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The Human Natures project: assessing and understanding transdisciplinary approaches to Culture, Biology and Human uniqueness

The Embodiment of Worship: Relations Among Postural, Psychological, and Physiological Aspects of Religious Practice

Conceptual Problems in Unification Theories

Enduring Character Virtues: How After-School Organized Activities Support Character Development from Childhood through Young Adulthood

The Emergence of Prosocial Religions: How Cultural Evolution Favored Beliefs and Rituals that Galvanize Large-scale Cooperation

The Real Danger of Nightmares

Neuroscientist Patrick McNamara offers one of the most startling accounts of nightmares that I have ever heard.  In this video for The Well, the Boston University associate professor of neurology first offers the benefits of REM sleep — its association with creative capacities and religious consciousness in humans—and then proceeds to dig into its darker aspect: nightmares.  First, he observes something I had not appreciated, which is that people with a certain neurobiology are more prone to have nightmares, and that this tendency seems to be related to having more dissociative episodes (periods of being disconnected from reality) when awake. …

What Is Organism-Centered Evolution?

Prize Competition to Promote Future Mindedness in Capital Markets

The Role of Religion in Social Change: The Case of “Secret Society” Religions

Promoting Intellectual Humility Among Middle-School Students: Developing an Educational Film and Preliminary Intervention Strategy