 |
| |
Others say...
"Almost Perfect!" In this extrodinary book is one statement I disagree with. That is that Christianity presents more of a conflict with the results of the scientific research on the human brain than another religion. I think if the author will read Mere Christianity by C.S. Lewis she will find out how well the Faith lines up with the scietific research!!
"Lotus Guide Review" Train Your Mind Change Your Brain By Sharon Begley We no longer live in a world where our mind is set in stone. Sharon Begley makes the science of Neuroplasticity and mind science not only comprehensible but meaningful on a very personal level. For anyone who meditates and wonders about the effects of meditation on the brain. [...]
"Very insightful!" Sharon Begley's "Train Your Mind Change Your Brain" does a fine job of exploring the science of neuroplasticity which upends long thought beliefs that the brain becomes hardwired early in life and can't be changed other than through physical techniques like medication, etc. Rather, by concentrating one's thinking in certain ways, actual physical changes can be effected in the brain. That is, the brain affects the mind and the mind affects the brain, a two-way process. Plus, she shows how actual scientific testing proves this, both in animals and humans.
She sees Buddhism as an example of neuroplasticity in action.
The book offers a lot of things to ponder. These are the ones which stuck with me:
1. Unlike most other religions, there is no antagonism between Buddhism and science. Experience comes first, then reason, then scripture.
2. A shrunken hippocampus in the brain exists with depression, but not sure which came first. The result being the inability to recognize novelty.
3. The brain's cortical representation of the reading finger of proficient Braille readers is enlarged at the expense of other fingers. Such reader's brain's visual cortex is active, not just the somatosensory cortex, hence brain plasticity.
4. The loss of vision early in childhood, or before, makes peripheral hearing sharper, just as loss of hearing makes peripheral vision sharper.
5. Dyslexia can be at least partially ameliorated by behavior remediation actually repairing left temporal brain region dysfunction, therefore plasticity of the brain.
6. People who have lost a limb undergo some brain reorganization. For example, a missing hand can generate an itch relieved by scratching one's lower face. Also, stroke victims can benefit like from putting one's good arm in a sling to force the person to use the bad arm, resulting in repairing the brain by using the mind to concentrate on using the bad arm.
7. Obsessive Compulsive Disorder (OCD) patients, by certain mental action can change the brain chemistry thereby preventing OCD.
8. For piano players, mentally rehearsing can activate the same brain circuits as actually physically rehearsing.
9. Genes can be silent or active, with the environment capable of activating the silent ones. For example, a child with an attentive mother will likely also become an attentive parent. However, a child with an inattentive mother will likely be an inattentive parent, however can also become an attentive parent if adopted later by an attentive mother.
10. Levels of brain hormones, oxytocin and vasopressin, can affect social bonding and parental care. Things like being very poor in a very rich country can cause a lack of these hormones, for example.
11. Cognitive functions (concentrating) can trigger emotional functions. For example, with Buddhist meditation it is possible to eliminate emotions of anger, hate, jealousy, envy, and greed.
12. "The Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders", used by therapists, considers normality to be not having such disorders. However, no concentration of positive mental states like happiness, contentment, curiosity, drive, engagement and compassion. Why?
"amazing" This book was amazing-the implications are far reaching for your own life, as well as your childrens lives. As a mom of three, and someone new to meditation, it's an exciting time to be raising young people. This book has made me think about every aspect of my life differently. I've reccommended it to everyone!!
"Could the ideas presented in this book help prevent Alzheimer's disease and related dementias" Sharon Begley's fascinating book, shares new ways that show the reader how to train his/her brain. The inner powers of the mind go along way to make a differnce. Meditation is a pwerful tool in expanding brain function. Could those who meditate, decrease their risk of developing brain conditions such as Alzheimer's disease or a related dementia? Read this book and discover the powers of meditation. This book is full of hope and optimism. Let the author share this and so much more with you. by Susan Berg, author of Adorable Photographs of Our Baby: Meaningful, Mind Stimulating Activities and More for the Memory Challenged, Their Loved Ones, and Involved Professionals
|
|
|
|
|
 |
|
 |
Buy Cheap Software Now!
|
 |
| |
Train Your Mind, Change Your Brain: How a New Science Reveals Our Extraordinary Potential to Transform Ourselves
 |
List Price : $14.95
Our Price : from $7.99
|
Special offer for you..find the cheapest!
