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  • Willpower Likely Won’t Save You from Your Bad Habits. Science Explains Why

    Willpower Likely Won’t Save You from Your Bad Habits. Science Explains Why

    Your brain makes habits stick. The good news? The same science shows how to replace the bad ones. Why are bad habits so hard to break? Neuroscientist Carl Hart, PhD, journalist Charles Duhigg, and psychologist Adam Alter, PhD explain how your brain wires habits as cue-routine-reward loops that control nearly half of your daily life. They show why willpower alone rarely works, why technology fuels new forms of addiction, and why habits can only be replaced, not erased. About Carl Hart, PhD: Dr. Hart is an Associate Professor of Psychology in both the Departments of Psychiatry and Psychology at Columbia University, and Director of the Residential Studies and Methamphetamine Research Laboratories at the New York State Psychiatric Institute. A major focus of Dr. Hart’s research is to understand complex interactions between drugs of abuse and the neurobiology and environmental factors that mediate human behavior and physiology. About Charles Duhigg: Charles Duhigg is a Pulitzer Prize-winning journalist and the author of The Power of Habit, which spent over three years on bestseller lists and has been translated into 40 languages, and Smarter Faster Better, also a bestseller. Mr. Duhigg writes for The New Yorker magazine and is a graduate of Yale University and the Harvard Business School. He has been a frequent contributor to CNBC, This American Life, NPR, The Colbert Report, NewsHour, and Frontline. About Adam Alter, PhD: Adam Alter is an Associate Professor of Marketing at New York University’s Stern School of Business, with an affiliated appointment in the New York University Psychology Department.

  • The Art and Science of Failing

    The Art and Science of Failing Well

    Failure is inevitable, but your response to it is a choice – and it makes all the difference. Journalist Tim Harford, PhD, psychologist Tal Ben-Shahar, PhD, and organizational behavior expert Robert Sutton, PhD, reveal how failure can become the foundation of success when it’s examined and built upon. Reframing failure as information, rather than a personal setback, is what sets productive thinkers apart.

  • 3 Experts Explain Your Brain’s Creativity Formula

    3 Experts Explain Your Brain’s Creativity Formula

    What makes the human brain capable of creativity? Neuroscientist David Eagleman, creativity researcher Scott Barry Kaufman, and productivity expert Tiago Forte each explore a different part of the puzzle: how humans evolved additional cortical “space,” how imagination builds on the knowledge we gather, and how organizing your thoughts in a “second brain” helps ideas take shape. Together, their perspectives explain why creativity depends on storing, combining, and transforming the raw material we collect over time.

  • Is Searching for Purpose an Inherent Human Trait These Experts Say Yes.

    Is Searching for Purpose an Inherent Human Trait? These Experts Say Yes.

    Behavioral scientist Dan Cable, philosopher Philip Kitcher, and management scholar D. Quinn Mills explore how purpose functions as both a psychological tool and a philosophical compass. Together, they argue that purpose isn’t some distant, abstract idea, but instead, is something essential to being human. It’s how we learn, adjust, and keep going when things become difficult. When we care about meaning instead of just basic needs, we find more energy; when we rethink what we believe, we grow wiser.

  • What’s More Real: Time Itself, or Your Perception of It

    What’s More Real: Time Itself, or Your Perception of It?

    David Eagleman, PhD, Brian Greene, PhD, and Dean Buonomano, PhD, explore one of science’s strangest questions: what is time? From Einstein’s spacetime theory to the brain’s internal clock, they examine whether time is an external property of the universe or a mental construct. By connecting physics and neuroscience, they unpack the idea that how we experience time may differ entirely from how it actually works.

  • Want To Be More Productive Start by Doing Less

    Want To Be More Productive? Start by Doing Less

    Writer Oliver Burkeman, psychologist Laurie Santos, and organizational psychologist Melanie Katzman discuss the illusion of perfectionism, the signs of burnout, and the limits of productivity. According to their research, the constant drive to improve often leaves people more exhausted and less productive – even if their intentions were to grow, improve, or achieve bigger goals. Together, they explain how accepting “good enough” and finding value beyond work can lead to greater balance and lasting happiness.

  • How Loving Strangers Changes Your Brain (and Your Life)

    How Loving Strangers Changes Your Brain (and Your Life)

    Want to know if someone is compassionate? It’s identifiable in more ways than one. Philosopher Meghan Sullivan, PhD, Buddhist scholar and former monk Thupten Jinpa, PhD, and meditation teacher Sharon Salzberg explore love through neuroscience, philosophy, and lived practice. They discuss society’s flaw in mistaking kindness for weakness, how neuroscience has proven to identify compassion in brain scans, and how expanding Aristotle’s Love Ethic can change our society for the better.

  • Is Free Will a Fallacy Science and Philosophy Explain

    Is Free Will a Fallacy? Science and Philosophy Explain.

    Do you actually control your own mind? Three experts in philosophy and neuroscience explain: It’s not so simple. Uri Maoz, PhD, Daniel C. Dennett, PhD, and Sam Harris, PhD explore how unconscious processes shape decisions we believe are conscious. From brain experiments that reveal the illusion of control, to mindfulness practices that reframe perception, they show how philosophy and neuroscience together unpack the truth about free will.