In this blog post, we will examine Frank Keil’s virtual animal transformation experiment to explore how appearance and underlying essence create differences in category judgments. This will help us easily understand the cognitive principles behind how we classify objects. How do people determine what a new object is when they encounter it? This directly relates to the problem of...
How does object-oriented programming in C++ differ from procedural programming, and how is it implemented?
In this blog post, we’ll examine how object-oriented programming differs from procedural programming and explore how this concept is implemented in C++. In the early days of programming, shortly after computers were developed, procedural programming was the mainstream concept. Procedural programming is the concept of executing user-input code in a predetermined sequence. As time...
How is BIM transforming the future of architecture, and what innovations will it bring?
BIM (Building Information Modeling) integrates design, construction, and management to reduce costs and increase efficiency. Future architecture is becoming more precise and innovative through BIM, with adoption cases increasing globally. The game ‘Minecraft’ gained popularity by allowing users to do virtually anything within a world composed entirely of cubes. Its originality and...
Can marine plant designers predict and design for a once-in-a-millennium wave?
This blog post explores the prediction techniques and design processes used by designers to safely engineer marine plants even under extreme natural conditions. Can we predict the next 1000 years? Of course, accurately predicting all the changes and events that will occur over a thousand years is extremely difficult, bordering on impossible. Often, it’s even hard to anticipate events...
Can the connectome created by 86 billion neurons truly determine our thoughts and emotions?
This blog post explores how the connectome—the network of connections among 86 billion neurons—shapes our thoughts and emotions. Our bodies are made of cells. We have approximately 37.2 trillion cells, and about 86 billion of these make up the brain. These brain cells are called neurons. A single neuron is broadly divided into three parts: the dendrite, the cell body, and the axon...
Was the 1920 Great Debate the first step toward understanding the nature of the universe?
This blog post examines whether the debate over the size and nature of the universe during the 1920 ‘Great Debate’ served as the starting point for modern cosmology, and reflects on its historical significance. On April 26, 1920, approximately 300 scientists were invited to a National Academy of Sciences debate held in the Baird Auditorium of the Smithsonian National Museum of Natural...
Why haven’t we become wealthy amid the investment craze?
This blog post calmly examines why the investment craze failed to build personal wealth, exploring the structure of financial capitalism and the reality of a bank-centric investment system. It also questions the nature of the risks individuals have come to bear. The Beginnings of Financial Capitalism In a capitalist society where money functions as the supreme value, we all dream of...
Why can’t we become happier just by saving anymore?
This blog post calmly examines the background behind why savings-centered thinking no longer guarantees personal happiness, through three axes: financial literacy, family education, and changes in social structure. Financial Literacy Survey of Elementary Students Some people may find that the more they learn about financial products, the more confused they become, and the less confident...
Why does capitalism demand consumption even for things we don’t need?
This blog post examines how capitalism mobilizes marketing and surveillance technology to create unnecessary desires in order to absorb surplus production, exploring this structure through everyday consumer experiences. Marketing that manipulates us In capitalist society, consumer marketing grows increasingly sophisticated over time, sparing no effort to develop new marketing techniques...
Why has the coffee market become monopolistic competition rather than perfect competition?
This blog post examines why the specialty coffee shop market operates as monopolistic competition rather than perfect competition, using the Starbucks case study, and unpacks the logic of the market structure created by price, differentiation, and narrative. The Reality of the Coffee Market That Perfect Competition Cannot Explain Starbucks is the undisputed leader in Korea’s coffee...