Amy Jones 10/8/11 Amy Jones 10/8/11 how perfectionism might make you stupid in wired Read More Amy Jones 10/3/11 Amy Jones 10/3/11 steven pinker loves on the new book willpower: rediscovering the greatest human strength in the nyt “Together with intelligence, self-control turns out to be the best predictor of a successful and satisfying life. But Baumeister and Tierney aren’t endorsing a return to a preachy puritanism in which people are enjoined to resist temptation by sheer force of will and condemned as morally irresolute when they fail. The “will” in willpower is not some mysterious “free will,” a ghost in the machine that can do as it pleases, but a part of the machine itself. Willpower consists of circuitry in the brain that runs on glucose, has a limited capacity and operates by rules that scientists can reverse-engineer — and, crucially, that can find work-arounds for its own shortcomings.” Read More Amy Jones 4/10/11 Amy Jones 4/10/11 the flip side of the coin and evolution “ I felt no sense that I carried a handicap that would render my efforts futile should I again face deep trouble. In fact, I felt a heightened sense of agency. Anything and everything I did to improve my own environment and experience—every intervention I ran on myself, as it were—would have a magnified effect. In that light, my short/short allele now seems to me less like a trapdoor through which I might fall than like a springboard—slippery and somewhat fragile, perhaps, but a springboard all the same.” -David Dobbs in The Atlantic on the “orchid hypothesis” in which a genetic vulnerability for depression under stress also encompasses an exceptionally positive response to environmental nurturing. Read More
Amy Jones 10/3/11 Amy Jones 10/3/11 steven pinker loves on the new book willpower: rediscovering the greatest human strength in the nyt “Together with intelligence, self-control turns out to be the best predictor of a successful and satisfying life. But Baumeister and Tierney aren’t endorsing a return to a preachy puritanism in which people are enjoined to resist temptation by sheer force of will and condemned as morally irresolute when they fail. The “will” in willpower is not some mysterious “free will,” a ghost in the machine that can do as it pleases, but a part of the machine itself. Willpower consists of circuitry in the brain that runs on glucose, has a limited capacity and operates by rules that scientists can reverse-engineer — and, crucially, that can find work-arounds for its own shortcomings.” Read More
Amy Jones 4/10/11 Amy Jones 4/10/11 the flip side of the coin and evolution “ I felt no sense that I carried a handicap that would render my efforts futile should I again face deep trouble. In fact, I felt a heightened sense of agency. Anything and everything I did to improve my own environment and experience—every intervention I ran on myself, as it were—would have a magnified effect. In that light, my short/short allele now seems to me less like a trapdoor through which I might fall than like a springboard—slippery and somewhat fragile, perhaps, but a springboard all the same.” -David Dobbs in The Atlantic on the “orchid hypothesis” in which a genetic vulnerability for depression under stress also encompasses an exceptionally positive response to environmental nurturing. Read More