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The TED talk will never be the same

Back in the late 90’s as a college student, I read Wired magazine religiously every month. My brothers did, too. It felt like seeing into the future.

I was surprised some years later when my younger brother told me that he stopped reading Wired. He’d realized that the cool inventions he’d been reading about almost never materialized. I’d never thought of that, but knew he was right. It was aspirational vapor, amazing to see but never real enough to be solid.

The TED talk in the 00’s was the next version of that. This article is worth a read just for the word “inspiresting.”

Back then, around a decade ago, I watched those articulate, audacious, composed people talk about how they were building robots that would eat trash and turn it into oxygen, or whatever, and I felt hopeful about the future. But the trash-eating robots never arrived. With some distance, now, from a world in which TED seemed to offer a bright path forward, it’s time to ask: what exactly is TED? And what happened to the future it envisioned?

What Was the TED Talk? - The Drift

(via Dense Discovery, a favorite newsletter)

Why “Follow Your Passion” Is Bad Advice

I use Dr. Cech’s research in one of my classes, and this article is a nice summary by her on how it can be perilous to “Follow Your Passion.” I wish we could scrub the advice from every graduation speech given every year. There are better ways to inspire the next generation.

Yet, what I found is that following one’s passion does not necessarily lead to fulfillment, but is one of the most powerful cultural forces perpetuating overwork. I also found that promoting the pursuit of one’s passion helps perpetuate social inequalities due to the fact that not everyone has the same economic resources to allow them to pursue their passion with ease. What follows are five major pitfalls of the passion principle that I discovered through my research.

5 drawbacks to following your passion | Cech

Humility in Eight Ways

Humility is often seen as a single trait, but this article makes the case that there are different kinds of humility, and they serve different purposes. As a parent, I could have used more familial humility a lot of times as my sons can attest.

We’re also learning that there are many different kinds of humility—and that each one can have limitations…Here’s an overview of eight varieties of humility—and of all the ways they can keep us grounded even in the face of injustices.

The Eight Kinds of Humility That Can Help You Stay Grounded | Ravi Chandra

A study of high-stakes, anonymous generosity

Related to yesterday’s post: Many studies of generosity have been done over the years, but with relatively small amounts. To study high-stakes generosity, you need a lot of research funding to give to study participants.

That’s what these researchers were able to do, and the results show that people are quite generous in large amounts, and will be generous even without social praise.

How generous are people when making consequential financial decisions in the real world? We took advantage of a rare opportunity to examine generosity among a diverse sample of adults who received a gift of U.S. $10,000 from a pair of wealthy donors, with nearly no strings attached. Two-hundred participants were drawn from three low-income countries (Indonesia, Brazil, and Kenya) and four high-income countries (Australia, Canada, the United Kingdom, and the United States) as part of a preregistered study. On average, participants spent over $6,400 on purchases that benefited others, including nearly $1,700 on donations to charity, suggesting that humans exhibit remarkable generosity even when the stakes are high. To address whether generosity was driven by reputational concerns, we asked half the participants to share their spending decisions publicly on Twitter, whereas the other half were asked to keep their spending private. Generous spending was similar between the groups, in contrast to our preregistered hypothesis that enhancing reputational concerns would increase generosity.

Are People Generous When the Financial Stakes Are High? | Sage Journals

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