any_book from FL, United States offers this stuff for:
 | Price : $7.99 Usually ships in 1-2 business days
|  |
Vipper offers this stuff with condition New, new for:
 | Price : $8.00 Usually ships in 1-2 business days
|  |
a1books from NJ, United States offers this stuff for:
 | Price : $8.35 Usually ships in 1-2 business days
|  |
smokymtnbooks from TN, United States offers this stuff for:
 | Price : $8.71 Usually ships in 1-2 business days
|  |
-dvdlegacy- from NY, United States offers this stuff for:
 | Price : $8.76 Usually ships in 1-2 business days
|  |
a1books from NJ, United States offers this stuff for:
 | Price : $8.93 Usually ships in 1-2 business days
|  |
thermite-media offers this stuff with condition New, new for:
 | Price : $8.99 Usually ships in 1-2 business days
|  |
Mindbooks offers this stuff with condition New, new for:
 | Price : $9.00 Usually ships in 1-2 business days
|  |
ob1s offers this stuff with condition New, new for:
 | Price : $9.08 Usually ships in 1-2 business days
|  |
allnewbooks from NJ, United States offers this stuff for:
 | Price : $9.15 Usually ships in 1-2 business days
|  |
What our customer's say!
"A New Scientific Approach to Human Development", Begley, the well-known science writer from Newsweek and the Wall Street Journal, is a genius at translation. She has the ability to go from scientific research to the application of that research to life. Typically, scientists stick to their science, and practitioners stick to their professional practice. Begley has a near-unique ability to make the successful translation between the two disciplines.
She's also an interesting--even fun read. This book, among the first to show the practical relevance of the mass of neuroscience research churning out of our best institutions, challenges much conventional wisdom regarding our minds and our intelligence. I'm well aware that overturning conventional wisdom doesn't change the orthodoxy, yet I'm also curious about the degree to which these well-researched ideas are beginning to spread.
Begley emphasizes that the brain is a dynamic organization--and that stasis is illusory. Significantly, the research shows that enrichment is key for humans--our brains are shaped by our experiences. Couch potatoes are in for long-term trouble.
I'd summarize this fine work by debunking three widely held beliefs: it's all downhill after age thirty, you lose 100,000 nerve cells a day, and you can't teach an old dog new tricks. That's very encouraging, nay exhilerating research for this member of the silent generation. ([.......])
"The Method is everything", Train Your Mind Change Your Brain is a very insightful book and has special meaning for me because I started my career as a nurse working in medical neurology. For me, probably more than for most readers, some of the old mantras about damage to the nervous system are familiar, since I worked with stroke and accident victims, among others, who were told they would only recover the function that arose after the edema from the incident subsided. In the old days, rehab was initiated more to facilitate the patient's adjustment to his or her limitations than to increase function. I've seen amazing things over the course of my career that indicated that "it ain't necessarily so;" the nervous system can and does regenerate tissue, redirect impulses, and improve with work.
The author presents her case by describing a series of meetings between neuroscientists and the Dalai Lama. It is refreshing to see that these sessions were a two way dialogue rather than a patronizing monologue by scientist to metaphysicist. Certainly the experience of those who have made a career of mind-over-matter meditation has much to say to scientists wishing to understand the abilities of the mind and its effect on anatomy and physiology.
Since I was working in neurology during the period of dogmatic attitudes about the brain and nervous system that the author describes, I recognize many of the road blocks that stood in the way of progress for so long. It's amazing that workers in the field persisted long enough to actually sway their more staid peers in the end. It must have seemed like an uphill battle to many of them. The resistance to the concept of plasticity in the nervous system that the author describes was incredibly fierce. It certainly shows that science, like every other human endeavor, is subject to ulterior motives, closed minds and other resistance to change. One is reminded of the major paradigm shift that occurred in geology after the introduction of ocean basin data that overwhelmingly supported plate tectonics and continental drift theory in the 1950's and 60's and of the battles between the steady state and big bang theories in cosmology during the 1970`s.
More than anything, though, the neurological concepts in this book and the theories mentioned above prove the effectiveness of the scientific method. The method is more important than any single individual, the data is more significant than the status and reputation of any given researcher in the field. The Method is everything.
"Begley's Excellent Job Describing the Budding relationship between Buddhism and Neuroscience", For many of those interested in the brain, questions linger about the relation between the brain and the mind. While science typically avoids dealing with the philosophical and religious implications of this dichotomy, this book explores head-on the relationship that has been growing between the new discoveries in neuroplasticity and the ancient traditions of Buddhist meditation practices. I hope to provide a brief overview of Train Your Mind Change your Brain and describe what a fantastic job Begley does of presenting the recent dialogue between neuroscience and Buddhism.
