Home

Think Again - a Big Think Podcast

We surprise some of the world's brightest minds with ideas they're not at all prepared to discuss. W

Episodes

Total: 237

NOTE: This is a special guest episode of Jason's new podcast Clever Creature. Please subscribe on iT

[From February through March 22, 2020 (his last day hosting Think Again) Jason will be revisiting fa

[From February through March 22, 2020 (his last day hosting Think Again) Jason will be revisiting fa

[From February through March 22, 2020 (his last day hosting Think Again) Jason will be revisiting fa

[From February through March 22, 2020 (his last day hosting Think Again) Jason will be revisiting fa

[From February through March 22, 2020 (his last day hosting Think Again) Jason will be revisiting fa

[From February through March 22, 2020 (his last day hosting Think Again) Jason will be revisiting fa

[From February through March 22, 2020 (his last day hosting Think Again) Jason will be revisiting fa

Since 1976, Sharon Salzberg has been sharing ancient meditation and mindfulness practices in a voice

Thelma and Louise, Ponch and John, Pancho and Lefty, Quixote and Sancho Panza, Marx and Engels, Marx

Freedom. Everyone wants it, but knowing where to look for it is another matter. And to make matters

If you’d told me a couple months ago that a podcast about Dolly Parton could move me deeply and rais

The other day on social media a friend asked what the heck is up with this Mr. Rogers revival. Why d

I’ve spent more of my life than most people I know immersed by choice in what my guest today would c

While reading Deborah Levy’s novel THE MAN WHO SAW EVERYTHING and her recent “working autobiography”

The phrase “common sense” can be misleading. The way we use it in casual conversation, it means some

“Maybe the opposite of goodness is not evil. Maybe the opposite of goodness is, in fact, numbness.” 

Some experiences change you so completely that you’re left with a choice: either spend your life run

Do you have a body? I do, but I was mostly unaware of this fact until somewhere in my mid-30s, when

I grew up in the almost entirely white suburbs of 1980’s Bethesda, Maryland thinking of myself and m