Is AI Cannibalizing Human Intelligence? A Neuroscientist's Way to Stop It
Theoretical neuroscientist Vivienne Ming reports that AI‑human hybrid teams can rival or exceed prediction‑market accuracy, but only when humans actively challenge AI outputs. In her Wall Street Journal experiment, pure AI (ChatGPT, Gemini) outperformed unaided humans, yet most hybrids simply echoed AI answers and performed no better. A small subset (5‑10%) treated the model as a sparring partner, questioning assumptions and generating richer forecasts. Ming warns that easy AI answers erode critical thinking, coining the "Information‑Exploration Paradox" and calling for new performance benchmarks for collaborative intelligence.
"Thinkhaven"
Thinkhaven is a proposed intensive writing program designed to train participants to generate novel, useful ideas daily. Participants must publish a 500‑word research journal each day, embed at least one new question, and produce a 2,500‑word effort post every two...
Warren Buffett Once Treated Bill Gates at McDonald's Using Coupons: How Frugal Is His Lifestyle
Billionaire investor Warren Buffett once paid Bill Gates for a McDonald’s lunch using coupons, underscoring his famously frugal habits. He routinely bases his daily breakfast spend—ranging from $2.61 to $3.17—on the market’s mood, a practice he describes in a documentary....

Confidence Isn’t the Absence of Doubt. It’s the Willingness to Act Before the Doubt Finishes Its Sentence.
The article reframes confidence as the willingness to act while doubt is still speaking, rather than waiting for certainty. It draws on decision‑science research that shows people set internal evidence thresholds, with low thresholds prompting quicker action and faster learning....

Your Instinctual Drive Predicts What You Find Beautiful
A 2025 University of Oklahoma study linked people’s dominant motivational drives to their aesthetic preferences with 77.6% accuracy. Security‑oriented participants chose sensual, tactile visuals 98% of the time, while intensity‑oriented respondents favored high‑contrast, magnetic designs. The research combined three primal...

Adults Who Apologize Constantly Aren’t Polite – They Were Trained to Treat Their Own Presence as Something that Required Ongoing...
The piece argues that chronic over‑apologizing is a learned survival tactic, not simple politeness. It traces the behavior to childhood emotional neglect and the “fawn response,” where apologizing defused danger. Research links the habit to anxiety, diminished self‑worth, and reduced...