Tag: Modern Psychology

Why does nostalgia feel bittersweet? the science behind the ache
Why does nostalgia feel bittersweet? Because you are experiencing two things at once. The pleasure of remembering something good. And the ache of knowing it is gone. Both hit at the same time. That is not a glitch. That is the whole point. Nostalgia is experienced several times a week by most adults. It is…

Confirmation Bias: how we build beliefs and defend them
This article explains confirmation bias explained simply, without academic jargon or political framing. You scroll past a headline that confirms what you already suspected. You feel a small sense of recognition. Of course. That makes sense. You keep reading. Later that day, you encounter an article arguing the opposite. You skim it. Something feels off.…

What is Dharma in Hinduism: the one goal modern life makes almost impossible
To understand why modern life sidelines it, we first have to answer a simple question: what is Dharma in Hinduism? Dharma is the most important of the four aims in Purushartha, and it is the one modern life is least equipped to support. Not because people are less moral than they used to be. Not…

This week’s good news the algorithm did not show you
Good news this week is buried under the usual avalanche of conflict, politics and economic anxiety. Which means most of the genuinely hopeful things that happened in the last seven days never made your feed. Here they are. The blindness epidemic nobody talks about is retreating Trachoma is the world’s leading infectious cause of blindness.…

The world as we knew it, as of yesterday, is no more
Khamenei dead. Three words that would have seemed impossible yesterday. Three words that make February 28, 2026 a date that does not unhappen. By the time most people woke up this morning, the United States and Israel had launched a major joint military operation against Iran. Hundreds of strikes. Explosions across Tehran, Qom, Isfahan, Kermanshah.…

From near-bankruptcy to £112 Billion: the Rolls-Royce turnaround nobody saw coming
Rolls-Royce hit a record high on the London Stock Exchange today. Then it hit another one. It has been doing this virtually every trading day of 2026. This morning the company announced underlying operating profit of £3.46 billion for 2025, a 40 percent increase on the previous year and ahead of every analyst forecast. It…

Before Ikigai and Maslow, there was Purushartha.
Somewhere in California, a startup founder is paying $3,000 to attend a retreat trying to answer a very old question. What should a human life actually aim for? A coach with 400,000 Instagram followers has just launched a course on “aligning purpose with profession.” A productivity guru is preparing a TED Talk about the four…

Did a philosopher predict the algorithm? Heidegger’s warning from 1954
Did a philosopher predict the Instagram/TikTok algorithm in the 1950s? Why do we treat our bodies as machines that we try to hack with supplements, diets, or medicines? Why does finding love in the modern age feel like sorting through a warehouse? Why do we treat everything around us, even humans, as commodities? These are…

Bad Bunny Grammy win. the room will never be the same.
Bad Bunny Grammy win wrote a new chapter in history on February 1, 2026, in Los Angeles. His album DeBÍ TiRAR MáS FOToS, which translates to “I Should Have Taken More Photos,” became the first Spanish-language album in the history of the Grammy Awards to win Album of the Year. In 68 years of the…

Baby monkey videos psychology: why we watch
This article contains descriptions of animal cruelty. Nothing graphic is detailed, but the subject matter is disturbing. It is written not to sensationalise but to understand a phenomenon that psychology and criminology researchers say we urgently need to talk about. The psychology behind baby monkey videos reveals something uncomfortable about how human beings behave online.…









