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Reading "Alien Brains" has a feeling

author:West Sea Rose 333
Reading "Alien Brains" has a feeling

I don't know how to buy this book, look at the title, sheng Ao! If you buy it, you can still look at it with peace of mind.

Chapter 1: Stone Carved Geometric Images: The Brain's First Step in Controlling the World. Totally blinded... Just remember one thing: symbolic symbolism is a key feature of modern behavior, and the new humans are different from all previous species. Chapter 2: Temporal Lobe Syndrome: A Reminder of The Unique Human Ability to Use Symbols. A world-class psychologist at the time, Krul's neuromedicine research, discovered temporal lobe syndrome, and his work was the first to suggest the important role of the temporal lobe. Its characteristics include: emotion, spirituality, creativity, empathy, attachment, and speech. The ability to use symbols is simply language creativity. This speciation event occurred 195,000-205,000 years ago in Africa, right in the hot wasteland of Ethiopia. Chapter Three: Temporal Lobe Epilepsy: Perhaps the only pathological mechanism for significant changes in behavior. The nervous system is manipulated by a unique natural energy, electricity, and multi-proof is its most notable feature. An amazing example is the artist Picasso, who began painting at the age of 3 and worked until his death in his 90s, having to paint paintings, sketches, sketches or sculptures every day.

Chapter Four: The All-Rounder Da Vinci: The Mirror Writing and Sexuality Mystery That Comes with Talent. It's relatively simple. I once read the 546-page thick "Biography of Leonardo da Vinci" carefully, and it was easier to understand his mirror writing, good at dissection, and the notebook he carried with him was densely packed with notes. After his stroke, he concluded through evidence that his speech function was mainly located in the right hemisphere, which also led to the book's central thesis: the eclipticization process of the brain determines the human ability to express itself, which can compensate for some individuals affected by problems and pathologies. His left-handed, mirror writing, and interpretation of so many aspects of the extraordinary can be seen that his brain is extraordinary. There is only one Leonardo da Vinci in the world, and we are fortunate to have it, and no one has surpassed it.

Later chapters on the Ripper murders, Van Gogh's brain, dreams, and the physiological phenomena of sleep, hysteria: Anna S. Van Goblet, who went down in the annals of psychiatry. O, schizophrenia is not only a human disease, but also a human disease is not deeply impressed, but for Niggins, a genius dancer who is not crazy and does not live a crazy half life, his masterpiece "The Afternoon of the Shepherd" is also carefully appreciated from the Internet. Hans Berger, who invented the EEG and missed the Nobel Prize for war, believed that chemistry and physics were the foundations of biological processes, and this belief drove him to look for electrical currents in the brain. Berg is more convinced than other physiologists that brain tissue produces electrical energy and that there is electrical activity in the cerebral cortex. For decades, he worked alone in an empty laboratory, in contact with only a few human subjects occasionally, day and night, until he finally traced the first trace of the magic.

The most profound, and the one that touched me the most: the crazy genius, the richest man with obsessive-compulsive disorder. As an engineer, industrial tycoon, pilot, philanthropist, filmmaker and director, Las Vegas entrepreneur, CIA partner and mystery celebrity, Howard Hughes is one of the richest people in the world. He set airspeed records, built the Hughes flying boat, and founded The Universal Airlines. He was the richest, most domineering, fickle, rough, eccentric and powerful, and he rose to the top of the U.S. government and had complex ties to the CIA. His last 20 years lived in isolation, and the evening scenes were very bleak. He always stayed in the roofed attic, sitting naked in an air-conditioned suite, not touching anything, including the doorknob and the telephone, and if he had to, he had to wrap his hands in a corneksheet tissue that piled up in his house, his room was tightly closed, the curtains were never opened, and the furniture consisted only of a hospital bed, a recliner, and a television. His sheets were never changed, and his assistants would lay out several layers of tissues for him to lie down. Greasy, thinning hair hanging down to the shoulders, a bleeding capsular tumor on the scalp, bedsores and ulcers everywhere, limbs covered with pinholes, fingernails growing to bizarre procedures, foul-smelling and filthy all over the body, sitting in their own feces and urine, watching the movie replay endlessly. He was already out of touch with the real world and suffered from mental illness. Such a person with great wealth, influence, ability and talent ended his life in an environment that was no different from a street addict. It all stemmed from the brain of Howard Hughes, who suffered from obsessive-compulsive disorder, the only anxiety disorder that could lead to psychosis. Obsessive-compulsive disorder includes repeated cleaning and fear of contamination and dirt. In a country that seems to be increasingly valued for social virtues, Howard Hughes is not only downright anti-social, but also has a brilliant career, a great reputation, a brilliant star, and an outstanding place, but at the same time, he has always insisted on his selfishness and indifference, and he is the last pure self in the world, and he has fulfilled the dream that we dare not admit.

Heathcliff and Howard Hughes in Wuthering Heights, after sitting on wealth, are unhappy, torturing themselves, tragically leaving in their old age, and no amount of money will help. Learning to let go and give up, learning to forgive and tolerate, will be the criterion for lifelong pursuit.

West Sea Rose Sea

July 7, 2021

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