Big Think
- Posted on Monday June 30, 2025

Developed by Chan Kim and Renée Mauborgne, two professors of strategy at INSEAD [business school], the central idea of blue ocean strategy is that instead of competing directly with competitors in an existing market, organizations should focus on finding new markets. There are several reasons for this approach, but the most compelling is clear: the opportunity to create a monopoly and reap the returns before competitors enter the new market you have created. Examples include the rise of disruptive businesses and innovators such as Apple, Airbnb and Amazon. Kim and Mauborgne identified their approach to strategy based on a study of 150 strategic business moves spanning more than 100 years across 30 sectors. Their insights were first published in 2004 in a Harvard Business Review article, and then in 2005 in their book Blue Ocean Strategy.
About the idea
Blue Ocean Strategy outlines two attitudes to competition: red oceans and blue oceans. The current marketplace for all products and services are made up of red oceans (bloody battlegrounds) where boundaries are clearly defined, and organizations operate within them. Here, organizations compete to ... Continue Reading » - Posted on Monday June 30, 2025
According to philosopher Meghan Sullivan, effective altruism may overlook the moral importance of seeing others as individuals. She explains how love should guide how we care for both present and future humans.
This video A philosopher’s guide to caring deeply is featured on Big Think.
Continue Reading » - Posted on Monday June 30, 2025

Observing the night sky consistently produces wondrous feelings of awe.
This image, taken in April of 2025, shows the completed and operational Vera C. Rubin Observatory with its dome open during its First Look observation activities. Overhead, the Beehive Cluster (Messier 41) shines bright, while below, the glow of nearby small cities shines in this mountainous landscape.
Credit: RubinObs/NOIRLab/SLAC/NSF/DOE/AURA/P. Horálek (Institute of Physics in Opava)
Overhead, the Moon, planets, and thousands of stars await.
It only happens once every 11 years, but occasionally, all five naked-eye planets are visible at once. Mercury is always the toughest to spot due to its proximity to the Sun, but sometimes Mars appears even smaller in angular diameter than Mercury. Venus is always the brightest planet, followed by Jupiter, and then usually followed by Mars and then either Mercury or Saturn, although any of those latter three is capable of outshining the others. Under favorable conditions, the much fainter but still technically naked-eye planet Uranus is sometimes visible as well. Here, the Moon is the bright point near Jupiter.
Credit: Martin Dolan
The Milky Way’s plane, plus several deep-sky objects, ... Continue Reading » - Posted on Saturday June 28, 2025

Aging is a privilege — one not guaranteed to everyone. Old age and good health often appear to be mutually exclusive paradigms. In Greek mythology, Tithonus was granted immortality by Zeus, but not eternal youth. As he ages, Tithonus laments his progressively frail body and eventually craves his own death. What Tithonus shows us, aside from being careful what we wish for, is the disparity between lifespan and healthspan. That is, not just the number of years we live, but how many of those we are healthy for. The key is optimizing for both, and the power is in our hands more than we realize.
Mainstream medical advice, quite correctly, pulls our focus onto diet, exercise, and sleep as the central pillars of optimal health. However, as interest in the field of longevity grows, we’re learning more about other ways to enhance our health behaviors, some of which are surprisingly easy to incorporate into daily life.
Ultra-processed foods
Good health often lies in what we ingest daily. We all know fruit and vegetables — especially those free from pesticides — are nutritionally favorable, ... Continue Reading » - Posted on Friday June 27, 2025

