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Orion Jones
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When it comes to choosing a mate, a new study form the University of Toronto argues that people overestimate their willingness to reject unsuitable romantic partners.
If learning institutions have become money machines, where does that leave their educational mission?
Psychologists recognize a thin line between creative genius and destructive psychopathy: general intelligence and so-called diversifying experiences that happen in childhood or young-adulthood.
Through a clever experiment, researchers at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology have arrived at a closer understanding of the foundation of the human imagination.
Both men and women with two or more children outperformed their peers who had one child or were childless.
Ever since the arrival of agriculture, and more recently, cubicles, modern society has begun selecting for those who can interest themselves in the repetitive, or least force themselves to tolerate it.
Children from intact families are more likely to be competitive in today's economy because their parents tend to spend more money on their education.