The Thought Atlas Podcast

What 20,000 Polygraph Tests Taught Me About Human Nature | David Goldberg

30 min · 30. maj 2026
episode What 20,000 Polygraph Tests Taught Me About Human Nature | David Goldberg cover

Beskrivelse

Truth seems simple. Yet some of the most important moments in our lives revolve around uncertainty: Who can we trust? Why do people lie? Can we ever truly know what someone else believes, remembers, or intends? In this episode of Thought Atlas, I’m joined by David Goldberg [chatgpt://generic-entity?number=0] — nationally recognized polygraph examiner, investigator, military combat veteran, and host of Inside the Polygraph. Over the course of his career, David has conducted more than 20,000 certified polygraph examinations involving criminal investigations, legal disputes, workplace matters, and deeply personal situations where the stakes could not be higher. But this conversation goes far beyond lie detectors. We explore: • Why human beings are fascinated by truth • The psychology of deception • Trust, credibility, and human behavior • Fear, guilt, and shame • Self-deception and personal narratives • What polygraphs actually measure • Why certainty is so difficult to achieve • Relationships and trust-building • The emotional cost of honesty • What decades of investigations reveal about human nature This is not a conversation about catching liars. It’s an exploration of trust, uncertainty, self-awareness, and what happens when people are forced to confront uncomfortable truths. 🌍 Thought Atlas: Thought Atlas [https://joinpodmatch.com/thoughtatlas?utm_source=chatgpt.com] 🌍 David Goldberg: Executive Protection Group Polygraph Services [https://www.polygraphny.com/?utm_source=chatgpt.com]

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episode Why Democracy Is Failing—And It’s Not Because of Politics | Dr. Raymond R. Roberts cover

Why Democracy Is Failing—And It’s Not Because of Politics | Dr. Raymond R. Roberts

Across the world, trust in institutions is weakening, political polarization is deepening, and many people are beginning to wonder whether democracy itself can survive. But according to Dr. Raymond R. Roberts, the crisis we’re experiencing isn’t merely political. It’s moral. It’s spiritual. And it’s cultural. In this episode of Thought Atlas, I’m joined by pastor, ethicist, professor, author, and musician Dr. Raymond R. Roberts. After forty years in ministry and now teaching ethics at the University of Richmond, Dr. Roberts has spent decades exploring the deeper beliefs that sustain healthy societies. His latest book, A Democratic and Republican Faith, argues that democracy depends on much more than laws and elections—it depends on trust, human dignity, moral imagination, and a shared commitment to the common good. Together, we explore: • Why democracy is struggling around the world • The hidden foundations of free societies • Human dignity and moral imagination • Trust and polarization • Faith and public life • Why institutions are losing credibility • The relationship between ethics and democracy • Individualism and the common good • What history teaches us about social decline • Why hope still matters This isn’t a conversation about partisan politics. It’s a conversation about the values and beliefs that make civilization itself possible. 🌍 Thought Atlas https://joinpodmatch.com/thoughtatlas [https://joinpodmatch.com/thoughtatlas] 🌍 Dr. Raymond R. Roberts https://raymondrroberts.org/ [https://raymondrroberts.org/] 📚 Learn more about A Democratic and Republican Faith and Dr. Roberts’ work by visiting his website. Because perhaps democracy doesn’t collapse when people disagree— Perhaps it collapses when they stop believing they belong to one another.

I går44 min
episode Life Kept Knocking Her Down—She Refused to Stay There | Zulma Williams cover

Life Kept Knocking Her Down—She Refused to Stay There | Zulma Williams

What happens when life knocks you down again and again? Abusive relationships. Depression. Immigration. Reinvention. Cancer. And somehow, instead of becoming bitter, you become stronger. In this episode of Thought Atlas, I’m joined by Zulma Williams—licensed clinical social worker, founder of Dragonfly Therapy Services, podcast host, speaker, breast cancer survivor, and the unapologetically authentic voice behind The Swearing Therapist. Born and raised in Buenos Aires, Argentina, Zulma moved to the United States at 31 and began rebuilding her life from scratch. At 42, while working in accounting, she decided to pursue her dream of becoming a therapist. Four years later, shortly after graduating, she was diagnosed with breast cancer. That experience changed everything. Together, we explore: • Reinvention after 40 • Immigration and identity • Depression and emotional survival • Abusive relationships • Breast cancer and resilience • Therapy and healing • Authenticity and self-worth • Why vulnerability matters • Finding purpose through suffering • Discovering the warrior within This isn’t simply a conversation about mental health. It’s a conversation about what happens when life refuses to go according to plan—and how we can still choose who we become. 🌍 Thought Atlas https://joinpodmatch.com/thoughtatlas [https://joinpodmatch.com/thoughtatlas] 🌍 Zulma Williams | The Swearing Therapist https://www.instagram.com/theswearingtherapist [https://www.instagram.com/theswearingtherapist] If today’s conversation resonates with you, follow Zulma and her work helping people heal with honesty, humor, and compassion. Because sometimes the strongest people aren’t the ones who never break— They’re the ones who learn how to begin again.