Overall Opinion of the Book: This is an absolutely terrific read. Clearly written, well-structured, and engaging, this book does a great job of presenting in laymen's terms both the seminal research and the recent studies which validate the now accepted concept of neuroplasticity, and how Buddhism is playing a role in our understanding of this phenomenon. I personally found the book to be intriguing, informative but light, and a pleasurable read.
Recommendation: With plenty of background and simple explanations, the author does a great job presenting this complex material for all to understand. I highly recommend this book to anyone (high schoolers and above) interested in learning about neuroscience, plasticity, or just explore an area where a great religious tradition and modern science are finding common ground.
Synopsis: This book really comes as the result of one man's striking curiosity for science, the Dalai Lama of Tibetan Buddhism. In 1990, as part of the Dalai Lama's personal quest for understanding science and seeking Buddhism's footing in the modern world, the Mind and Life Institute began as an annual conference hosted in Dharamsala, arranged as a week of lectures and discussion between Western scientists and the Dalai Lama. The dialogue of the 2004 conference - the focus of this book - centered on the advancements in understanding neuroplasticity and the results of the then recent experiments studying its relationship with intense meditation and mental training. It is from these proceedings that the book gets its major content and structure - discussing the topics and appropriate background of the ideas presented to the Dalai Lama.
While Begley structures the book around the presentations that occurred during the Mind and Life Institute of 2004, she frequently interjects the stories and experiments that carved out the heated debate over plasticity that spanned many decades in neuroscience. The book effectively intertwines the personal stories of the scientists and the research performed by the leading figures on both sides of the historic debate. From describing Merzenich's famous experiment's to the Silver Springs controversy, the author weaves the hard science and research with enriching personal anecdotes and experiences of those behind the discoveries.
First the book explores the discovery of neuroplasticity followed by a treatment on explaining the recent evidence supporting neurogenesis. Next follows discussions on plasticity in developing brains in children, then how sensory experience can induce changes in adult brains, and eventually reaches the debate of whether the mind can influence the structure and function of the brain through plasticity. All the while, Begley adds in commentary from the discussion between the Dalai Lama and the scientists and makes ties to the Buddhist philosophies that relate to the neuroscience being discussed. Finally, the book concludes with a discussion of the experiments carried out on monks and the changes that occur with years of mental training and meditation and how the relationship between Buddhism and science has illuminated new areas of research for neuroplasticity.
Complaints: While I overall enjoyed the book thoroughly and thought it did a terrific job educating the reader on the advancements and the debate on plasticity, I wished there would have been a slight bit more background on the Buddhist principles and meditation practices mentioned throughout. Begley does a terrific job summarizing the science behind plasticity, but I think lacks in fully explaining the Buddhist concepts that provoked the study of the monk's minds near the end of the book.
Favorite Parts: I most thoroughly enjoyed how Begley kept the book from being solely focused on the academic side of plasticity. Frequently throughout the book she describes the efforts that research on plasticity has enabled in aiding the treatment of diseases such as depression, obsessive compulsive disorder, and dyslexia, but even more so, how the science of plasticity and the practices of mental training can help improve the general daily lives of anyone, not just those suffering from a disability or injury. Additionally, I appreciated reading of the respectful dialogue that is bridging the gap between modern science and religious traditions - as both disciplines have a tremendous amount to learn from each other as this book shows.
"Excellent book", The power of thought has more influence in our physical and mental health than we can imagine. A group of Western and Eastern influencial people work together to discover how our own thinking creates changes in our brain. This book has already changed my brain This is one of many great books that talk about neuroplasticity. I strongly recommend this book to anyone and everyone.
"A fascinating read", This was a very good read on a subject--the brain, neuroplasticity, and the power of the mind--that I have long found particularly interesting. The author writes very eloquently, and at times, in just such a way that I felt was also quite touching. I found this to be an absorbing book, both due to the nature of the subject matter and the writer's wonderful ability to present it. I would highly recommend this book, especially to anyone with a bit higher than average curiosity regarding this particular sort of subject matter. If you are looking for a "self-help" style of book, written in a more personal style, this is not that book.
You might need this... The Brain That Changes Itself: Stories of Personal Triumph from the Frontiers of Brain Science (James H. Silberman Books) details..
|  The Mind and the Brain: Neuroplasticity and the Power of Mental Force details..
|  Contemplative Science: Where Buddhism and Neuroscience Converge (Columbia Series in Science and Religion) details..
|
 The Attention Revolution: Unlocking the Power of the Focused Mind details..
|  The Intention Experiment: Using Your Thoughts to Change Your Life and the World details..
| |
Read this reviews before You buy...
