Depression: The silent collapse of a society in crisis

Depression: The silent collapse of a society in crisis

Amid the deafening clamor of an ever-accelerating modern world, depression emerges as the shattered mirror of a society in crisis. It is not merely a chemical imbalance in our brains but the melancholic lament of a humanity subjected to relentless demands for performance, deepening inequalities, and creeping precarity. Behind every diagnosis lies the story of…

The Hypocrite’s memory: unveiling the science of acting and recall 

The Hypocrite’s memory: unveiling the science of acting and recall 

Imagine yourself standing on a stage, illuminated by dozens of spotlights, facing an audience hanging on your every word, keenly attuned to even the slightest misstep. And yet, each line, each phrase flows effortlessly from your lips, as if it were etched into your mind. How do theater actors manage to memorize entire pages of…

Unlocking the brain’s potential: How fasting shapes cognition and longevity

Unlocking the brain’s potential: How fasting shapes cognition and longevity

For decades, scientists have been investigating the effects of fasting on physical health. It is now well established that calorie restriction and various forms of fasting can lead to weight loss, improve insulin sensitivity, reduce inflammation, and even extend lifespan. By stimulating autophagy, a cellular recycling and repair process, fasting appears to play a crucial…

Fear unveiled: from instinct to manipulation

Fear unveiled: from instinct to manipulation

Who doesn’t experience fear in this vast world? Even a newborn infant, devoid of understanding or reasoning, cries under the grip of fear. At the core of our being, a microscopic sentinel, the amygdala, stands watch in silence, like a vigilant guardian confronting the unknown. This biological safeguard detects the slightest threat, triggering the fleeting…

Reverse amnesia: How a tennis match revived a forgotten past

Reverse amnesia: How a tennis match revived a forgotten past

Memory, which links us to our past and shapes our sense of identity, is the thread that allows us to recognize ourselves over time. But what happens when this thread breaks, when memories fade, and the past becomes inaccessible? Retrograde amnesia is a world where landmarks disappear, leaving individuals adrift in a present without roots….

Reading minds in bone: The rise and fall of Phrenology

Reading minds in bone: The rise and fall of Phrenology

During a time when science was still struggling to unravel the brain’s mysteries, an idea both audacious and alluring began to take root. What if the shape of an individual’s skull could reveal their character and intelligence? In the late 18th century, the German physician Franz Joseph Gall proposed a hypothesis that would leave an…

Beyond appearances: Bridging authentic identity and self worth

Beyond appearances: Bridging authentic identity and self worth

We have all experienced those faint whispers and inner murmurs, sometimes reassuring, sometimes critical, that shape how we see ourselves. This intimate dialogue, at times gentle and at times unrelenting, defines the contours of our self-esteem, oscillating between certainty and doubt, light and shadow. Some people judge themselves with unyielding severity, tracking every perceived flaw…

The crowd: A study of the popular mind – A visionary look into group dynamics

The crowd: A study of the popular mind – A visionary look into group dynamics

In 1895, the French physician and sociologist Gustave Le Bon published The Crowd: A Study of the Popular Mind, a timeless classic in the fields of social and political psychology. This work delves into the dynamics of crowds and their impact on human behavior, a theme that remains remarkably relevant in today’s era of social media…

Le phénomène du « déjà vu »

Déjà Vu: The neuroscience and mystery behind the feeling

Sometimes, in the midst of an ordinary moment, a scene, location, or conversation can trigger a strange, unsettling feeling: the sense that this instant has already been lived, even though we know that’s impossible. Called “déjà vu,” this phenomenon has intrigued scientists, philosophers, and poets for centuries. It affects about two-thirds of people at some…

Creativity: A Flash of Rebellious Brilliance

Creativity: A Flash of Rebellious Brilliance

Imagine a world without Socrates, without Einstein, without Tesla. A world bereft of Leonardo da Vinci, Beethoven, and Steve Jobs.A world where ideas never spark, where matter remains inert, and canvases bear only soulless colors. No theories to challenge the passage of time, no symphonies to elevate the human spirit, no pixels to transform our…