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How long will human impacts last? - David Biello

AdultsGlobal WarmingHumanNature...
Imagine aliens land on Earth a million years from now. What will these curious searchers find of us? They will find what geologists, scientists, and other experts are increasingly calling the Anthropocene, or new age of mankind. David Biello explains how the impacts that humans have made have become so pervasive, profound, and permanent that some geologists believe we merit our own epoch.

How does your body know you're full? - Hilary Coller

AdultsHumanNeuroscienceHealth...
Hunger claws at your belly. It tugs at your intestines, which begin to writhe, aching to be fed. Being hungry generates a powerful and often unpleasant physical sensation that's almost impossible to ignore. After you've reacted by gorging on your morning pancakes, you start to experience an opposing force: fullness. But how does your body actually know when you're full? Hilary Coller explains.

Why Are You Anxious?

AdultsBiologyHuman
When you're feeling or stressed, your body releases stress hormones, such as adrenaline and cortisol...

How to Cure Aging - During Your Lifetime?

AdultsHealthHumanScience
What if we could stop aging forever?

Your Face Could Be Recreated From DNA: Should You Worry?

AdultsBiologyGeneticsHuman
Can we predict what a person's face looks like based solely on a sample of their DNA? A new study says yes, but geneticists aren't so sure.

Baby Animal Rescue // 60 Second Docs

AdultsAnimalsHumanNature
For the last 15 years, Joseph Keter has been rescuing, caring for and returning injured and abandoned animals -- mainly orphans whose mothers have died -- to the wild. From lions to cheetahs and buffalo to gazelle, Joseph has cared for some of Africa's most iconic animals. His days may be long and difficult, but when it's life or death for baby animals on Kenya's Lake Naivasha, it's all worth it.

Is It Better to Be Polite or Frank?

AdultsCultureHumanSociety...
We live in an age that thinks highly of frankness and directness. But there are - nevertheless - a few reasons why politeness remains a hugely important quality.

Why You Shouldn't Trust Your Feelings

AdultsHumanPsychologyMental Health
It can be very hard to detect just how much our judgement is constantly affected by our feelings. We should - at points - take care to be very sceptical of our first impulses.

How We Lie to Ourselves

AdultsHumanPsychologySociety...
We are masters at knowing how to lie to ourselves. We pay a heavy price for this self-deception.

Why We Feel Lonely and Odd

AdultsHumanPsychologyMental Health...
We feel lonely and odd because we mistakenly assume that the kind of thoughts and fears we have will have no echo in other people. They do; it's just we haven't found a way to speak to one another honestly about who we are.

6 scientific tricks for falling asleep

AdultsHumanPsychologyScience...
Can't sleep? Don't just lie there in bed and stress about it. These tricks will have you snoozing in no time.

5 useless human body parts left over from evolution

AdultsHistoryHumanBiology...
Your body is walking proof of evolution, but some parts have grown unnecessary over time. Here are five useless body parts left over from evolution.

Do You Really Have Two Brains?

AdultsBiologyHumanNeuroscience...
Are you a left-brained person or a right-brained person? Spoiler: You're neither. Each of us uses both sides of our brain for most of what we do. But still, there are a number of brain functions that do show lateralization, where they are localized to one side or another. Why is this? And how does it influence our definition of consciousness? People with "split brains" can help us figure it out.

Is Reality Real? The Simulation Argument

AdultsHumanSciencePhilosophy...
What if we are not creators, but creations?

How to Process Your Emotions

AdultsHumanPsychologyMental Health...
In order to be calm and at ease with ourselves, we need regular periods where we do something rather strange-sounding: process our emotions. Here is a guide to this essential psychological move.

Why do we dream? - Amy Adkins

AdultsHumanPsychologyScience
In the 3rd millennium BCE, Mesopotamian kings recorded and interpreted their dreams on wax tablets. In the years since, we haven't paused in our quest to understand why we dream. And while we still don't have any definitive answers, we have some theories. Amy Adkins reveals the top seven reasons why we might dream.

What is Emotional Intelligence?

AdultsHumanPsychologyRelationships...
Many of humanity's greatest problems stem not from a shortfall of technical or financial intelligence, but what we term emotional intelligence. It is through the acquisition of Emotional Intelligence that we stand to become better lovers, workers, friends and citizens. We are rarely systematically taught Emotional Intelligence and pay a heavy price for this gap in learning. The School of Life is dedicated to fostering Emotional Intelligence.

Ancient Humans & Neanderthals Had Sex, Here's How It Changed Us Forever

AdultsGeneticsHistoryHuman...
We've known for a while that ancient humans got busy with Neanderthals, but how exactly did that Neanderthal DNA affect modern humans?

How To Be A Genius

AdultsCultureHumanSociety...
"We hear a lot about genius. We are taught to admire the minds of those infinite, baffling but astonishing geniuses like Einstein, Tolstoy or Picasso. Quite what genius might actually be is left a little vague. It's a codeword for 'brilliant but perhaps too other-worldly ever really to fathom.' We are invited to stand in awe at the achievements of geniuses but also to feel that their thought processes might be quasi-magical and that it is ultimately simply mysterious how they were ever able to come up with the ideas they have had..."

Our Little Superhero Made Of Glass | Living Differently

AdultsFamilyHealthHuman...
Kaden Casebolt, 5, has Osteogenesis Imperfecta, meaning his bones can break from sneezing. Despite his fragility, the superhero-obsessed boy loves dressing up as his heroes.

Your Body Is Designed to Attack a New Organ, Now We Know Why

AdultsBiologyHealthHuman...
Scientists think they've found the molecular basis for organ transplant rejection. Now that we know its cause, could we prevent its effect?