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The newest essays, interviews, and features from Big Think.
2mins
If you’re attacked, the best thing to do is “make the hunter become the hunted,” says Sliwa.
6mins
Curtis Sliwa recounts in vivid detail how in 1992 a seemingly normal cab ride turned into a near-death experience, leaving him shot and bleeding on a New York sidewalk.
Globalization has transformed the practice and study of law, says Larry Kramer, the dean of Stanford Law School. American law firms have dominated the internationalization of law, but this has […]
The U.S. military is investing in all kinds of augmentation – pills you ingest, body armor you can wear, and machine parts you can add to your body.
Conservative commentator Fred Barnes has recently criticized liberal journalists for discussing ideas on a free, private email list. Barnes claims that, unlike the denizens of journo-list, he’s a non-partisan conservative: […]
4mins
Most of the United States’ health care costs come from diabetes, heart disease and obesity—problems that could be fixed by changing our behavior.
When President George W. Bush came to office in 2001, the U.S. was sending $1.4 billion a year to Africa in humanitarian and development aid, including programs intended to foster […]
3mins
Lawyers will be much more fulfilled if they do some public service, suggests Kramer.
5mins
Kramer believes that firms hire too far in advance. They don’t know what they’re getting, and students get locked into their legal specialties prematurely.
8mins
As dean of Stanford Law, Kramer is trying to reconceptualize the three-year law program, emphasizing more practical skills lawyers will need.
4mins
The Stanford Law dean says the legal education system needs to do more to prepare students to actually practice. There are a wide set of intellectual skills that are essential […]
5mins
The expansion of the legal market around the world has benefited massive corporate law firms at the expense of small community firms, says Kramer.
27mins
A conversation with the dean of Stanford Law School.
Jayne Merkel, architectural historian and critic, locates the moment in American architectural history when less ceased to be more and inspiration was found in yesterday's buildings.
Steve Chapman attends a National Organization for Marriage speech and sees how defenders of traditional marriage hope to use their raucous critics to their own advantage.
"Chevy Volt will sell for $41,000 before a federal tax credit, while the Nissan Leaf will go for $32,780 before the credit. The two cars are trying to jump-start the US electric-car industry."
"I'm sure that Julian Assange is now regarded as one of the very most dangerous men and he should be quite proud of that," says Daniel Ellsberg, who leaked the Pentagon Papers.
"Why learn about the glass ceiling in a sociology class if you are going to hit it anyway a decade after graduation?" A liberal arts professor meditates on the the liberal arts conundrum.
"People who fake symptoms of mental illness can convince themselves that they genuinely have those symptoms, a new study suggests." Scientific American on the power of the mind.
"It is the poor, not the rich, who are inclined to charity." The Economist reports on a study that finds the less affluent are quicker to compassion and more willing to give to the needy.