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Understanding others’ beliefs—especially false ones—is key to human communication and begins to develop between ages three ...
Depression feels weird compared to things like fear or anger, which help us survive by warning us of danger or pushing us ...
Our brains may work best when teetering on the edge of chaos. A new theory suggests that criticality a sweet spot between order and randomness is the secret to learning, memory, and adaptability. When ...
Baker writes damningly about the intellectual cowardice and inconsistency that set the stage for the city of ’s and ...
Social competition shaped behaviors that still influence human emotional health. Depression may reflect evolved signals of submission in competitive social settings. Modern life amplifies social ...
"We all have our ups and downs, but sometimes, those 'downs' are more than just a bad day. Depression affects millions, yet ...
If love keeps going wrong, these psychology books reveal the hidden patterns behind your choices and offer a path to ...
The tyrant, of course, was King George III, the target of the Declaration of Independence. We take it for granted now, but ...
In “Hope for Cynics,” Make It’s June book club pick, Stanford psychology professor Jamil Zaki explains why cynicism is ...
Rethink what intelligence truly means with these eye-opening reads that blend neuroscience, culture, and consciousness to ...
Imaginary time is a wonky concept for our time-bound brains, but in quantum theory and mathematics, it’s a useful tool for ...