Blog
What Pixar Understood About Emotions That 2,000 Years of Philosophy Got Wrong
Four principles of emotional intelligence, why sadness isn't the enemy of happiness, and what Inside Out reveals about how the brain actually works
Beauty Is Already Running Your Life — You Just Don't Notice
How the science of beauty quietly shapes what you eat, where you live, what you buy, and who you trust — a capstone connecting ten posts of neuroaesthetics to daily life
Why a Forgery Looks Ugly the Moment You Learn It's Fake
How origin, history, and hidden essences shape our pleasure from art, food, and people — and why you can't enjoy a Nazi's favorite painting once you know it's a fake
What Makes a Face Beautiful and How Much of It Is Biology?
Cross-cultural studies, infant preferences, and the uncomfortable history of measuring facial attractiveness — plus why babies and isolated tribes agree on beauty more than you'd expect
Your Brain Rewards You for Seeing What Artists Want You to See
How peak shift, Bayesian perception, and perceptual grouping explain why art works — and why artists have been exploiting your visual system for centuries
Four Theories That Try to Explain Why You Like What You Like
Mere exposure, arousal dynamics, prototype theory, and fluency — how psychologists have tried to crack the code of aesthetic preference, and where each theory breaks down
How Do You Actually Study Beauty in a Lab?
What happens when researchers try to measure something as subjective as beauty — and why the gap between what we feel and what we can test matters
Can You Like Something Beautiful Without Wanting It?
Kant's four features of aesthetic judgment, the neuroscience of liking versus wanting, and why your brain treats beauty differently from simple pleasure
What Would the World Look Like Without Beauty?
A first look at why aesthetics shapes nearly every decision we make — from organizing browser tabs to choosing a life partner
Why Your Brain Decides Something Is Beautiful Before You Do
How symmetry, exposure, arousal, and grouping shape aesthetic judgment — and why a serial killer, a blurry portrait, and a Lego set prove the point









