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...  DO IT NOW “Tactical strategy” (IF/ THEN thinking in real life) Imagine you are the tactical officer on the bridge of a starship. There are three ships nearby detected on your screen and ...
2. IMMMUN chapter 8
(Workshop/Stuff by Members)
... our conscious minds can translate concrete concepts into abstract concepts that lead to rational thought and real life strategies. The ability to merge internal images with concepts and to transfer ...
3. IMMMUN Chapter 7
(Workshop/Stuff by Members)
... talk about a bluish-green I may ask for an example in real life - I am uncertain whether the details of your model - in this case where exactly 'blue' ends and 'green' begins - are exactly the same as ...
4. IMMMUN chapter 6
(Workshop/Stuff by Members)
Chapter 6 Interface: Interaction and relationships  If you take a moment to think about which real life contexts cause the most emotional difficulties for human beings, it won't ...
5. IMMMUN chapter 5
(Workshop/Stuff by Members)
... real life examples they are most regularly exposed to, will grow up with individual, isolated ideas of what emotions they (and you) are feeling, how these feelings are described in words, and which emotional ...
6. IMMMUN chapter 4
(Workshop/Stuff by Members)
...  Since all processing begins with concrete sensory experience (we cannot imagine, or abstract from, a sensory experience that we have never had in real life), all system learning proceeds from concrete ...
7. IMMMUN chapter 3
(Workshop/Stuff by Members)
... religions, nations, etc). Our artificial constructs replace and obstruct the natural events and circumstances of real life whose signals lead to healthy development.    Understanding how ...
8. IMMMUN chapter 2
(Workshop/Stuff by Members)
... boat, what if telephones could be mobile, etc. Practical creativity also occurs in this phase; we turn our creative ideas from step 4 into actual real life inventions and creations. If some wannabe chemist ...
9. IMMMUN Chapter 1
(Workshop/Stuff by Members)
... day in our real life concrete situation here and now, not in a theoretical abstract future one. It isn't what facts we can recite; it's what we DO that defines us.   Most people think of their ...
10. I've Made My Mind Up Now: Foreword
(Workshop/Stuff by Members)
... that organize our thought processes and enable successful change through neural plasticity. Only real life experience of doing stuff can do that. When we miss out the information-as-experience factor, ...
... never actually DO it now in real life. Okay, here's the thing: your progress will be slower than those who actually really DO the do it nows. Why? Because we are biologically designed to learn from personal ...
... to see ourselves, others, and life in general differently. Whenever we're confronted with conflicting ideals or disappointing results, we should ask, "What's more important in real life than having ...
... to watch out for personally when changing habits. It will also enable you to understand the process of change from the perspective of real life experience, and you only need to learn that process once. ...
... (whether about facts or moral values) is also to believe that one has accepted it for legitimate reasons; in other words that there is adequate proof of its efficacy in real life. Biological morality ...
... the signal clarity (eg., attention, real life experience, reliable formal operations & reasoning skills, reliable allies, enriched environments which provide cheer and comfort and clarity of thought, ...
16. Sakiro's Hackipedia Volume 3
(Neurohacking/Resources)
... attempting to memorize the list, shopping without it, and seeing what items we forgot. Now here's the trick: the more actual real life inconvenience this causes, the faster memory will get its act together, ...
... best adapt to cope with ever changing circumstances (because that's what real life IS). Autonomy is freedom to explore and play, which is how we learn. Learning provides two types of knowledge: knowledge ...
... fictional constructs (imaginary objects) are metaphorized as and treated like people. In real life, nothing can 'threaten a nation', because a 'nation' is a fictional construct which has no physical body, ...
... instead of hours, and shows us ways to 'change the script' and 'change the plot' in real life, real time strategic situations. This is where we can really start reaping the benefits of connecting and aligning ...
20. Books -The Head Trip by Jeff Warren
(Neurohacking/Resources)
... movies you risk losing your ability to appreciate -- and even notice -- the subtleties and complexities of real life and consciousness, which, to circle back to my original metaphor, is more like a Henry ...
... family or friends who already know our birthdates, bank details and passwords. In real life, however, we don't get interrogated by strangers online using BCI devices, and would get extremely suspicious ...
  Differences and similarities between a matrix and a network   What is a matrix –reloaded [2009] A few years ago I could effectively describe what a matrix was only by giving examples ...
... constructs such as culture, art, language and mathematics. Unsurprisingly, the same processes that allow us to construct things in real life such as shelters, tools, buildings and spaceships, also enable ...
24. Sakiro's Hackipedia Volume 2
(Neurohacking/Resources)
... all areas of entertainment and in your real life. Don’t hang out with a bunch of dummies unless you want to be a dummy too! It’s actually healthier for you to be alone than to be in the ...
25. Sakiro's Hackipedia Volume 1
(Neurohacking/Resources)
... is a hack. You’re basically fooling the mind into thinking that something good is happening “out there” in your real life. When the mind gets these signals from the muscles in your ...
... with 'how things work' concepts, congruous association can't happen and we hit an ideological dilemma and get confused. One obvious example of this happening in real life is people who claim to believe ...
... and success. They have developed for its evolutionary needs. Unconsciously, in real life you learned more about physics through congruous association when learning to walk, swim or play ball than you ever ...
... the standard model of cosmology, for example. That's how science works. You make a model of what you think is going on, you test it against the real life evidence and you find how accurate it is. If it's ...
... physical example of someone who is already adept at a skill we require to learn; either on a screen or in real life. In youth it is often our parents and friends that we learn skills from this way. Some ...
30. NOT the Queens Speech
(News/Latest)
... has nothing that can satisfy real human needs in real life; nothing to give life meaning and passion and joy. Fortunately I also did what many of you do. You do what is necessary; what intelligent people ...
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