In Chapter 3 “Tools of the Mind”, by Nicholas Carr describes the development of maps, clocks and other innovative advancements through the years and how it has changed the way we communicate with each other. Scientific technology has affected the progress of society and improved the history of individual’s awareness. However, with modern technologies individuals are continuing to learn and progress with the present-day innovations. At the beginning of the chapter Carr describes the drawings and creativity of a child and how she is inspired by her art and later became a surveyor. Maps can influence logical and cognitive abilities.…
36. Under the Biological Perspective: How has the depressed brain influenced the development of mood disorders?…
“Coddling of the American Mind”, written by Greg Lukianoff and Jonathan Haidt, is an extensive article touching on the oversensitivity of college students and faculties in today’s society. They discuss these issues and the environment created by “protecting” college students from emotional discomfort while pointing out the negative effects of this particular mindset. In all reality, “coddling” the students is doing more harm than help. So after reading this article, I am truly convinced our generation needs to make a change within these schools by articulating a more open, understanding, and helpful atmosphere for our young adults. The authors also provide numerous evidence and truths throughout their dictation and voice, allowing the style of their report to have a more honest tone one can appreciate.…
In “Decolonizing the Mind,” Ngugi Wa Thiong’O, the writer of the essay, strongly argues that the language is an essential way to form a communication, a society, and a culture. The key concept of the essay releases as the writer illustrates how the language should be valued in the society; the language is not only a tool to create a culture or a history, but also a tool to create and develop human being as a nature. The essay starts with Thiong’O’s childhood story, when he and his community spoke Gikuyu and told stories in Gikuyu. However, while he acknowledges that, “Language was not a mere string of words. It has a suggestive power well beyond the immediate and lexical meaning” (341), he experiences a sudden change in the language of education:…
BZRK by Michael Grant is a story about a war for control over the human mind taken place in the near future. The owners of Armstrong Fancy Gifts Corporation are Benjamin and Charles Armstrong who are conjoined twins, whose goal is to make the world a utopia with no free will by taking control over the human mind and they will start with world leaders. Fighting to stop them is a group of teenagers who call themselves BZRK and they all risk their life everyday with the chance of going insane. Agents in BZRK have biots which are microscopic robots that are connected to their mind and they are able to control the biots to fight in the human body. AFGC and BZRK are fighting this war in the nano-level and the battleground is the human brain.…
Humans seem to be an entity made up by a combination of both physical properties and mental properties. Folk psychology of soul proposed by Bering (2006) suggested “common-sense mind-body dualism” is a cognitive adaptation that evolved through natural selection. According to this quote, it is believed that individual is fundamentally constituted of body, mind and volition. For centuries, people have tried to discover what makes an individual from philosophical, psychological and physiological perspectives. At different stages of this knowledge in understanding human beings, behaviourism, humanism and the study of consciousness will be critically evaluated in this discussion.…
Sharma, Verinder; Burt, Vivien K, MD, PhD; Ritchie, Hendrica L, MD. The American Journal of Psychiatry166. 11 (Nov 2009): 1217-21.…
My theory states that the unconscious is something very deep. We as individuals do not understand what is all going on in our unconscious. We can uncover parts of ourselves that we may not have known about, but we will never be able to know or understand everything about ourselves. I believe that the unconscious is a positive reinforcement that keep us going in our daily lives. There are times we get depressed, some more than others, yet we are able to try and seek help or push through day to day. No matter how bad we know we feel we still fight.…
Depression is a mood disorder and the biomedical model portrays one way in which it can be understood. The biomedical model focuses on biological factors alone in an attempt to explain an illness or a disorder. It describes illnesses as disturbances within the human body that can be altered and corrected. Very unlike the biopsychosocial model, it doesn’t include other factors that may contribute to a disorder such as their psychological state or their social context. The biomedical model focuses on activities within the brain alone that can cause disorders like depression. In this assignment I will explain how biological processes in the brain can arguably be perceived to cause depression.…
Many theories have been challenged throughout the history of psychology. Mind vs. Body is one of the most important issues that has formed the basic foundation in this field today. One of the central questions in psychology and philosophy concerns the mind-body problem: Is the mind part of the body, or the body part of the mind? If they are distinct, then how do they interact? And which of the two is in charge? (McLeod, 2007). Philosophers have examined the relationship between the two and have proposed a variety of approaches to support their arguments.…
We also see the effects of stress and depression on the ventral striatum, including the nucleus accumbens, the later playing a central role in the mechanisms of natural reward. Deep brain stimulation treatment of the nucleus accumbens seemed to be successful. Pittenger and Duman (2008) do note that study of plasticity in this pathway under conditions of stress and depression, while sparse, represents an important component of any comprehensive view of the relationship between stress, depression and neuroplasticity.…
"Civilization advances as more and more of life's essentials are absorbed by the unconscious." -Diane Ackerman, "An Alchemy of Mind: The Marvel and Mystery of the Brain"…
Rasmusson, A. M., Hauger, R. L., Morgan, C. A., et al (2000) Biological Psychiatry, 47, 526–539…
Where is your mind? Where does it begin and where does it end? Does it stop at the skin and skull or, does it extend beyond our body? It is normal to think that the mind including our thoughts, beliefs, memories, experiences, and so on is internal to our bodies as most of us tend to identify the mind with the brain. However, if we try to imagine the possibilities of the extended mind, what ideas could potentially come up may be telekinesis, mind control, or telepathy. If asked whether the ability to move things with your mind equals your mind extending beyond and out into the world, majority of us would agree, that if we had the ability to control things then our mind really does extend beyond our body.…
predictions about how others will behave, according to the state of mind they are presumed to be in.…