The new book Noticing: How We Attend to the World and Each Other opens with a quote from psychologist William James: “Only […] The post Ziyad Marar on Noticing appeared first on Social Science Space.| Social Science Space
No. There you go; you can stop reading and move on with your life, unless you, too have ever wondered what the point is of looking for things to be grateful for and then writing about or listing them. I previously called out empathy and authenticity, so why not go for a positive psychology trifecta […] The post Should You Practice Gratitude? appeared first on Farther to Go!.| Farther to Go!
Not necessarily you, personally. But maybe you. If so, you should stop doing that. When I came across a promising article posted on a writers’ website titled “The World Needs Writers Now More than Ever” I could do nothing but nod in agreement, although my perspective runs more along the lines of when hasn’t the […] The post You Give Truth a Bad Name appeared first on Farther to Go!.| Farther to Go!
It isn’t exactly news, but the evidence that we are all walking around, unaware, inside our personal fog of vagueness is becoming hard to ignore. We not only lack clarity, but we are also unable to pin down (be specific about) what’s important to us. We use words, we engage in verbal communication, we consider […] The post What Are So-Called<br> Secondary Emotions? appeared first on Farther to Go!.| Farther to Go!
We can’t ask (or answer) true or false questions about something if it isn’t real to begin with. By that, I mean that reality and truth are not the same thing. I also mean that there’s a hierarchy in that we have to first determine the reality of something before we can entertain questions about […] The post It’s a Schabziger Moon. Or Is It? appeared first on Farther to Go!.| Farther to Go!
We would not be human if we did not feel differently in the company of women than we do in the company of men. Or more precisely, people whom we perceive to be women and men.| Debbie Hayton
Economy and ecosystem, production and reproduction, Apple and the apple| indi.ca
Please, dear God, never say these things to people who suffer from depression. You’re better off being silent.| Learning Mind
The halo effect refers to a tendency of people to make global evaluations of people they don’t know based on specific perceived characteristics.| Learning Mind
By using these negative words and phrases, you program your subconscious mind for failure and attract unhappiness. How can we avoid saying them?| Learning Mind
90% of all information processed by the brain is visual, so it makes sense to have a visual learning style, but how can you tell? Here are 15 signs| Learning Mind
Authors| Chris Choy
A close look at the psychology of wine, how marketing affects your perceptions, and why you’re paying too much for wine. In 2002, four Wall Street businessmen sat down for dinner at the Balthazar in New York City. They ordered a Mouton Rothschild 1989 for the table. The Balthazar menu lists this wine at $2,000. […] The post Does expensive wine taste better? appeared first on Kent Hendricks.| Kent Hendricks
I did it again.| ars
Let me get back to the idea of using the asterism as a Fediverse logo.| ars
| Open Encyclopedia of Cognitive Science
Discover mirror thinking and understand why we often judge others for qualities we dislike in ourselves. Discover how to break the cycle, accept...| Learning Mind
Why 'the environment' can be a misleading myth I see myself as an environmentalist. And have done so ever since my early teens – which was a long time ago. So why would I be writing a blog with such a title? On the face of things, perhaps it seems a bit contradictory – a [...]| Stephen Sterling
AV beats: An audiovisual photoacoustic synthesizer # Paula Vītola Paula.vitola@gmail.com RTU Liepaja Academy Art Research Lab, Liepaja, Latvia Abstract # During spring 2023 I developed a prototype of a modular audiovisual synthesizer that creates sound and visuals by using photoacoustic and stroboscopic principles. The photoacoustic effect is a process of transforming light to sound using a photosensitive material. The photoacoustic effect makes it possible to work with the sound visually ...| Speculative Sound Synthesis Symposium 2024
Tips for staying positive when everyone and everything around you is negative. Build a strong mindset, overcome challenges, boost your resilience.| Mazzastick
Every quarter we take a deep dive into the latest research in sports science. In this edition we look at the latest research on team building, balancing stress and recovery, changing the perception of| HMMR Media
Negativity has no place in the age of self-actualization. Today, we strive to keep negativity out of our lives and invest in cultivating a positive mindset.| Learning Mind
Are you constantly being blamed for someone else’s failures and mistakes? You may be trapped in the blame game perpetrated by toxic people.| Learning Mind
The victim mentality is a malignancy feeding off neglect, criticism, and mistreatment. This feeling can become a way of life. Are you a perpetual victim?| Learning Mind
A short post to accompany the Primitive Peacemakers series, with some quotes from Middlemarch that otherwise wouldn’t make it in. Eliot repeatedly returns to the observation that individuals&…| Suspended Reason
Should we just live in the moment? In “Matter and Memory” the French philosopher Henri Bergson claims that this is not even possible. 1. Perception is physical First of all: How do we perceive the “current moment” anyway? Bergson suggests that the whole point of perception is action. For example, when some single-cell organism touches an obstacle, it moves away. That is the whole point of perception: to move in the right direction, to find food, to not be food—to survive. Perception...| Ralph Ammer
You are awake. You think and you feel. But what is it that is doing all this thinking and feeling? We call it “consciousness” and over 100 years ago the philosopher Edmund Husserl made a bold attempt to uncover its secrets. Subjective experience is private The thing is: Consciousness is not “out there”, it is “in here“. It is personal and subjective. When I say that I like squirrels or that my foot hurts, then you will have to take my word for it. You can’t know what it is like ...| Ralph Ammer
Apparently, there are some extraordinary people out there who can cure whatever ails us, physically or psychologically. We know this because they excel at self-promotion to the extent that they’re difficult to escape. One of them is the neuroscientist who shall remain nameless and who seems to have spawned a minor genre of professionals debunking […]| Farther to Go!
