A podcast from the very loved crew at «This American Life». This podcast asks the question why, although we always discuss and argue with people who have different opinions than we have, we never really change our minds. And if, rarely, we do, why that happens.
(Actually, in the process of choosing this link for the Weekly Filet, I first wanted to share a different link; a video showing breathtaking, rare footage of postwar Berlin. But then I changed my mind. Or, as the great spoken word artist Taylor Mali says in one of his most famous poems: «Changing your mind is one of the best ways of figuring out whether or not you still have one.»
From Weekly Filet #207, in May 2015.
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Smart essay on connecting the dots and why predicting the present is nearly as hard as predicting the future.
From Weekly Filet #201, in March 2015.
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«When experts are wrong, it’s often because they’re experts on an earlier version of the world.» One of those thoughts that seem so obvious, but only after somebody else has uttered them. The more you think about it, the bigger it gets.
From Weekly Filet #189, in January 2015.
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I guess you could spend an entire weekend with this exhaustive list of cognitive biases on Wikipedia. It’s fascinating to see in how many different ways humans are inclined to poor judgements. Oh, and if you think most of those biases apply only to other people and not yourself, that’s called the bias blind spot.
From Weekly Filet #44, in November 2011.
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A series of wittily illustrated videos on famous experiments of thought, from half-dead cats to infinitely booked hotels.
From Weekly Filet #40, in October 2011.
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Make sense of what’s happening, and imagine what could be.
Carefully curated recommendations on what to read, watch and listen to. For nerds and changemakers who love when something makes them go «Huh, I never thought of it this way!».
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