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Mind and Behavior
What’s one of the most reliable indicators that a first date is going well? The answer might lie in how closely the couple is matching each other’s behavior and physiology. […]
More than 90% of human faces are home to mites that live in our skin pores. These friendly guests might be merging with us.
Success can be measured in different ways. When it hinges entirely on our careers, we fall victim to a devastating addiction.
Arguments are a normal and often healthy part of a relationship. It all depends on picking the right kind of arguments, though.
8mins
Having trouble learning? A PhD engineering professor gives you one key tip.
John Templeton Foundation
Experiments cannot confirm what theory predicts about neutrinos. And particle physicists have no idea why.
Deaths of despair are skyrocketing in the U.S., while at the same time, they are falling in other wealthy countries. What are we doing wrong?
Pain makes sense from an evolutionary perspective. What's puzzling is why so many of us choose to seek out painful experiences.
John Templeton Foundation
Can we stop mass shootings? The first step is collecting data, and these authors have done just that.
There’s an enormous evolutionary advantage for flamingos to stand on one leg, but genetics doesn't help. Only physics explains why.
Humans are already so integrated with technology that the dream of transhumanism is a reality. Can we handle what comes next?
4mins
Kids don’t always make you happier. Here’s why people have them anyway.
John Templeton Foundation
6mins
Branding isn’t buzz — we’ve been doing it for thousands of years.
We tend to assume our view of the world is objective and accurate rather than subjective and biased — which is what it really is.
"The Soul of a New Machine" provides a rare level of insight into the minds and decisions of humanity's greatest thinkers.
5mins
There are two kinds of suffering. One is pure pain. The other makes life worth living.
John Templeton Foundation
AI systems can carry on convincing conversations, but they have no understanding of what they're saying. Humans are easily fooled.
For 40 years, scientists thought a specific gene was linked to aggression in hamsters. Removing it, however, had violent consequences.