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How Much of Communication Is Nonverbal?

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How Much of Communication Is Nonverbal? The famous number is less useful than the mismatch it points to. Framing the Question A room can agree before it believes. You have seen it happen. The executive says, “We are aligned.” Heads nod. Nobody objects. The meeting ends with a decision that looks clean on the page. Then the side conversations begin: one team quietly disagrees, another waits to see who will move first, and the person who said “sounds good” starts rewriting the plan in Slack. That is why people ask, “How much of communication is nonverbal?” They are not really asking for a percentage. They are asking why the official message often feels less true than the room around it. The famous answer is that 93% of communication is nonverbal. It sounds powerful. It is also misleading. The better answer is this: nonverbal communication matters most when words and signals stop matching. The Truth, There Is No Universal Percentage There is no reliable rule that says a fixed percentage o...

Can We Exhaust Human Intelligence?

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Can We Exhaust Human Intelligence? The mind is not a battery. It is a living system that depends on the conditions around it. Framing the Question Can we exhaust human intelligence? The question matters because we are living through a strange reversal: machines are producing more answers while many humans feel less able to think clearly. Work is faster, feeds are louder, AI is more capable, and attention is more fragmented. So the real issue is not whether intelligence disappears. It is whether we are draining the conditions that allow intelligence to show up. Intelligence Doesn’t Run Out. Its Conditions Do. We probably cannot exhaust human intelligence the way we exhaust fuel, money, or patience. Intelligence is not a pile of answers that gets used up. It is a living capacity: to notice, compare, imagine, judge, connect, doubt, and ask again. But we can exhaust the conditions that support it. We can overload attention. We can crowd out reflection. We can reward fast answers so consist...

What, Then, Is Time?

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What, Then, Is Time? The question behind every deadline, memory, and decision. Framing the Question What is time? The question sounds abstract until it shows up as a missed deadline, a child growing up too fast, a meeting that should have been an email, or a memory that still feels present ten years later. We treat time as if it were one thing: something to save, spend, waste, measure, or run out of. But the deeper problem is that we often confuse different kinds of time and then make poor decisions inside the confusion. To ask “What, then, is time?” is really to ask which clock is ruling your life. Time Is Not One Thing T ime is the ordering of change, the measurement of duration, and the human experience of before, now, and next. That answer is deliberately layered because time has layers. Physics gives us measurable time. Memory gives us felt time. Planning gives us future time. Culture gives us scheduled time. Mortality gives time its weight. Saint Augustine made the question famou...

What Is the Difference Between Authority and Leadership?

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What Is the Difference Between Authority and Leadership? Authority can open the room. Leadership changes what happens inside it. Framing the Question The difference between authority and leadership matters because many teams confuse permission with progress. Authority is the formal right to decide, direct, approve, reward, or stop something. Leadership is the practice of helping people face reality, make better choices, and move toward a purpose they may not fully understand yet. When the two are confused, organizations either wait for permission or mistake compliance for commitment. Authority Creates Motion. Leadership Creates Judgment. Authority is a position people recognize; leadership is behavior people experience. Authority can be granted by a job title, policy, expertise, rank, ownership, or control over resources. Leadership has to be earned repeatedly through judgment, courage, clarity, and the ability to help others do difficult work. Picture a product team at 4:45 p.m. on a ...