Social Animal,How the new sciences of human nature can help make sense of a life

Source:http://www.newyorker.com/reporting/2011/01/17/110117fa_fact_brooks
by David Brooks January 17, 2011

Researchers have made strides in understanding the human mind, filling the hole left by the atrophy of theology and philosophy.
After the boom and bust, the mania and the meltdown, the Composure Class rose once again. Its members didn’t make their money through hedge-fund wizardry or by some big financial score. Theirs was a statelier ascent. They got good grades in school, established solid social connections, joined fine companies, medical practices, and law firms. Wealth settled down upon them gradually, like a gentle snow.
You can see a paragon of the Composure Class having an al-fresco lunch at some bistro in Aspen or Jackson Hole. He’s just back from China and stopping by for a corporate board meeting on his way to a five-hundred-mile bike-a-thon to support the fight against lactose intolerance. He is asexually handsome, with a little less body fat than Michelangelo’s David. As he crosses his legs, you observe that they are immeasurably long and slender. He doesn’t really have thighs. Each leg is just one elegant calf on top of another. His voice is so calm and measured that he makes Barack Obama sound like Sam Kinison. He met his wife at the Clinton Global Initiative, where they happened to be wearing the same Doctors Without Borders support bracelets. They are a wonderfully matched pair; the only tension between them involves their workout routines. For some reason, today’s high-status men do a lot of running and biking and so only really work on the muscles in the lower half of their bodies. High-status women, on the other hand, pay ferocious attention to their torsos, biceps, and forearms so they can wear sleeveless dresses all summer and crush rocks with their bare hands.
A few times a year, members of this class head to a mountain resort, carrying only a Council on Foreign Relations tote bag (when you have your own plane, you don’t need luggage that actually closes). Once there, they play with hundred-and-sixty-pound dogs, for it has become fashionable to have canines a third as tall as the height of your ceilings. They will reflect on the genetic miracle they have achieved. (Their grandmothers looked like Gertrude Stein, but their granddaughters look like Uma Thurman.) In the evenings, they will traipse through resort-community pedestrian malls licking interesting gelatos, while passersby burst into spontaneous applause.
Occasionally, you meet a young, rising member of this class at the gelato store, as he hovers indecisively over the cloudberry and ginger-pomegranate selections, and you notice that his superhuman equilibrium is marred by an anxiety. Many members of this class, like many Americans generally, have a vague sense that their lives have been distorted by a giant cultural bias. They live in a society that prizes the development of career skills but is inarticulate when it comes to the things that matter most. The young achievers are tutored in every soccer technique and calculus problem, but when it comes to their most important decisions—whom to marry and whom to befriend, what to love and what to despise—they are on their own. Nor, for all their striving, do they understand the qualities that lead to the highest achievement. Intelligence, academic performance, and prestigious schools don’t correlate well with fulfillment, or even with outstanding accomplishment. The traits that do make a difference are poorly understood, and can’t be taught in a classroom, no matter what the tuition: the ability to understand and inspire people; to read situations and discern the underlying patterns; to build trusting relationships; to recognize and correct one’s shortcomings; to imagine alternate futures. In short, these achievers have a sense that they are shallower than they need to be.

Help comes from the strangest places. We are living in the middle of a revolution in consciousness. Over the past few decades, geneticists, neuroscientists, psychologists, sociologists, economists, and others have made great strides in understanding the inner working of the human mind. Far from being dryly materialistic, their work illuminates the rich underwater world where character is formed and wisdom grows. They are giving us a better grasp of emotions, intuitions, biases, longings, predispositions, character traits, and social bonding, precisely those things about which our culture has least to say. Brain science helps fill the hole left by the atrophy of theology and philosophy.
A core finding of this work is that we are not primarily the products of our conscious thinking. The conscious mind gives us one way of making sense of our environment. But the unconscious mind gives us other, more supple ways. The cognitive revolution of the past thirty years provides a different perspective on our lives, one that emphasizes the relative importance of emotion over pure reason, social connections over individual choice, moral intuition over abstract logic, perceptiveness over I.Q. It allows us to tell a different sort of success story, an inner story to go along with the conventional surface one.
To give a sense of how this inner story goes, let’s consider a young member of the Composure Class, though of course the lessons apply to members of all classes. I’ll call him Harold. His inner-mind training began before birth. Even when he was in the womb, Harold was listening for his mother’s voice, and being molded by it. French babies cry differently from babies who’ve heard German in the womb, because they’ve absorbed French intonations before birth. Fetuses who have been read “The Cat in the Hat” while in the womb suck rhythmically when they hear it again after birth, because they recognize the rhythm of the poetry.
