Replicating Milgram's shock experiments reveals not blind obedience but deep moral conflict
By Michael Shermer | Nov 12, 2012 | 12
Subliminal influences guide our voting preferences
By Michael Shermer | Sep 25, 2012 | 27
Why people who believe in one conspiracy are prone to believe others
By Michael Shermer | Aug 18, 2012 | 94
Volition as self-control exerts veto power over impulses
By Michael Shermer | Jul 26, 2012 | 52
The death of the brain means subjective experiences are neurochemistry
By Michael Shermer | Jun 28, 2012 | 44
The death of the brain means subjective experiences are neurochemistry
By Michael Shermer | Jun 27, 2012 | 94
Morality binds us together into cohesive groups but blinds us to the ideas and motives of those in other groups
By Michael Shermer | Jun 13, 2012 | 40
Science closes in on why there is something instead of nothing
By Michael Shermer | Apr 27, 2012 | 76
How awareness of our mortality may be a major driver of civilization
By Michael Shermer | Apr 6, 2012 | 71
The willful distortion of reality to extremes can be harmful
By Michael Shermer | Mar 14, 2012 | 8
How deception leads to self-deception
By Michael Shermer | Feb 4, 2012 | 15
YES! Send me a free issue of Scientific American with no obligation to continue the subscription. If I like it, I will be billed for the one-year subscription.