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Think: Episode Archives


  • New Hope for ADHD

    What is ADHD and how can a different learning strategy help when medication can’t necessarily offer enough? We’ll talk this hour with Sandra B. Chapman, Ph.D. and Jacquelyn F. Gamino, Ph.D. who presented the lecture “Get Smart: New Hope for ADHD” earlier this week at the UTD Center for Brain Health’s “The Brain: An Owner’s […]

  • A History of Conversation

    Are we losing the ability to converse and what can be done to preserve the art and practice of conversation in our go-fast society? We’ll find out this hour with essayist Stephen Miller, author of the new book “Conversation: A History of a Declining Art” (Yale, 2008).

  • The Battle for Latin America's Soul

    What does the future hold for Latin America? According to Economist Americas Editor Michael Reid, a prosperous, fairer, and more democratic Latin America is just over the horizon. Reid’s new book on the subject is “Forgotten Continent: The Battle for Latin America’s Soul” (Yale, 2008).

  • The Art of the American Snapshot

    For most of the 20th Century, the traditional camera and the roll of film were ubiquitous household items. Not anymore. The rise of digital photography has spurred some to look back at the snapshot and what it offered as art. We’ll explore that idea this hour with John Rohrbach, Senior Curator of Photographs at the […]

  • The Radical Roots of Civil Rights

    Where did the Civil Rights Movement really get started? According to Yale Historian Glenda Elizabeth Gilmore, we have to look back to the early struggles against Jim Crow in the 1920s and 30s to find the roots of American social justice. She’ll join us this hour to discuss “Defying Dixie: The Radical Roots of Civil […]

  • Art, Science, and the Spiritual

    How are art and science related? We’ll talk this hour with interdisciplinary expert Lynn Gamwell who’s in town for a series of lectures. Gamwell’s work as both a museum director and science professor give her special insight into the relationships between seemingly disparate fields of study. She explores these ideas in her book “Exploring the […]

  • J.M.W. Turner

    Beginning Sunday, North Texans will have the rare chance to view one of the largest and most comprehensive artistic retrospectives ever seen in the United States as the Dallas Museum of Art opens “J. M. W. Turner.” We’ll discuss the exhibit and the artist this evening with Dorothy Kosinski, Senior Curator of Painting and Sculpture […]

  • The Grammys

    What are the Grammy Awards all about this year? We’ll discuss the 50th anniversary of the Grammys, which will be handed out Sunday, and the history of the award this hour with Thor Christensen, Pop Music Critic for the Dallas Morning News.

  • Our Future on a Hotter Planet

    How much could an average global temperature rise of six degrees really change things? The National Geographic Channel will give us a preview with the world premiere of “Six Degrees Could Change the World” at 7pm CT this Sunday (February 10th). We’ll spend this hour with the program’s host, Mark Lynas, a National Geographic Emerging […]

  • Women's Health

    According to the American Heart Association, coronary heart disease is the leading cause of death for American women. We’ll discuss women’s health this hour with Dr. Cara East, Director of the Clinical Cardiovascular Research Center at Baylor University Medical Center and Dr. Robert Hebeler, a cardiothoracic surgeon at Baylor. The free Sister to Sister National […]