The Latest from Big Think

Text reading "The Latest" in a large, serif font on a light background.
9mins
Why an “inside outsider” might be the next person most suited to take over a company.
18mins
A conversation with the Harvard Business School professor.
3mins
Our minds don’t capture and record reality, but rather blend experience with fantasy—a process that often results in convincing, yet completely false, memories.
4mins
Remaining mentally active and engaged is critical to retaining information as we age.
4mins
The neuroscientist explains how our mind produces memories and why they actually alter our DNA.
4mins
Less than 5% of Alzheimer’s Disease cases are genetically transmitted. The disease is a consequence of aging, and doesn’t target specific demographics.
4mins
Simply paying attention can do a lot to improve recollection, but scientists are also working on a wide variety of memory-boosting drugs.
5mins
A protein that scientists once thought was a “piece of garbage in the brain” turns out to play a key role in memory formation. At high concentrations, however, it spells […]
27mins
A conversation with the professor at the Taub Institute for Research in Alzheimer’s Disease and the Aging Brain at Columbia University.
2mins
Our “insidious” digital overconnectedness can pose a major challenge.
4mins
What the philosopher can still teach us about grief versus stoicism and “the role of emotions in the good life.”
5mins
The military ethicist believes Abu Ghraib represented an ethical breakdown “from the top down.” But have things changed under Obama?
8mins
From the Iliad to Afghanistan, the field of military ethics has tried—not always successfully—to impose rules on the chaos of mass slaughter.
6mins
We’re taking better psychological care of soldiers than we used to. But with deployments getting longer and longer, far more needs to be done.
3mins
Maddening boredom. Utter numbness. Comradeship so intense that it threatens family ties. War’s worst psychological effects can be the ones you’d never expect.
6mins
From mangled bodies to the twisted psychological world of Abu Ghraib, the stories Middle East veterans tell Nancy Sherman reveal a side of war not shown on TV.
3mins
In some ways, the psychology of combat hasn’t changed since Troy. But modern wars have also brought their own unique traumas.
3mins
The “Untold War” author first became interested in the psychology of combat by observing her father’s tight-lipped silence about World War II.
41mins
A conversation with the Georgetown philosophy professor and author of “The Untold War.”
6mins
The most successful leaders of business and government gain that power by being able to persuade their constituencies with a compelling story.