23. juni 202640 min
episode He Looked Fine on the Outside—But Was Secretly Falling Apart | Mark Paisant cover

He Looked Fine on the Outside—But Was Secretly Falling Apart | Mark Paisant

What if looking okay doesn’t mean you’re okay? In this episode of Thought Atlas, I’m joined by Mark Paisant—certified personal trainer, podcast host, mental health advocate, husband, and father. After struggling with anxiety, depression, body image, and self-worth throughout early adulthood, Mark lost more than 100 pounds and transformed his physical health. But he soon realized something many people discover too late: Physical fitness alone doesn’t heal emotional pain. Through therapy, mindfulness, and honest conversations, Mark learned that vulnerability isn’t weakness—and that true strength comes from asking for help rather than hiding behind perfection. Together, we explore: • High-functioning anxiety • ADHD and mental health • Depression and self-worth • Masculinity and vulnerability • Why men struggle to ask for help • Therapy and emotional healing • Fitness and identity • Fatherhood and responsibility • Body image and confidence • What it means to become stronger mentally and physically This isn’t simply a conversation about fitness. It’s a conversation about the invisible struggles so many people carry—and why nobody should have to fight them alone. 🌍 Thought Atlas https://joinpodmatch.com/thoughtatlas [https://joinpodmatch.com/thoughtatlas] 🌍 Mark Paisant https://www.marcpaisant.com/ [https://www.marcpaisant.com/] 🎙️ Relatively Normal Podcast https://www.marcpaisant.com/ [https://www.marcpaisant.com/] If today’s conversation resonates with you, explore Mark’s work and remember: Strength isn’t pretending everything is fine. Strength is being honest enough to say when it isn’t.

23. juni 202642 min
episode She Spent 40 Years Hiding Who She Really Was | Karen Holmes cover

She Spent 40 Years Hiding Who She Really Was | Karen Holmes

What happens when you spend decades trying to silence a part of yourself? In this episode of Thought Atlas, I’m joined by Karen Holmes—author, TEDx speaker, longtime public servant, and transgender advocate. For forty years, Karen wrestled privately with questions of identity, faith, fear, and belonging. From the age of thirteen to fifty-three, she tried repeatedly to suppress what she knew deep inside, even throwing away hundreds of clothes and hoping that part of herself would disappear. It never did. Today, Karen speaks around the country, helping people understand the human side of identity and encouraging others to live with authenticity, compassion, and courage. Together, we explore: • Why authenticity can feel so frightening • Faith, identity, and inner conflict • The emotional cost of hiding ourselves • Self-acceptance and compassion • Fear, shame, and belonging • Relationships and understanding • Living authentically later in life • Why empathy matters • Finding peace after decades of struggle • What it means to stop wandering This isn’t just a conversation about gender. It’s a conversation about what happens when we stop fighting ourselves and begin telling the truth. 🌍 Thought Atlas https://joinpodmatch.com/thoughtatlas [https://joinpodmatch.com/thoughtatlas] 📚 Karen Holmes’ memoir 40 Years and Wandering No More: Loving My Life Being Transgender If today’s conversation resonates with you, remember: Perhaps the greatest freedom in life isn’t becoming someone new— but finally allowing yourself to be who you’ve always been.

23. juni 202635 min
episode The Truth About Israel and Palestine Nobody Wants to Hear | Aryeh Green cover

The Truth About Israel and Palestine Nobody Wants to Hear | Aryeh Green

What if one of the world’s most difficult conflicts can’t be solved by taking sides louder—but by thinking differently? In this episode of Thought Atlas, I’m joined by Aryeh Green—author, strategist, renewable energy executive, and self-described “radical moderate.” Born in Washington, D.C., raised in California, and living in Israel for more than forty years, Aryeh has worked across diplomacy, media, business, public policy, and renewable energy. He is the author of Finding Peace in the Promised Land and My Israel Trail, and his perspective bridges divides that often seem impossible to cross. Together, we explore: • Israel and the Middle East • Why polarization benefits extremists • Media narratives and public perception • Democracy and identity • Hope in divided societies • The meaning of being a “radical moderate” • Personal resilience and healing • Spirituality and belonging • Renewable energy and building a better future • Why peace begins with changing how we think This isn’t a conversation about slogans or political talking points. It’s a conversation about complexity, humanity, and the possibility that understanding doesn’t require agreement. 🌍 Thought Atlas https://joinpodmatch.com/thoughtatlas [https://joinpodmatch.com/thoughtatlas] 📚 Aryeh Green’s Books https://www.amazon.com/dp/B0GTX2KTDD [https://www.amazon.com/dp/B0GTX2KTDD] If today’s conversation resonated with you, explore Aryeh’s books Finding Peace in the Promised Land and My Israel Trail. Because perhaps peace begins not when one side wins— but when we stop believing the other side must lose.

23. juni 20261 h 0 min