Primates are hardwired for us/them dichotomies. Our brains detect them in less than 100 milliseconds.
“Primates are hardwired for us/them dichotomies. Our brains detect them in less than 100 milliseconds.”
The World Motivation
Primates are hardwired for us/them dichotomies. Our brains detect them in less than 100 milliseconds.
“Primates are hardwired for us/them dichotomies. Our brains detect them in less than 100 milliseconds.”
Primates are hardwired for us/them dichotomies. Our brains detect them in less than 100 milliseconds.
[…] And then you notice someone. Amid the family clusters postceremony, the new graduates posing for pictures with Grandma in her wheelchair, the bursts of hugs and laughter, you see the person way in the back, the person who is part of the grounds crew, collecting the garbage from the cans on the perimeter of the event.
But I like schlocky violent movies, but I'm for strict gun control. But then there was a time I was at a laser tag place, and I had such a good time hiding in a corner shooting at people. In other words, I'm your basic confused human when it comes to violence.
If you have to abuse your power, you're probably in the process of losing it.
He's very clever, but sometimes his brains go to his head.
Families don't donate brains of their loved ones unless they're concerned about the person.
Each new generation of children grows up in the new environment its parents have created, and each generation of brains becomes wired in a different way. The human mind can change radically in just a few generations.
The Zika virus invades and disrupts the development of the fetal brain, but the effects on the brains of infants and young children are unknown.
What we find is that our brains have colossal things happening in them all the time.