Sublime
An inspiration engine for ideas
Richard J. Haier • The Neuroscience of Intelligence (Cambridge Fundamentals of Neuroscience in Psychology)
Teaching your child to sleep is important. If your child is over nine months old and is still having trouble falling asleep on her own or is waking and needing your attention many times a night, then you are both sleep deprived. By taking the little time it takes to sleep train your child, you are actually setting her up for better health as a
... See moreRebecca Michi • Sleep and Your Child's Temperament.
Children, in particular, have suffered a grievous decline in just the goods that are most important to them: adult time, energy, and company. The child-rearing work that men and women and an extended family did a hundred years ago, and that women did thirty years ago, has to be done somehow by someone. The scientific moral is not that we need
... See moreAlison Gopnik, Andrew N. Meltzoff, • The Scientist In The Crib: Minds, Brains, And How Children Learn
Because of the narrowing of the female pelvis, brought about by our species’ shift to walking upright, and the disproportionate size of the human head to accommodate our large, language-producing brain, our infants are born premature. In fact, wildly premature, taking ten to fifty-two years to reach semifunctioning independence, if there is such a
... See moreDacher Keltner • Awe
Let your children sleep. Sleep plays a crucial role in brain development, and when synapses—the connections between neurons—are being generated at a very…
Some highlights have been hidden or truncated due to export limits.
Heather Heying • A Hunter-Gatherer's Guide to the 21st Century: Evolution and the Challenges of Modern Life
Neuroscience
Ep. 81 All The Fertility Questions You’ve Been Scared To Ask with Dr Helen O’Neill | Working Hard, Hardly Working
shows.acast.com“Examine the nature of unborn awareness.”
Pema Chödrön • Start Where You Are: A Guide to Compassionate Living (Shambhala Classics)
Professor Rory Wilson of Swansea University has researched the degree to which illness, hormones, nutrition and emotions affect the movements of both humans and cockroaches.