Reality is detailed, and attention is finite. As I get older, I find myself noticing less. I think this is partly because adults are socialized not to stare, and to pretend like they know what’s going on. Children are not embarrassed by gawking. And they learn much faster| The Autodidacts
Monty Python’s Life of Brian is a British movie but Always Look on the Bright Side of Life could easily be America’s theme song. Barbara Ehrenreich covered the pitfalls of what some call toxic positivity in her book Bright-Sided, which I read shortly after it was published in 2009. It probably goes without saying that […]| Farther to Go!
Yesterday morning I looked out onto my patio and discovered a red Mylar balloon in the shape of a heart lazily floating to and fro in the breeze. Today it’s gone, carried away by a gust of wind. This is New Mexico, after all: the wind giveth and the wind taketh away. The wind routinely […]| Farther to Go!
Arnauld Rochereau. Ce livre est à la fois une enquête et un pari. Une enquête sur les points de vue, sur ce qui nous est donné de voir, et donc sur les processus perceptifs également, inhérents à toute perspective humaine ou non-humaine. Le point de départ de cette enquête est une planche scientifique issue d’un article de l’éthologue Tim Caro, composée de quatre visions différentes d’un même zèbre. A travers ces perceptions distinctes, on s’aperçoit que la perspective ...| Implications philosophiques
Perceive through your soul over mind and mind over matter. My assessment on the incoming Trump administration and beyond.| coreysdigs.com
Over the past decade, I have honed a new dialect—the language of psychoanalysis. Gradually, I find myself increasingly fluent in this language. Psychoanalysis, for better and worse, has shaped and molded my thinking. Yet, in its chiseling, some words confound my senses.| ROOM A Sketchbook for Analytic Action
This is the essay my therapist doesn’t want me to write. I wish that I could say that I don’t understand her concerns, but I do. She fears that it would place in the foreground something that most people who come to know me see only as a small part of me. It’s never been what defines me, so why run the risk of letting that happen now? I imagine she wants to protect me from being typecast as disabled and likely the recipient of all the associated projections that I’ve worked for years ...| ROOM A Sketchbook for Analytic Action
Infographics connect our ideas with the world. They contain pictures, schemas, symbols, and signs. This is how they work:| Ralph Ammer
, crisis management and crisis communication advisor, explores the boundary between reality and perception in crisis management and crisis communication.| About Resilience -
Shari Appollon’s "My Mother’s Haiti" for ROOM 2.24 illustrates a kind of internal anguish children can experience when, from the start, belonging and not belonging are intertwined.| ROOM A Sketchbook for Analytic Action
As Freud taught, “looking back and in” is ribboned with unconscious resistance. Addressing the unintegrated and painful past of national trajectories, Jill Salberg looks at the grand-scale implications of this resistance in Fascism Amnesia: A Failure of Witnessing in ROOM 2.24.| ROOM A Sketchbook for Analytic Action
Beauty leads us to truth and goodness, said Immanuel Kant. And this is how it works.| Ralph Ammer
What do optical illusions have to do with data visualization? Aside from being kind of fun, optical illusions tell us a lot about how human visual perception changes how we interpret what we see. T…| Do Mo(o)re with Data
Kant's "Critique of Pure Reason" is about what we can know—and what we can't. It explains how we look and think to understand the world.| Ralph Ammer
sing a systems thinking approach can expand our understanding of a particular problem or issue by helping us view our actions in the context of the larger system. We often fail to anticipate the entire series of cause-and-effect relationships that will follow from a particular decision. As a result, when something happens in the “external” […]| The Systems Thinker
Follow these 4 steps to draw a beautiful moment: 1. Find your interest, 2. Make a plan, 3. Relax — but stay alert, 4. Accept.| Ralph Ammer
This is a very quick (and fun) introduction to David Hume. It explains his famous "problem of induction" and why it is important for science.| Ralph Ammer