Latest Articles

Latest Articles

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

"Millions of workers who have already been unemployed for months, if not years, will most likely remain that way even as the overall job market continues to improve," writes Catherine Rampell.
Could business executives learn from the test that London taxi drivers take? Stephen Adshead writes that the process teaches conflict management and the benefit of humility.
"The government's current policy to leave a great deal of its liabilities off-balance sheet makes the U.S.'s current debt levels look a lot more favorable than they really are," writes Daniel Indiviglio.
The tea party movement has become "an insta-network for ambitious women," writes Hanna Rosin. "Some would surprise you with their straightforward feminist rage."
Western-style Holocaust denial—the attempt to produce pseudo-scientific proofs that the Jewish genocide did not happen—is not that common in the Arab world, writes Gilbert Achcar.
"Nowadays a specimen of unkempt, puffed-up prose or stumbling, lugubrious verse doesn't even need to make it past an editor or publisher to glide slimily" into our awareness, writes Laura Miller.
New research into the brain provides intriguing information about the neural activity associated with moments of sudden insight.
"The world remains inexplicably indifferent and uncurious" about the deadly nature of Communism, writes Claire Berlinski. "For evidence of this indifference, consider the unread Soviet archives."
So what are we to make of the new British coalition Government that made its appearance, in the shape of David Cameron and Nick Clegg, in the 10 Downing Street […]
Sick of hearing about a slow-moving sheet of oil floating about in the middle of the Gulf of Mexico? You may not be alone. According to The New Republic's Bradford […]
Elena Kagan's friends assure us that she's not gay. "I’ve known her for most of her adult life and I know she’s straight," Kagan's roommate in law school told Politico. […]
Ever since Niall Ferguson was a boy, and still to this day, the Harvard historian says he has looked to the BBC's Dr. Who as his superhero role model. Why? […]
The relationship between literary talent and literary fame is not so interesting to discuss (being so much discussed, and yet being uniquely subjective). Why should we care if the writers […]
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If the U.S. can use its political and technological advances to grow its way out of this crisis, then the future could be rosy. The other option is much grimmer.
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The country sees its relationship with the U.S. marriage on the rocks and "is actively looking, if not for another partner, then certainly for a divorce from this somewhat unreliable […]
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There are six killer applications that made the West dominant over the past 500 years. But is that age now over?
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Those with historical understanding of past scenarios are likely to be better at visualizing what's to come. After all, at the heart of the historian's enterprise is the imagination
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A conversation with the Harvard University historian.
How connecting cutting-edge technologies with the people who need them the most is revolutionizing the traditional aid model and empowering communities to take charge of their own well-being.
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Harvard Business School professor Robert Eccles comments on a recent video interview with Gro Harlem Brundtland, a U.N. Special Envoy on Climate Change.