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What Makes Your Brain Happy and Why You Should Do the Opposite
- De: David DiSalvo
- Narrado por: David DiSalvo
- Duración: 5 h y 14 m
- Versión completa
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Narración:
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Historia
Science writer David DiSalvo reveals a remarkable paradox: what your brain wants is frequently not what your brain needs. In fact, much of what makes our brains "happy" leads to errors, biases, and distortions, which make getting out of our own way extremely difficult. DiSalvo's search includes forays into evolutionary and social psychology, cognitive science, neurology, and even marketing and economics - as well as interviews with many of the top thinkers in psychology and neuroscience today.
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Cursory but not instructive
- De Sean en 08-02-12
Exhausting
Revisado: 08-12-20
Agro male voice feels like an attack; this guy should stick to writing and leave the reading to someone who doesn’t get so out of breath. It’s exhausting just to listen to.
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Immanuel Kant
- The Giants of Philosophy
- De: A. J. Mandt
- Narrado por: Charlton Heston
- Duración: 2 h y 18 m
- Versión completa
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Narración:
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Historia
Immanuel Kant's "transcendental" philosophy transcends the question of "what" we know to ask "how" we know it. Before Kant, philosophers had debated for centuries whether knowledge is derived from experience or reason. Kant says that both views are partly right and partly wrong, that they share the same error; both believe that the mind and the world, reason and nature, are separated from one another.
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Well worth the download!
- De Smelly Ian en 06-04-07
- Immanuel Kant
- The Giants of Philosophy
- De: A. J. Mandt
- Narrado por: Charlton Heston
Ick, meh
Revisado: 08-12-20
The only meaningful parts are narrated by a guy with an accent, ostensibly to bring Kant’s words “to life,” but the accent is so bad it’s distracting and you can’t really parse the words. I thought maybe Heston would be entertaining, but now I realize his forceful, slightly aggressive style actually just triggers my patriarchal trauma. To be fair I thought this would be an actual reading of Kant’s work, not a biography, so if you’re thinking what I was thinking, look elsewhere.
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