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Redirecting Our Brain’s Automatic Responses To Better Meet Our Survival Needs in a Modern World
We often imagine ourselves as independent thinkers, making deliberate, rational decisions. But cognitive science paints a different picture—one that may be limiting our ability to thrive in today’s complex world.

Sciences Are Converging On a Broader View of Reality A Reality that Challenges Conventional Wisdom
Reality may seem absolute—fixed, tangible, and independent of individual interpretation. Yet sciences across the board are increasingly converging on a view that challenges this assumption. It’s anything but conventional, at least in terms of how the modern Western mind has been conditioned to understand reality

How Our Minds Shape Reality In Its Quest to Find Meaning
Ancient wisdom traditions such as Hinduism and Buddhism have long proposed that the world we experience is a construct of the mind. Today, modern evidence-based sciences are converging on a similar insight.

Confronting the Truth About Ourselves We're All Part of the Problem
It’s easy to look at the world and point fingers. We blame corrupt systems, bad leadership, ignorance, and greed for the problems we see—but what if the real issue is closer to home?
Small Things We Can Do
- Lend a helping hand to a stranger.
- Be mindful of the other person’s point of view.
- Listen more, talk less.
Confronting the Truth About Ourselves
We Live Inside Bubbles of Our Own Making
Our bubbles blind us to the larger world that’s around us. We’ve become victims of habits, adssumptions, and perspectives that limit our understanding of the bigger picture. More often than not, we’re not even aware of the blind spots in our thinking.
Having the courage to look inside ourselves means being honest about the ways we might be contributing to the problems of the world. The problems aren’t “out there,” for someone else to solve.
Change starts with looking inside ourselves.
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Confronting the Truth About Ourselves We're All Part of the Problem
It’s easy to look at the world and point fingers. We blame corrupt systems, bad leadership, ignorance, and greed for the problems we see—but what if the real issue is closer to home?