The All-or-Nothing Marriage Do we expect too much? http://t.co/o8qdQAJwe5
— danariely (@danariely) February 17, 2014
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The All-or-Nothing Marriage Do we expect too much? http://t.co/o8qdQAJwe5
— danariely (@danariely) February 17, 2014
via http://ift.tt/qeHnni
“When it comes to Iran, Russia’s goal is not to help the United States keep Iran from becoming a nuclear power or to stabilize the Middle East. That outcome would be excellent for the United States, and horrible for Russia; American power in Russia’s backyard would grow, and the price of oil would nosedive, reducing Russia’s biggest source of income. Ditto on nuclear disarmament.[…] President Obama’s foreign policy goals put him in fundamental opposition to Putin. it’s a fact that if the world goes Obama’s way, Putin’s Russia will be squeezed out of the ranks of great powers. “
“It was the shift in attention from a full focus on the outside world to a split focus on external stimuli and internal world-modeling, Buckner theorizes, that accounted for the cognitive leaps that eventually separated modern man from his ape ancestors.”
“Such ups and downs in oxygen contents have always taken place on Earth. However, we shall not expect any dramatic fluctuations in the future, assures Emma Hammarlund. Today there is so much of the planet’s carbon stored in underground rocks that cannot be released and react with oxygen. Only a gigantic disaster, for example if another planet crashed into Earth, could release this hard-bound carbon.”
“One of science’s strongest dogmas is that complex life on Earth could only evolve when oxygen levels in the atmosphere rose to close to modern levels. But now studies of a small sea sponge fished out of a Danish Fjord shows that complex life does not need high levels of oxygen in order to live and grow.”
My answer to "What does it feel like to meet your biological parent(s) or sibling(s) for the first time?" http://t.co/1Vlmxb8XkK
— David Cole (@irondavy) February 16, 2014
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“Burke said that in the past, there was only one truth, put there by the ruling class to ensure everyone behaved in the same way. But that’s changing.”
Now me: that's a mixed bag because it has also allowed opinion to seem as valid as empirical evidence. Have to take bad w/ good I guess.
— Dan Turkenkopf (@dturkenk) February 17, 2014
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Interesting short post from @acroll with insight from James Burke on how the internet has democratized truth http://t.co/8vEYn7ujBv <cont>
— Dan Turkenkopf (@dturkenk) February 17, 2014
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‘“Birdhouse in Your Soul” refuses to be about one single thing, and elsewhere on the album, this refusal hits fever pitch. On the would-be theme song “They Might Be Giants,” the band uncorks a flood of all the things they might be, never quite hammering down what they are: […]The answer never comes, of course. That sort of ambiguity was the point.’
“…this has made customer loyalty pretty much a thing of the past. Only twenty-five per cent of American respondents in a recent Ernst & Young study said that brand loyalty affected how they shopped.”
@kenarneson It's like a box of chocolates. You never know what it will put on the page.
— Dan McLaughlin (@baseballcrank) February 15, 2014
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— Ian Miller (@teen_archer) February 13, 2014
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American Girl catalog has arrived and lived up to every expectation! https://t.co/wTlzxkFzx9
— Vanessa (Van) Demske (@vdemske) February 13, 2014
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It took over a decade, but we finally completed a recreation of tables-for-layout in CSS: http://t.co/Lee7OZuF4P http://ift.tt/1j0lepN
— Matt Haughey (@mathowie) February 11, 2014
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The psychology of trust in work and love – fascinating read http://t.co/HzZGZr1kXZ #longreads
— Maria Popova (@brainpicker) February 9, 2014
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@kenarneson nice BP 2014 piece. Thanks
— Bleacherdave (@Bleacherdave) February 11, 2014
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