science

28 09, 2016

The pen is mightier than the (key)board, says technology (Microsoft News Center)

By |2016-09-28T07:52:49-04:00September 28th, 2016|2016, Debate / dialogue, Europe, Everything Else, History, Italy, News, science, September, Writing|0 Comments

In an recent study, Norwegian researchers funded by Microsoft discovered that using a pen stimulated more cerebral activity than typing on a computer. Drawing words makes the brain more prone to learning. From the article: Inspired by previous studies that suggested long-hand notetaking using a pen deepens the mind’s ability to retain and process information, van der [...]

24 09, 2016

Healthy living from technology and modern science (Sarah Frier, Bloomberg)

By |2016-09-24T07:16:18-04:00September 24th, 2016|2016, Everything Else, History, Medicine, News, science, September, STEM, Technology, U.S. / Canada|0 Comments

Healthy living from technology and modern science: how the Chan Zuckerberg Initiative would change history within the next generation. “Can we work together to cure, prevent or manage all disease within our children’s lifetime?” Chan said Wednesday onstage at an event in San Francisco for the Chan Zuckerberg Initiative. “Mark and I believe that this is possible.” Chan, a [...]

26 08, 2016

The arts of medicine

By |2016-08-26T09:21:19-04:00August 26th, 2016|2016, Academia, August, Everything Else, Medicine, News, science, STEM|0 Comments

The arts of medicine: for those in the healing field, knowing their patients requires more than the natural sciences. From the article: "[T]oday’s medical curriculum teaches new doctors about culture and communication. It is no longer good enough – and probably never was – for a doctor to simply know the appropriate medication to prescribe or diagnostic test [...]

23 07, 2016

Science, industry, and racial barriers

By |2016-09-04T23:50:14-04:00July 23rd, 2016|2016, Academia, education, Employment, Everything Else, History, July, Quotes, science, Technology, U.S. / Canada|0 Comments

Science, industry, and racial barriers: one of America's most eminent historians reflects on a lifetime of change and stasis But the challenges I, my brother, Buck, and my sisters, Mozella and Anne, faced were always formidable. Living through years of remarkable change, the barrier of race was a constant. With the appearance of each new institution [...]

16 07, 2016

How can we reintegrate knowledge in a simple and useful way? (Charles Eames)

By |2016-09-13T21:38:22-04:00July 16th, 2016|2016, Academia, Arts, education, Everything Else, July, Language, Literature, News, science|0 Comments

How can we reintegrate knowledge in a simple and useful way? Forty years ago, a leading designer reflects on the challenges created by divisions in higher education. From the article: Unfortunately, universities today are becoming discontinuity headquarters, with each department avoiding communication with the others and with the rest of the world. Used as it [...]

13 07, 2016

Caring for the soul: where psychiatry and religion meet (Richard Gallagher, Washington Post)

By |2016-09-13T21:39:02-04:00July 13th, 2016|2016, Academia, Debate / dialogue, Everything Else, health, History, July, Medicine, News, psychology, Religion, science|0 Comments

Caring for the soul: where psychiatry and religion meet. Religion and science collaborate in order to help the spiritually afflicted, and thereby challenge the doctrinal conventions of each. From the editorial: Is it possible to be a sophisticated psychiatrist and believe that evil spirits are, however seldom, assailing humans? Most of my scientific colleagues and [...]

9 07, 2016

Thinking, feeling, reading (Susan Reynolds, Psychology Today)

By |2016-11-02T11:52:09-04:00July 9th, 2016|2016, Everything Else, Language, Literature, News, poetry, psychology, science|0 Comments

Thinking, feeling, reading: how not just what you read, but how you read, affects your soul and self. From the article: Recent research also revealed that “deep reading”—defined as reading that is slow, immersive, rich in sensory detail and emotional and moral complexity—is distinctive from light reading—little more than the decoding of words. Deep reading [...]

29 06, 2016

Egyptian knowledge, health, and piety

By |2016-11-02T11:52:10-04:00June 29th, 2016|2016, Africa, Everything Else, health, June, Literature, Medicine, Quotes, science|0 Comments

Egyptian knowledge, health, and piety: Herodotus, the Greek "Father of History," remarks on Egyptian learning and character. The Egyptians who live in the cultivated parts of the country, by their practice of keeping records of the past, have made themselves the most learned any nation of which I have had experience. I will describe some of [...]

22 06, 2016

Literature, therapy, and healing (Andrew Solomon, The Guardian)

By |2016-11-02T11:52:10-04:00June 22nd, 2016|2016, Academia, Debate / dialogue, Europe, Everything Else, health, History, June, Language, Literature, Medicine, News, science, Writing|0 Comments

How language -- its clarity, immediacy, and nuance -- is vital to both patients and doctors, for it can overcome the split between scientific specialization and the experience of suffering. From the article: Many of the great doctors have been writers, and those who have not have required writers to set down their insights. Hippocrates, Galen, [...]

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