This was a very interesting book for me. It's about the current research into how the brain works. It expounds on new research that makes the old neuron model of the brain, that we all learned in high school, outdated.
It seems that neurons aren't the prime movers behind intelligence after all. Only 15% of the cells in our brains are neurons, the rest (85%)were previously ignored by neuroscientists as purely structural and support for the neurons. But the latest research shows that these glial ("glue") cells not only listen in on everything the neurons are doing, but they play a major role in determining what the neurons do (i.e. how they connect to each other, when and how often they fire, etc...).
This fascinates me because it fits perfectly with my own view of intelligence being a social phenomenon more than a logical one. The glia cells in our brains are like "little blue men" who make up a society that communicates over long distances using the neurons. It's like the glia are "people", and the neurons are their "Internet". Dr. Fields didn't go so far as to put it that way, but I think it makes perfect sense to do so based on everything else he says in this book.
Very fascinating indeed!
"Read! Read! Read! And never stop until you discover the knowledge of the Universe." - Marcus Garvey
October 27, 2012
5 Very Good Reasons To Punch a Dolphin in the Mouth - by: Matthew Inman (2011)
I found this book on the prison bookcart and grabbed it thinking it'd be good for a chuckle; it wasn't. It's just a book of tacky cartoons that would hardly impress a three-year-old, though judging by the language used it was meant for adults. The popularity of a book like this, and the Website it was taken from, is frightening.
Kundalin: The Evolutionary Energy in Man - by: Gopi Krishna (1967), With Psychological Commentary - by: James Hillman (1970)
An interesting account of the author's own unexpected incounter with "Kundalini" energy (i.e. pure conscious energy). I especially appreciated the psychological commentary which were decidedly Jungian. These comments helped to bring the author's experiences into a more "Western" light of understanding.
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Magic and Mystery in Tibet - by: Alexandra David-Neel (1932, 2014)
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