Predictions about people influence people. Social predictions tend to act like magnets. They bend reality towards themselves.
Beware the Power of Prediction | Carissa Véliz | TED · TED
5 examples from real videos — listen, replay, loop.
Predictions about people influence people. Social predictions tend to act like magnets. They bend reality towards themselves.
Beware the Power of Prediction | Carissa Véliz | TED · TED
Predictions about people influence people. Social predictions tend to act like magnets. They bend reality towards themselves.
Beware the Power of Prediction | Carissa Véliz | TED · TED
because of some biological excuse: "Oh, we don't have magnets in our beaks or in our scales." No; if your language and your culture trains you to do it,
How Language Shapes the Way We Think | Lera Boroditsky | TED · TED
In England, the 19th-century physicist J.J. Thompson conducted experiments using magnets and electricity, like this. And he came to an incredible revelation.
The case for curiosity-driven research | Suzie Sheehy
Or, you can take this dollar bill over here, and I can take a set of magnets, and you can see that the dollar bill gets lifted by the magnets.
How to spark your curiosity, scientifically | Nadya Mason
And in this tunnel, we use superconducting magnets colder than outer space to accelerate protons to almost the speed of light
How we explore unanswered questions in physics | James Beacham