Essays
Essays on clarity, regulation, identity, and coherence.
This series consists of long-form psychological essays focused on understanding how attention, emotion, identity, and meaning function under modern conditions. These pieces are analytic rather than reactive, and explanatory rather than persuasive. They are written to clarify underlying psychological structures, not to comment on current events or offer personal guidance. The emphasis is on coherence: how inner life organizes itself, where it breaks down, and what allows it to stabilize again.
The Hidden Psychology Driving the Decline of Critical Thinking
Critical thinking is declining not from lack of intelligence but from environments that discourage it. This article explores how cognitive overload, algorithmic curation, and social reinforcement erode deep analysis, and how intentional effort can help reclaim thoughtful engagement.
The Psychology of Cheap Content
In an age of viral snippets, society increasingly mistakes cheap content for real value. This article explores how shallow engagement erodes critical thinking and argues that reclaiming depth requires resisting algorithmic ease and intentionally prioritizing substance over superficiality.
Misinformation and Political Polarization: A Social Psychology Perspective
Misinformation thrives in polarized environments by exploiting tribal psychology and group identity. This article explores how confirmation bias and motivated reasoning fuel echo chambers and argues that breaking the cycle requires addressing the social needs behind polarization, not just correcting facts.
Heuristics and Schemas: Mental Shortcuts and Frameworks
Heuristics and schemas are cognitive shortcuts that aid quick thinking but often lead to biases and errors. This article explores how these mental frameworks shape perception and decision-making, and how recognizing their influence can help us think more deliberately and accurately.