Kathryn Schulz
Kathryn Schulz
================
Full Name and Common Aliases
------------------------------
Kathryn Schulz is the American journalist and author known for her insightful commentary on politics, philosophy, and culture.
Birth and Death Dates
-------------------------
Kathryn Schulz was born in 1979 (exact date not publicly available). Her current status as alive makes this section unnecessary.
Nationality and Profession(s)
--------------------------------
American journalist and author Kathryn Schulz is a prominent figure in the media landscape. She writes for leading publications, including The New Yorker and The New York Times.
Early Life and Background
-----------------------------
Growing up in a family of journalists instilled in Schulz a passion for storytelling from an early age. Her upbringing likely contributed to her interest in exploring complex ideas through narrative writing. With a natural affinity for language and an insatiable curiosity, she began pursuing a career as a journalist.
Major Accomplishments
-------------------------
Kathryn Schulz's work has garnered significant attention due to its thought-provoking nature. Notably:
Pulitzer Prize for Feature Writing (2016): Schulz won this prestigious award for her article "The Really Big One," published in The New Yorker.
National Magazine Award for Feature Writing (2014): This recognition acknowledged her piece "A Small Furry Problem" in The New Yorker.
Notable Works or Actions
---------------------------
Schulz's writing often delves into the intersection of politics, philosophy, and culture. Some notable works include:
The Really Big One: A feature article exploring the risks associated with a potential earthquake in the Pacific Northwest.
A Small Furry Problem: A piece examining the complexities surrounding human-animal relationships.
Impact and Legacy
----------------------
Kathryn Schulz's contributions to journalism have had a profound impact on readers worldwide. Her work:
Challenges readers' perspectives, encouraging them to reevaluate their assumptions about complex issues.
Inspires discussions and debates within communities, fostering engagement with pressing social and cultural concerns.
Why They Are Widely Quoted or Remembered
-----------------------------------------
Schulz's insightful commentary and nuanced storytelling have earned her a reputation as a thought leader. Her:
Ability to distill intricate concepts into accessible narratives has made her writing both informative and engaging.
Commitment to exploring pressing issues with clarity and sensitivity has endeared her to readers seeking thoughtful analysis.
Kathryn Schulz's dedication to her craft, coupled with her unique perspective on the world, has solidified her position as a respected voice in contemporary journalism.
Quotes by Kathryn Schulz

The point isn't to live without any regrets. The point is to not hate ourselves for having them.

The fact is, with the exception of our own minds, no power on earth has the consistent and absolute ability to convince us that we are wrong. However much we might be prompted by cues from other people or our environment, the choice to face up to error is ultimately ours alone.

The world is outside us; our senses are within us. How, then, do the two come together so that we can know something? Obviously our senses can’t go forth and drag an actual chunk if the world back to their internal lair, intact and as is, for the benefit of the rest if the brain.

If imagination is what enables us to conceive of and enjoy stories other than our own, and if empathy is the act of taking other people’s stories seriously, certainty deadens or destroys both qualities. When we are caught up in our own convictions, other people’s stories – which is to say, other people – cease to matter to us.

Our brains are not actually duplex apartments occupied by feuding neighbors, and how we bring about the complicated act of deceiving ourselves remains a mystery.

But nor is the willing embrace of error always beyond us. In fact, this might be the most important thing illusions can teach us: that it is possible, at least some of the time, to find in being wrong a deeper satisfaction than we would have found in being right.

This was the pivotal insight of the Scientific Revolution: that the advancement of knowledge depends on current theories collapsing in the face of new insights and discoveries. In this model of progress, errors do not lead us away from the truth. Instead, they edge us incrementally toward it.

There tore through me a transformation with the force of a river which, dammed up and diverted for a lifetime, bursts its way back to its true channel. I became what I was. I ceased to be what I was not.

As with scientists, so too with the rest of us. Sometimes in life we find ourselves between jobs, and sometimes we find ourselves between lovers, and sometimes we find ourselves between homes. But we almost never find ourselves between theories. Rather than assess a belief on its own merits, we choose among beliefs, clinging to our current ones until something better comes along.

Freud, as I’ve already noted, believed that the false worlds of our dreams reveal deep and hidden truths about ourselves.