Do we get a dopamine hit from creating meaningful lives?
This morning I came across something quite delightful: Hatchet Job of the Year, an award for the most scathing book review. Novels, poems, they all get their awards,
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Skip to contentThis morning I came across something quite delightful: Hatchet Job of the Year, an award for the most scathing book review. Novels, poems, they all get their awards,
In the Bay Area, what starts out as counterculture eventually becomes a commodity. It's inevitable, and not a bad thing: indeed, the counterculture has always had an entrepreneurial
One of the chapters of my book talks about what to do when concentration fails. For a book about rebuilding your capacity for attention, this may seem odd,
In my last post I mentioned Christopher Jamison's short, very accessible book, Finding Sanctuary. Here's a bit more about it: No matter how hard you work, being too
Maria Konnikova, author of the soon-to-be-published book Mastermind: How to Think Like Sherlock Holmes, has a piece in the New York Times about the benefits of mindfulness. (Clearly Viking/Penguin's
Der Spiegel has a really good piece about what it's like to be a drone pilot, a job that has received rather little respect in the military (for
This video from ASAPScience (via The Atlantic) is good: via YouTube My experience writing The Distraction Addiction followed many of the rules the video describes: boosting your productivity
Or so Silas House argues in a recent essay, "The Art of Being Still:" I’m not talking about the kind of stillness that involves locking yourself in a
Simon Doonan explains what's wrong with art today. One of his points: Short attention spans have made art into one quickie sight gag after another. Is that an
A new Gensler study* [pdf], discussed in Fast Co.exist (or however one should write that– the whole project is so typographically challenging the brand become impossible to find