Articles for category: Politics

How Political Alignment Modulates Neural Activation

The intersection of political cognition and neuroscience has frequently been misread through a deterministic lens: the suggestion that ideology is ‘hardwired’ into neural architecture, thereby predetermining belief or behaviour. The empirical record, however, points in a substantively different direction. Rather than indicating that biology dictates politics, converging evidence from structural and functional neuroimaging suggests that sustained engagement with abstract, culturally constructed frameworks measurably modulates patterns of brain activation. Over time, repeated interpretive habits, attentional priorities, and social identifications appear to leave functional traces—and potentially subtle structural adaptations—in the circuits we use to navigate uncertainty, assess threat, and process social meaning.

Like Donald Trump: Conditional Generosity in the NHS Labyrinth

In the continuing chronicle of Britain’s health‑service governance, the latest development arrives with all the subtlety of a departmental memo announcing that oxygen will henceforth be rationed. The Health Secretary, Wes Streeting, has declared that the thousand additional specialty training posts—previously heralded as a strategic investment in the future workforce—will now be contingent upon resident doctors refraining from industrial action (in BMJ). This conditionality is presented not as coercion but as a sophisticated mechanism of partnership, a term which here appears to mean that one party dictates terms while the other is invited to be grateful. But the logic –