Dame Agatha Christie stacked up quite the body count during her long and esteemed career. The “Duchess of Death” wrote 66 detective novels, 14 short story collections, and 20 plays. Across those tales, her many victims were shot, bludgeoned, stabbed, electrocuted, strangled, run over, drowned, axed, and pushed off all manner of precipitous edges — from stairs to cliff sides — to let gravity sort out the messier details.
Christie has probably envisioned more creative ways to murder someone than Hannibal Lecter, Dexter Morgan, and Freddy Krueger combined, and readers have enjoyed solving her puzzle-box stories for a century — making her one of, if not the bestselling author of all time.
I’m one such reader. I’ve adored Christie’s stories since I picked up a well-worn Pocket Books edition of Murder on the Orient Express in a used bookstore my freshman year. The book is considerably older than I am yet retains a treasured perch on my bookshelf — that subtle fragrance of vanilla aged books acquire growing stronger with each reread. Value for money, it is easily the best $2 I’ve ... Continue Reading » - Posted on Friday June 27, 2025
What if the smartest person in the room isn’t the CEO—but the one who understands the books? Accounting expert Kelly Richmond Pope illuminates how accounting shapes the way we see power, trust, and truth, and how it’s often used to hide some of the biggest corporate lies in plain sight.
Most people think accountants just crunch numbers, but as Pope reveals, they decode intent.
This video Legal fraud: How the books get cooked is featured on Big Think.
Continue Reading » - Posted on Friday June 27, 2025

Out there in the Universe, there are both discoveries just waiting to be made and cosmic puzzles just waiting to be solved. We have an incredibly robust picture of our cosmos, at present. We know the hot Big Bang marked the beginning of our Universe as we know it some 13.8 billion years ago, set up by a preceding period of cosmic inflation that seeded the Universe with fluctuations that would eventually grow into stars, galaxies, and the cosmic web. We know that, today, our Universe is still expanding and cooling, and isn’t just full of normal matter and radiation, but large amounts of dark matter and — for the last ~6 billion years — dark energy has been causing the expansion of the Universe to accelerate.
But even with the advances brought by cutting edge observatories like Hubble, ALMA, and JWST, much remains unknown. We still haven’t found the first stars. We don’t know why there’s more matter than antimatter in the Universe. We don’t have a resolution to the Hubble tension, or why different methods of measuring the expansion ... Continue Reading » - Posted on Thursday June 26, 2025

In a brilliant essay for Noema, philosopher Shannon Vallor dismantles the seductive myth of “superhuman” AI. We hear the phrase everywhere — from tech founders to policymakers — but Vallor warns it’s more than hype: it’s a quiet erosion of what it means to be human.
When we label machines as superhuman, we reduce ourselves to task-completing automatons and ignore the richness of consciousness, empathy, and moral imagination. To Vallor, this isn’t just a philosophical quibble.
As Vallor writes, “By describing as superhuman a thing that is entirely insensible and unthinking, we implicitly erase the concept of a ‘human.’” In a world obsessed with efficiency, we risk forgetting what really matters: not speed, but meaning. Her call is clear and urgent — before we let AI define us, we need to remember who we are.
Key quote: “Today’s powerful AI systems lack even the most basic features of human minds; they do not share with humans what we call consciousness or sentience, the related capacity to feel things like pain, joy, fear and love. Nor do they have the slightest sense of their ... Continue Reading » - Posted on Thursday June 26, 2025
What if the chaos in your life (and in the world as a whole) isn’t caused by evil, but caused by ordinary people trapped in bad mindsets? The real enemy, Sam Harris argues, isn’t each other. It’s the stories that we so often mistake for the truth.
If you’re burned out, stuck in anger, feeling devoid of compassion, Harris offers clarity, and a path to escaping your mind.
This video Sam Harris: Breaking the thought trap of anger is featured on Big Think.
Continue Reading » - Posted on Thursday June 26, 2025

The Universe we know today, filled with stars and galaxies across the great cosmic abyss, hasn’t been around forever. Despite the fact that there are several trillions of galaxies visible to us, spanning distances of tens of billions of light-years, there’s a limit to how far away we can look. Even here in the JWST era, the most distant galaxy we’ve ever seen is located an impressive 34 billion light-years away, with its light corresponding to a time where the Universe was a mere 280 million years old: just 2% of its current age. Why can’t we see farther than that? The reason isn’t because the Universe is finite — in fact, it may well be infinite after all — but rather because it had a beginning that occurred a finite amount of time ago: the Big Bang.
The fact that we can:
look at our Universe today,
see it expanding and cooling,
and infer our cosmic origins from what we observe,
is one of the most profound scientific achievements of the 20th century. The Universe began from a hot, dense, matter-and-radiation filled state some 13.8 billion years ago, ... Continue Reading »
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