As a newborn, Harold, like all babies, was connecting with his mother. He gazed at her. He mimicked. His brain was wired by her love (the more a rat pup is licked and groomed by its mother, the more synaptic connections it has). Harold’s mother, in return, read his moods. A conversation developed between them, based on touch, gaze, smell, rhythm, and imitation. When Harold was about eleven months old, his mother realized that she knew him better than she’d ever known anybody, even though they’d never exchanged a word.
Harold soon developed models in his head of how to communicate with people and how to use others as tools for his own learning. Thanks to his mom’s attunement, he became confident that if he sent a signal it would be received. Later in life, his sense of security enabled him to go out and explore the world. Researchers at the University of Minnesota can look at attachment patterns of children at forty-two months, and predict with seventy-seven-per-cent accuracy who will graduate from high school. People who were securely attached as infants tend to have more friends at school and at summer camp. They tend to be more truthful through life, feeling less need to puff themselves up in others’ eyes. According to work by Pascal Vrticka, of the University of Geneva, people with what scientists call “avoidant attachment patterns” show less activation in the reward areas of the brain during social interaction. Men who had unhappy childhoods are three times as likely to be solitary at age seventy. Early experiences don’t determine a life, but they set pathways, which can be changed or reinforced by later experiences.
For several months when he was four, Harold insisted that he was a tiger who had been born on the sun. His parents tried to get him to concede that he was a little boy born in a hospital, but he would become grave and refuse. This formulation, “I’m a tiger,” may seem like an easy thing, but no computer could blend the complicated concept “I” with the complicated concept “tiger” into a single entity. As Harold grew, he was able to use his imagination to blend disparate ideas, in the same sort of way that Picasso, at the height of his creative powers, could combine the concept “Western portraiture” with the concept “African masks.”
Throughout his life, Harold had a superior ability to feel what others were feeling. He didn’t dazzle his teachers with academic brilliance, but, even in kindergarten, he could tell you who in his class was friends with whom; he was aware of social networks. Scientists used to think that we understand each other by observing each other and building hypotheses from the accumulated data. Now it seems more likely that we are, essentially, method actors who understand others by simulating the responses we see in them. When Harold was in high school, he could walk around the cafeteria and fall in with the unique social patterns that prevailed in each clique. He could tell which clique tolerated drug use or country-music listening and which didn’t. He could tell how many guys a girl could hook up with and not be stigmatized. In some groups, the number was three; in others seven. Most people assume that the groups they don’t belong to are more homogeneous than the groups they do belong to. Harold could see groups from the inside. When he sat down with, say, the Model U.N. kids, he could guess which one of them wanted to migrate from the Geeks and join the Honors/Athletes. He could sense who was the leader of any group, who was the jester, who played the role of peacemaker, daredevil, organizer, or self-effacing audience member.
One of Harold’s key skills in school was his ability to bond with teachers. We’ve spent a generation trying to reorganize schools to make them better, but the truth is that people learn from the people they love. In eleventh grade, Harold developed a crush on his history teacher, Ms. Taylor. What mattered most was not the substance of the course so much as the way she thought, the style of learning she fostered. For instance, Ms. Taylor constantly told the class how little she knew. Human beings are overconfidence machines. Paul J. H. Schoemaker and J. Edward Russo gave questionnaires to more than two thousand executives in order to measure how much they knew about their industries. Managers in the advertising industry gave answers that they were ninety-per-cent confident were correct. In fact, their answers were wrong sixty-one per cent of the time. People in the computer industry gave answers they thought had a ninety-five per cent chance of being right; in fact, eighty per cent of them were wrong. Ninety-nine per cent of the respondents overestimated their success.
Ms. Taylor was always reminding the class of how limited her grasp of any situation was. “Sorry, I get distracted easily,” she’d say, or, “Sorry, sometimes I jump to conclusions too quickly.” In this way, she communicated the distinction between mental strength (the processing power of the brain) and mental character (the mental virtues that lead to practical wisdom). She stressed the importance of collecting conflicting information before making up one’s mind, of calibrating one’s certainty level to the strength of the evidence, of enduring uncertainty for long stretches as an answer became clear, of correcting for one’s biases. As Keith E. Stanovich, a psychologist at the University of Toronto, writes in his book “What Intelligence Tests Miss” (2009), these “thinking dispositions” correlate weakly or not at all with I.Q. But, because Ms. Taylor put such emphasis on these virtues and because Harold admired her so much, he absorbed and copied her way of being.
By the time Harold was in his mid-twenties, he was well on his way toward a happy and fulfilling life, and the building blocks of his happiness had little to do with the lines on his résumé. There’s a debate in our culture about what really makes us happy, which is summarized by, on the one hand, the book “On the Road” and, on the other, the movie “It’s a Wonderful Life.” The former celebrates the life of freedom and adventure. The latter celebrates roots and connections. Research over the past thirty years makes it clear that what the inner mind really wants is connection. “It’s a Wonderful Life” was right. Joining a group that meets just once a month produces the same increase in happiness as doubling your income. According to research by Daniel Kahneman, Alan B. Krueger, and others, the daily activities most closely associated with happiness are social—having sex, socializing after work, and having dinner with friends. Many of the professions that correlate most closely with happiness are also social—a corporate manager, a hairdresser.
