illiteracy “rational ignorance”—inattention that is justified because the costs of paying attention outweigh the benefits? The New Yorker says no.
Retired physician and emeritus professor Arthur Rivin shares insights on the increasingly common disease which 5.3 million Americans also have.
Do claims of slave labor in the Brazilian Amazon merely reflect cultural misinterpretations? The BBC on the state of Para, where more than 1,000 "slaves" were rescued in two years.
As if further evidence is needed of the sheer parochialism ritually on display here on our media in ‘Little England’, I woke up this morning to hear a BBC reporter […]
Ever since Lafayette, some connection between America and France, however tenuous, has existed. One of the strongest bonds between the two countries is the American love of French art. When […]