Blog
Scott Mann, in Nobody is Coming to Save You looks at ways to manage the mess of high emotions that makes us both polarized and violent.
If we want to avoid being at the behest of pathological leaders and their dysfunctional politics, we will need a citizen that has more knowledge of psychology: of both his or her own, and that of their leaders.
The tendency for power to attract pathologically ruthless and narcissistic people is resulting in the creation of "pathocracies" – rule by the pathological.
Can a 14th century Muslim polymath’s ideas about the rise and fall of societies explain the situation in today’s Middle East, and particularly in Israel?
When formulating foreign policy, domestic considerations are important, but they are only one piece of the puzzle.
In his World War Two memoir, Singapore: The Japanese Version, Colonel Masanobu Tsuji provides a different perspective on Japan’s war effort in Southeast Asia, and our conception of the “enemy.”
America’s departure from the Old World and its sense of can-do pragmatism have a built-in downside: it is less capable than other cultures to read the more intangible tribal identity codes and motivations of other societies.
In his book War and Peace and War: The Rise and Fall of Empires, Peter Turchin illustrates the role of group cohesion in the success of nations.
The recent Pentagon documents leak, which partly demonstrates the degree to which more and more information is subject to classification, is yet another example of a world obsessed with increasingly minute degrees of control.
Mattias Desmet’s The Psychology of Totalitarianism puts forward a compelling new theory about unconscious group behaviour in the political sphere.