Science

Your Brain on Art by Susan Magsamen and Ivy Ross

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Your Brain on Art is the latest selection from the Next Big Idea Club. The authors did a nice job of gathering scientific evidence of how art making and appreciation physically changes your brain. I loved the part where a scientist discovered that different sound waves can alter the shape and appearance of our heart cells. Lots of good science-based tips on how to flourish by incorporating art in your everyday life. For me, I’m planning to spend more time really listening (and dancing!) to new music, not just having it on in the background.

Probable Impossibilities by Alan Lightman

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This collection of essays makes a rational and persuasive argument for a material universe, and by implication means that our lives are meaningless blinks in an eternity of unthinking time and space.  You get the feeling that Lightman wishes it were otherwise (like us all), but wants to lay it out as he sees it.

Basin and Range by John McPhee

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A highly readable account (as always) from John McPhee of a difficult subject.  In this case, Geology.  I read this to acquaint myself with the unusual mountain and desert terrain that we’ve encountered here in Arizona.  I have learned a lot about geology in general from this short book.  It’s also given me a whole new perspective on Time and the universe. A million years is nothing in geology, but uncomprehending to the human mind.

Highlights

Deffeyes is a big man with a tenured waistline. His hair flies behind him like Ludwig van Beethoven’s. He lectures in sneakers. His voice is syllabic, elocutionary, operatic. He has been described by a colleague as “an intellectual roving shortstop, with more ideas per square metre than anyone else in the department-they just tumble out.”

The inclination of a slope on which boulders would stay put was the angle of repose.

On the geologic time scale, a human lifetime is reduced to a brevity that is too inhibiting to think about. The mind blocks the information.

Since the late Miocene, the earth’s magnetic field had reversed itself twenty timesβ€”from north to south, from south back to northβ€”and the dates of those reversals had by now become well established.

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