Date: December 23, 2006
"Twentieth-century intellectuals can be defined by two extremes: the Paul Valéry types who made their discoveries in the abstract laboratory of their minds and the Graham Greene and Ernest Hemingway types who made their discoveries while drunk in brothels in countries where the president had just...
preview | full record— Moroney, Robin
Date: 2006
"While the amygdala's role as a sentinel and trigger for distress is old news to neuroscience, its social role, as part of the brain's system for emotional contagion, has been revealed only recently."
preview | full record— Goleman, Daniel (b. 1946)
Date: 2006
"More generally, the amygdala acts as a radar for the brain, calling attention to whatever might be new, puzzling, or important to learn more about."
preview | full record— Goleman, Daniel (b. 1946)
Date: 2007
"And at the same time, a censor somewhere in my brain was simplifying things for me, helping me to cope with the necessary."
preview | full record— Engel, Howard (b. 1931)
Date: 2007
"It would keep, and my brain filed it away for later."
preview | full record— Engel, Howard (b. 1931)
Date: 2007
"I have a brain full of remembered names but the road is often blocked with rubble."
preview | full record— Engel, Howard (b. 1931)
Date: 2007
"[M]y brain ... did most of what I wanted it to do, but it had sand traps that I learned to avoid."
preview | full record— Engel, Howard (b. 1931)
Date: 2007
"I knew I could no longer rely on the 'sticking plaster' of memory"
preview | full record— Engel, Howard (b. 1931)
Date: 2007
"And when and idea for additional information to throw into a discussion came into my head, it often evaporated when I was on the point of saying it."
preview | full record— Engel, Howard (b. 1931)
Date: 2007
"But at the back door of my mind I ruminated on the New York visit, recalling the details of Dr. Sack's office, his manner and kindness."
preview | full record— Engel, Howard (b. 1931)