How psychedelics could kickstart the next mental health revolution

How psychedelics could kickstart the next men...

Up next

The best ways to spot a liar

How can we tell if someone we’re speaking to is being economical with the truth? Oftentimes, we’re told that the primary telltale signs lie in the use of body language – maybe someone is avoiding eye contact, touching their face a lot, or fidgeting and squirming. But there’s also ...  Show more

Why understanding what makes us hungry is key to weight loss

Chances are that if any of us are looking to drop a bit of excess weight, the first thing we’ll attempt is to cut down the number of calories we’re consuming. For decades, we’ve been told that balancing the number of calories we put into to our bodies with the energy that we burn ...  Show more

Recommended Episodes

How Art and Science Intersect
The Pulse

We often think of art and science as existing in different — even opposite — spheres. One revolves around creativity and imagination; the other around observable facts and data — and never the twain shall meet.But really, art and science aren't as far apart as we might think. For ...  Show more

41: Reality Is More Than Complex (Group Theory and Physics)
Breaking Math Podcast

Children who are being taught mathematics often balk at the idea of negative numbers, thinking them to be fictional entities, and often only learn later that they are useful for expressing opposite extremes of things, such as considering a debt an amount of money with a negative ...  Show more

How Did Geometry Create Modern Physics?
The Joy of Why

Geometry is one of the oldest disciplines in human history, yet the worlds it can describe extend far beyond its original use. What began thousands of years ago as a way to measure land and build pyramids was given rigor by Euclid in ancient Greece, became applied to curves an ...

  Show more

A Mathematician Asks ‘Is Math Real?’
Science Friday

When math is based on abstract concepts, how do we know it’s correct? Dr. Eugenia Cheng takes on that question in a new book.

 

The concept of math has been around for a long time, developing independently in many different cultures. In 1650 BC, the Egyptians were ...

  Show more