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Leaders should rethink learning strategies, embed computational thinking into decision frameworks and redesign leadership ...
Are You Hungry or Do You Just Have Cravings? Try These Tips to Get In Tune With Your Body's Needs How can you tell the difference between a hunger cue and a craving? I talked to experts to find out.
Advertisers carefully craft messages to turn wants into perceived needs. Think of all the things we consider necessities today that years ago (or in other cultures) would be luxuries: a smartphone ...
You’ve just gotten home from an exhausting day. All you want to do is put your feet up and zone out to whatever is on television. Though the inactivity may feel like a well-earned rest, your brain is ...
Opinion Why does antisemitism persist? Because the world wants it to. Societies continually want a scapegoat, and Jews have remained the ideal target.
It's about teaching our children to think critically about their spending, to understand the difference between wants and needs, and to appreciate what they already have.
How the U.S. Public and AI Experts View Artificial Intelligence The public and experts are far apart in their enthusiasm and predictions for AI. But they share similar views in wanting more personal ...
While thinking hard can be notably difficult, we do it to expand our horizons, to utilise our skills and to engage with others. Thinking may be unpleasant, it may even be painful at times, but the ...
As Donald Trump negotiates with Russia, Europe needs statesmanship and strategic thinking rather than knee-jerk emotive rhetoric and moral panic.
It may employ a kind of reasoning humans use all the time — but you’ve probably never heard of it.
Janti Soeripto, CEO of Save the Children U.S., discusses the challenges of moving goods and making high-stakes decisions in response to crisis.
There is an age-old belief that more information will save us from our (or more commonly, "their") collective stupidity. We think more information will free us from our intellectual echo chambers.