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Total: 21 results found.

1. IMMMUN chapter 8
(Workshop/Stuff by Members)
... Imagination is more important than knowledge. Knowledge is limited. Imagination encircles the world." [einstein]   There is an argument that since intelligence is based upon an imagination ...
2. IMMMUN Chapter 1
(Workshop/Stuff by Members)
... important than knowledge. For knowledge is limited to all we now know and understand, while imagination embraces the entire world, and all there ever will be to know and understand." (Albert Einstein) ...
... appearance whether a muscle started out big, or has started out small and been exercised a lot, or both. We can't determine whether Einstein had very dense brain connections because he did complicated ...
... 'parrot-fashion' (for example, most people know Einstein's most famous equation parrot-fashion, but few could explain it or use it.) We'll also be exploring declarative memory further in this tutorial. ...
... what they did, when they began). Physicists today would not be at all the same physicists if they had never read Newton or Einstein, never imagined the things those dudes imagined. This is what we mean ...
6. Emotion - methods for mood & anxiety disorders
(Neurohacking/Theory & Research)
... J. Neurosci. 20, 3397–3403 (2004). | Article | PubMed | ISI | 99. Paulus, M.P., Feinstein, J.S., Castillo, G., Simmons, A.N. & Stein, M.B. Dose-dependent decrease of activation in bilateral ...
7. Deschooling essays by John Taylor Gatto
(Homeworld/School & Work Alternatives)
... his ability to do anything? Sometimes the problem is the problem of mastering solitude, as Thoreau did at Walden Pond, or Einstein did in the Swiss customs house. One of my former students, Roland Legiardi-Lura, ...
8. NOT the Queens Speech
(News/Latest)
   "The most beautiful thing we can experience is the mysterious, it is the true source of art, science, and friendship." - Albert Einstein “What is a friend? - One intelligence ...
9. Methods & Technology Intro - Part II: Technology
(Neurohacking/Methods & Technology)
... details not readily available to introspection by most individuals. People like Einstein can turn this modality on and off in one or two networks without permanently losing any other modalities (true genius ...
10. Books: Magical Parent / Magical Child
(Neurohacking/Resources)
... Musicians play with sounds. Singers and actors play with emotions. Einstein played with ideas. Children play with anything they can and especially with the people they love. Nature set aside all of childhood ...
11. Matrix Theory Background - Herman Epstein Papers 1
(Neurohacking/Theory & Research)
... association area of association areas”. Geschwind also described its apparent absence in non-humans. He pointed out the study by Weinstein and Teuber (1957) of soldiers who had survived being shot ...
12. BTPT 3, 4
(Workshop/Beyond The Porcelain Throne)
... shift in scale because we're going to use warp speed –and if you don't believe that achieves the same thing, read what the human called Einstein wrote about light speed and stuff. xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx ...
13. Psychological methods - Meditation - benefits
(Neurohacking/Methods & Technology)
... US and his colleagues. Davidson's group reports in the June 2009 PLoS Biology. Kevin J. Tracey, director and chief executive of the Feinstein Institute for Medical Research, US. Tracey spoke about ...
  "Principles of Research", by Albert Einstein [The following piece was a speech written by Albert Einstein for Max Planck's 60th birthday.] In the temple of science are many ...
15. Nature and Wonder; by Carl Sagan
(Neurohacking/Entelechy)
... Albert Einstein said, “I maintain that the cosmic religion feeling is the strongest and noblest motive for scientific research.” So if both Carlyle and Einstein could agree on something, it ...
16. In The Beginning: A Kabbalists View
(Neurohacking/Entelechy)
... recession, but yet, in accord with Albert Einstein’s then recent theory of relativity, the Earth has no privileged position. Hubble’s results shocked people who only a few years earlier thought that our ...
... we can say that the Newtonian model is an excellent one for the commonsense world as we know it, while Einsteinian relativity-based on radically different presuppositions-represents in addition an excellent ...
... at the world's first genuine genius. We don't believe the world has seen one yet; what people refer to as 'genius' today is actually high performance in mainly one or two networks. [Einstein, Mozart, Da ...
... to have all your networks developed enough to do their job well. That doesn’t mean brain size is the important thing though! (Einstein had a notably small brain.) It is the density of networks ...
... nurturing of intelligence’s development results in an optimal mind. And optimal development can be achieved at any age. When Einstein died in 1955, neurologists almost got stuck in the mortuary ...
... appearance whether a muscle started out big, or has started out small and been exercised a lot, or both. We can't determine whether Einstein had very dense brain connections because he did complicated ...