Today’s Solutions: May 16, 2026

Neuroscientists are discovering what Buddhists have believed for ages: our self is not constant, but ever-changing. A new paper, published in Trends in Cognitive Sciences this month, links the Buddhist belief to physical areas of the brain. There’s scientific evidence that “self-processing in the brain is not instantiated in a particular region or network, but rather extends to a broad range of fluctuating neural processes that do not appear to be self specific,” write the authors. As Even Thompson, a philosophy of mind professor at the University of British Columbia, says, “There’s nothing that corresponds to the sense that there’s an unchanging self.”

Solutions News Source Print this article
More of Today's Solutions

A daycare built a ‘forest floor’, and it changed kids’ immu...

Time in nature is valuable for children’s physical and mental health, so one daycare in Finland decided to invest in a playground that replicated ...

Read More

This 30-minute training can help teenagers’ response to stress

Many successful people live by the expression “in every tragedy, there is an opportunity.” It turns out that the same kind of thinking can ...

Read More

The ongoing success of the 4-day workweek: a year in, companies share insights

Nearly 61 British businesses made the historic switch to a four-day workweek in 2022, setting in motion a cascade of beneficial effects that are still ...

Read More

Bartering is back: how to trade your skills and goods without spending a dime

BY THE OPTIMIST DAILY EDITORIAL TEAM In a world where we’re used to swiping cards and tapping phones to pay, it might seem old-fashioned ...

Read More