Engaging, research-driven talks on disinformation, critical thinking, and the cultural and technological forces shaping belief in the modern world
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Why do intelligent, well-informed people believe things that aren’t true?
This talk explores the cognitive habits, emotional pressures, and social dynamics that make all of us vulnerable to misinformation. Rather than focusing on “other people,” it examines how belief formation works—and how easily it can go wrong.
Audience takeaways:
Why intelligence doesn’t protect against bad beliefs
How cognitive biases actually operate in real-world situations
Practical ways to slow down flawed reasoning
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We are all now operating in a manipulated information environment.
This talk examines how disinformation is created, amplified, and targeted by bad actors, algorithms, and sometimes by accident. It provides practical tools for recognizing and resisting manipulation without becoming cynical or disengaged.
Audience takeaways:
How modern misinformation ecosystems function
How emotional manipulation drives engagement
Strategies for navigating information without burnout or paranoia
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False claims spread further and faster than the truth, but why?
Drawing on case studies and research, this talk breaks down the structural and psychological reasons misinformation thrives in modern media systems.
Audience takeaways:
Why false information is often more “shareable” than truth
The role of outrage, novelty, and identity in virality
How platforms unintentionally reward misleading content
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Healthy skepticism is essential, but it can easily go too far.
This talk explores the difference between critical thinking and corrosive distrust, and how to maintain a balanced, evidence-based approach in uncertain environments.
Audience takeaways:
The line between skepticism and conspiracy thinking
How distrust can be both useful and dangerous
A framework for evaluating claims without overcorrecting
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Conspiracy theories don’t emerge from nowhere, they tell us something real.
Using historical and contemporary examples, this talk explores what conspiracy theories reveal about institutions, culture, and collective anxiety while separating insight from error.
Audience takeaways:
Why conspiracy theories persist across time and cultures
What they get right—and where they go wrong
How to engage with believers constructively
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From Cold War paranoia to modern UFO culture.
This talk traces the origins of flying saucer sightings, their connections to real military projects, and how they evolved into one of the most enduring modern myths.
Audience takeaways:
The historical roots of UFO sightings
The role of secrecy, technology, and misinterpretation
How myths evolve alongside real-world events
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What happens when machines can generate convincing falsehoods at scale?
As AI systems become capable of producing realistic text, images, audio, and video, the line between authentic and fabricated information is becoming harder to detect. This talk explores how generative AI is reshaping the landscape of disinformation, and how it may accelerate existing conspiratorial thinking rather than create it from scratch.
Rather than treating AI as a singular threat, this talk situates it within a longer history of media disruption, showing how new technologies amplify familiar cognitive and social vulnerabilities.
Audience takeaways:
Why AI doesn’t create conspiracism—but supercharges it
How synthetic media (text, images, deepfakes) changes trust dynamics
Why “seeing is believing” is no longer reliable
Practical strategies for individuals and organizations navigating AI-generated content