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  • David McRaney
    4:04 pm Tue, Jul 7, 2015
    Curing kids of the notion that they suck at science

    Can a new computer-assisted teaching program rid us of the cognitive errors that lead to students believing they suck at math or just aren't cut out to study science? According to Ulrik Christensen, senior fellow of digital learning at McGraw-Hill Education, yes it can.

    • COMMENTS
  • David McRaney
    9:04 am Fri, Jun 26, 2015
    How we learn to be helpless—and unlearn it

    Learned helplessness keeps people in bad jobs, poor health, terrible relationships, and awful circumstances despite how easy it may be to escape. Learn how to defeat this psychological trap, thanks to the work of Martin Seligman.

    • COMMENTS
  • David McRaney
    4:22 pm Wed, Jun 10, 2015
    How Google uses behavioral science to make work suck less

    From Dilbert to Fight Club to Joe Versus the Volcano, the world of white-collar drones and managerial ineptitude has long been a goldmine for parody.

    • COMMENTS
  • David McRaney
    1:00 am Thu, May 14, 2015
    LISTEN: Overcoming our irrational and sometimes crippling fear of rejection with Jia Jiang

    What if you could give yourself a superpower – not Hulk-level strength, not telekinesis, but something realistic, something that added a superhuman ability by taking away a normal human limitation?… Read the rest of the article: LISTEN: Overcoming our irrational and sometimes crippling fear of rejection with Jia Jiang

    • COMMENTS
  • David McRaney
    9:12 am Wed, Apr 29, 2015
    How to change a person's mind on a divisive social issue in 22 minutes

    The power of disclosure can reduce prejudice, shift attitudes, and change minds forever

    • COMMENTS
  • David McRaney
    12:12 pm Thu, Apr 9, 2015
    Our newfound power to ruin the lives of strangers with tweets

    Author Jon Ronson looks at what happens when we obliterate people for unpopular opinions, off-color jokes, offensive language, and professional faux pas.

    • COMMENTS
  • David McRaney
    2:29 pm Fri, Mar 27, 2015
    Unlearning, laser eyes, and reptilian false flags

    In this episode of the You Are Not so Smart Podcast you will hear an excerpt from a lecture I gave at DragonCon2014 all about unlearning, superseded scientific theories, post-hoc… Read the rest of the article: Unlearning, laser eyes, and reptilian false flags

    • COMMENTS
  • David McRaney
    8:48 am Wed, Mar 18, 2015
    How "compassion fatigue" affect doctors' decisions

    An interview with Danielle Ofri, physician and author of "What Doctors Feel" – a book about the emotional lives of doctors.

    • COMMENTS
  • David McRaney
    5:59 pm Tue, Mar 3, 2015
    James Burke on the coming age of scarce scarcity and abundant abundance

    Matt Novak and James Burke help us understand why we are to terrible at predicting the future

    • COMMENTS
  • David McRaney
    10:57 am Wed, Feb 11, 2015
    The science behind Brian Williams' misremembering

    The last 40 years of memory research strongly suggests the kind of misremembering Williams claims to have suffered is easy to reproduce in our own lives.

    • COMMENTS
  • David McRaney
    2:00 am Thu, Jan 29, 2015
    Avatars, rubber hands, virtual reality, and racism

    Can changing your body, even just for a few minutes, change your mind? Can a psychological body transfer melt away your long-held opinions and unconscious prejudices? Maybe so.

    • COMMENTS
  • David McRaney
    12:08 pm Fri, Jan 16, 2015
    The ceiling that birthed a naked man

    What happened when a naked man literally appeared out of thin air inside a couple's apartment while they were getting ready for work?

    • COMMENTS
  • David McRaney
    2:00 am Fri, Jan 9, 2015
    Monkeys, money, and the primate origins of human irrationality

    Psychologist Laurie Santos trains monkeys how to use money, and has learned that they attempt to solve the same sort of financial problems humans have attempted.

    • COMMENTS
  • David McRaney
    4:00 am Tue, Dec 23, 2014
    The odd phenomenon of "blind insight"

    A growing body of evidence is revealing that our guesses and our confidence in those guesses don't come from the same place in our minds.

    • COMMENTS
  • David McRaney
    2:00 am Wed, Dec 17, 2014
    How the Halo Effect turns uncertainty into false certainty

    When faced with complex information, why do we turn the volume down on what's hard to quantify ?

    • COMMENTS
  • David McRaney
    1:54 pm Tue, Nov 25, 2014
    The real reason you are motivated to work

    It's likely very easy for you to explain your motivations for going to work. David McRaney is not sure he believes you.

    • COMMENTS
  • David McRaney
    6:18 pm Wed, Nov 12, 2014
    Why we are unaware that we lack the skill to tell how unskilled and unaware we are

    Each one of us has a relationship with our own ignorance, a dishonest, complicated relationship, and that dishonesty keeps us sane, happy, and willing to get out of bed in the morning. By David McRaney

    • COMMENTS
  • David McRaney
    11:58 am Mon, Nov 3, 2014
    You knew it was crap, but you bought it anyway. This is why.

    David McRaney explores the sunk cost fallacy, a strangely twisted bit of logic that seems to pop into the human mind once a person has experienced the pain of loss or the ickiness of waste on his or her way toward a concrete goal. It's illogical, irrational, unreasonable – and as a perfectly normal human being, you act under its influence all the time.

    • COMMENTS
  • David McRaney
    9:51 am Wed, Oct 15, 2014
    New York City's Placebo Buttons and The Post Hoc Fallacy

    David McRaney explains why placebo buttons surround you, pretending to do your bidding.

    • COMMENTS
  • David McRaney
    3:14 pm Tue, Sep 30, 2014
    Why people believe things you don't believe

    Why do Holocaust deniers, young Earth creationists, people who think they've lived past lives as famous figures, people who claim they've been abducted by aliens, and people who stake their lives on the power of homeopathy believe things that most of us do not? David McRaney investigates.

    • COMMENTS
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