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Chapter one
Limits
How Much More Can We Learn About the Universe?
These are the few limits on our ability to know.
The Bridge From Nowhere
How is it possible to get something from nothing?
The Brief, Mystical Reign of the Wax Cadaver
Early medical models of human anatomy shrouded death in feminine beauty.
Chapter two
School Days
Why We Love How-to Videos
Instructional videos can teach us anything—especially if you watch them this way.
Cursive Handwriting and Other Education Myths
Teaching cursive handwriting doesn’t have nearly the value we think it does.
Teaching Me Softly
Machine learning is teaching us the secret to teaching.
Why Science Should Stay Clear of Metaphysics
Meet the philosopher who revived anti-realism.
Chapter three
Self Knowledge
How to Tell If You’re a Jerk
If you think everyone around you is terrible, the joke may be on you.
A Mental Disease by Any Other Name
For Frank Russell, reinterpreting his schizophrenia as shamanism helped his symptoms.
How I Rewired My Brain to Become Fluent in Math
The building blocks of understanding are memorization and repetition.
Addicted to Anticipation
What goes wrong in the brain chemistry of a gambling addict.
Chapter four
Field Trip
Hallucinogen Therapy Is Coming
How shrooms can spring people from fears and destructive habits.
Fish Can Be Smarter Than Primates
To understand the plurality of intelligence, look under water.
For Kids, Learning Is Moving
Children’s brain development is fueled when they find their own way.
Why Neuroscientists Need to Study the Crow
The neocortex is argued to be the seat of cognition, but crows don't have one.
The Harsh, Hidden Lessons of Tree School
Tree education is full of tearing and screaming.
Chapter five
Time Travel
A Nonlinear History of Time Travel
Births, deaths, and other time travel paradoxes.
The Modern Mind May Be 100,000 Years Old
New fossil evidence shows sophisticated thought began earlier than we thought.
Ingenious: Richard K. Miller
Engineering education.
The Genius of Learning
MacArthur Fellow Danielle Bassett says learning works best when you don’t overthink it.
Alzheimer’s Early Tell
The language of authors who suffered from dementia has a story for the rest of us.
Related Facts So Romantic
“Reality provides us with facts so romantic that imagination itself could add nothing to them.” —Jules Verne
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