Executive coach Jodi Wellman explains how to “make it to the end with no regrets.”
Kevin Dickinson is a staff writer and columnist at Big Think. His writing focuses on the intersection between education, psychology, business, and science. He holds a master’s in English and[…]
Our desire for recognition at work can lead to perilous ends.
Kevin Dickinson is a staff writer and columnist at Big Think. His writing focuses on the intersection between education, psychology, business, and science. He holds a master’s in English and[…]
While weltschmerz — literally “world-pain” — may be unpleasant, it can also spur us to change things for the better.
Kevin Dickinson is a staff writer and columnist at Big Think. His writing focuses on the intersection between education, psychology, business, and science. He holds a master’s in English and[…]
If words are really only 7% of communication, then why would anyone need to learn a foreign language?
Admitting that we know little about our future selves can radically improve our decision-making.
A physicist, a psychologist, and a philosopher walk into a bar and discuss a framework for thinking better in the 21st century.
According to Harvard career advisor Gorick Ng, this time-saving system can help us reclaim our work-life sanity.
Memories aren’t mental recordings, but pliable information we can use to better manage the present and conjure future possibilities.
Bertrand Russell shows us how to recognize emotional arguments smuggled into presumed statements of fact.
We can’t always change our horrible bosses — but we can transform the ways we interact with them.
Psychologist Noel Brick shares the mental techniques we can use to improve our performance on and off the field.
Many conversations start awkwardly and derail from there, but a few simple techniques can put them back on track.
When we prepare for our plans to go wrong, we build the foundations for lasting profit.