"Great summary of new developments.", This book is a great summary of developments in the new field of neuroplasticity. It was a real eye-opener to learn how so many of "long time accepted" concepts in medicine have been proven to be wrong. It is also encouraging to see how thinking people are able to continue to contribute to learning new ideas.
"Incredible", This is an incredible book with news from the frontiers of neuroscience. It is well written in a very readable style.
For many years scientists and medical practitioners considered that once we reach adulthood our brains abilities were fixed. This book documents discussions between neuroscientists and the Dalai Lama and his scholars regarding recent new understanding about the ability of the brain to change at any age.
"Minor Corrections", The reviews here are in general substantially on target. The book does miss the target advertised by the title editors. (ie. This is not a how-to book) Oh wait. That is not how it's done. The book gets written and then the marketing people try to help it find a place in the market, shaping its position with title, color, designs, and testimonials. (OK the editors may sometimes commission and then guide the project towards a market. But I digress and confuse.)
To Amazon: The graphic for the book is incorrect and not consistent with the title accompanying it. It is confusing.(Just Deserts for title writers who can't make up their minds about how to position their book on "changing" minds?)
To the audio production team: Did you hire the editor in the middle of the recording? Did you not pay her enough to listen to the entire reading? My relief was enormous when the obvious voice-over edit of the word "Causal" was finally (and from that point on) pronounced correctly. (Track 7 of disc 3, I think) Every single time before that the word was mispronounced as "casual," I wanted to scream. (Heck, I was alone in my car, I did scream.) There really is a big difference in science as well as in the language.
To Ms. Eliza Foss (reader): Once someone pointed out your error, did you not want to admit that you had been mispronouncing "causal" during all of the prior recording sessions?
Wait? Am I blaming the wrong people? I did not purchase the print version. Is it possibly spelled wrong all those other times in the print version? OK so I'm picky.
"Worth Reading", There is now proof the brain can be changed, and the changes possible will in the near future have a major impact on education, raising our children and how we treat strokes, depression and other concerns related to our overall well being. The public is only now being introduced to what our neuroscience people have learned. You will need to struggle to get through all the scientific information related to neuroscience, but it is will worth the effort. This book introduced me to neuroscience and I am now on my third book related to the research and the application of the research to many of the problems we face in terms of our health and learning.
"Summary of neuro research intersections with Buddhism", "Train Your Mind Change Your Brain" is NOT a guide to training your brain. It IS a summary of some of the history of neuroplasticity research, including research conducted with meditation adepts. ("Neuroplasticity" being the term that covers structural and activity changes that can be detected in a brain adapting to injury or new stimuli.)
There ARE a few things the reader can infer (exercise is apparently VERY beneficial to mental health, meditation techniques can lead to useful changes in overall types of brain activity, etc.). There ARE NOT any specific techniques described in sufficient detail that the reader can adopt to help make the changes. I DO NOT mind reading another book. I DO MIND wild goose chases.
So, after reading a chapter or two of "gee, here's the good news from the experimental neuro laddies," and "wow, the Dalai Lama is really a lot more hip to neuroscience than I ever realized," the reader will detect there isn't a lot more additional content.
|
|
 |
|
 |
|
|
All the software listed in this directory are shareware and commercial software. There are no free software here.
We have many utilities which run on windows, mac / macintosh, linux and unix. As one of the download directory in internet we have many software and application. All of our applications / app are downloadable for your computer. We also have shareware, demo, osx, linux, xp, windows, 95, 98, 2000, win, winfiles program file. The extension of files may vary, it can zip, exe, jpg and many more. We don't support illegal software like hack, crack and serial number. No hacking and cracking.
Online PAD Generator /
Download Site /
Term Of Use /
Privacy Policy /
Disclaimer
|
|
|
|
Copyright ? 2004-2008.
Shareware Download, Files Download. All
Rights Reserved.
Free Online Recipe,
Lowongan Kerja,
Indonesia Map,
Kamus,
Video Lyrics,
Health Vitamin,
PAD Generator,
Free Web Template, Wordpress Theme,
Deal Bargain Offers,
Affiliate Datafeed,
Mac OSX Tricks
Online Game Cheat,
Online Flash Game,
Electric Guitar Review,
RC Helicopter Reviews
Ascii Art,
Anagram Finder,
Clapper Generator,
Post-it Note,
Dog Name Generator,
Freelance Jobs,
Network Tools
|
|
|