Young American men are not exactly famous for being in touch with their emotions. But Harold sensed that he was a social animal, not a laboring animal or a rational animal, and one day he went on a blind date with the woman—let’s call her Erica—who would someday be his wife. Given the stakes, we might pause over this incident, to show in slightly more detail how the inner processes of the mind interact with the conscious ones.
Harold and Erica got their first glimpse of each other in front of a Barnes & Noble. They smiled broadly as they approached, and a deep, primeval process kicked in. Harold liked what he saw, from the waist-to-hip ratio to the clear skin, all indicative of health and fertility. He enjoyed the smile that spread across Erica’s face, and unconsciously noted that the end of her eyebrows dipped down. The orbicularis-oculi muscle, which controls this part of the eyebrow, cannot be consciously controlled, so, when the tip of the eyebrow dips, that means the smile is genuine, not fake.
Erica was impressed by him: women everywhere tend to prefer men who have symmetrical features and are slightly older, taller, and stronger than they are. But she was more guarded and slower to trust than Harold was. That’s in part because, while Pleistocene men could pick their mates on the basis of fertility cues discernible at a glance, Pleistocene women faced a more vexing problem. Human babies require years to become self-sufficient, and a single woman in that environment could not gather enough calories to provide for a family. She was compelled to choose a man not only for insemination but for continued support. That’s why men leap into bed more quickly than women. Various research teams have conducted a simple study. They hire a woman to go up to college men and ask them to sleep with her. More than half the men say yes. Then they have a man approach college women with the same offer. Virtually zero per cent say yes.
So Erica was subconsciously looking for signs of trustworthiness. Marion Eals and Irwin Silverman, of York University, have conducted research suggesting that women are sixty to seventy per cent more proficient than men at remembering details from a scene. In the previous few years, Erica had used her powers of observation to discard entire categories of men as potential partners, and some of her choices were idiosyncratic. She rejected men who wore Burberry, because she couldn’t see herself looking at the same pattern on scarves and raincoats for the rest of her life. She viewed fragranced men the way Churchill viewed the Germans—they were either at your feet or at your throat. She would have nothing to do with men who wore sports-related jewelry, because her boyfriend should not love Derek Jeter more than her.
She looked furtively at Harold as he approached. Janine Willis and Alexander Todorov, of Princeton, have found that we make judgments about a person’s trustworthiness, competence, aggressiveness, and likability within the first tenth of a second. These sorts of first glimpses are astonishingly reliable in predicting how people will feel about each other months later. Erica noticed that Harold was good-looking but not one of those men who are so good-looking that they don’t need to be interesting. He was tall, which tends to inspire confidence; one study estimated that each inch of height corresponds to six thousand dollars of annual salary in contemporary America. Then he walked up and said hello.
Despite the saying about opposites attracting, people usually fall in love with people like themselves. There’s even some evidence that people tend to pick partners with noses of similar breadth to their own and eyes about the same distance apart. At lunch, Harold and Erica quickly discovered that they had a lot in common. They both affected connoisseurship regarding prosaic things such as muffins, hamburgers, and iced tea. They both exaggerated their popularity in high school, and had the same opinions about the characters in “Mad Men.” People generally overestimate how distinct their own lives are, so the commonalities seemed to them a series of miracles. The coincidences gave their relationship an aura of destiny.
The server came to their table and took their orders. The restaurant seemed to specialize in hard-to-eat salads. Erica, anticipating this, chose an appetizer that could be easily forked and a main dish that didn’t require cutlery expertise. But Harold went for a salad, composed of splayed green tentacles that could not be shoved into his mouth without brushing salad dressing on both of his cheeks. None of it mattered, because Harold and Erica clicked. Most emotional communication is nonverbal. Gestures are a language that we use not only to express our feelings but to constitute them. By making a gesture, people help produce an internal state. Harold and Erica licked their lips, leaned forward in their chairs, glanced at each other out of the corners of their eyes, and performed all the other tricks of unconscious choreography that people do while flirting. Erica did the head cant women do to signal romantic interest, a slight tilt of the head that exposes the neck. Then, there was the hair flip: she raised her arms to adjust her hair and heaved her chest into view. She would have been appalled if she had seen herself in a mirror at that moment.
And through it all the conversation flowed. You’d think, if you listened to cultural stereotypes, that women are the more romantic of the sexes. In fact, there’s evidence that men fall in love faster and are more likely to believe that true love lasts forever. Though men normally spend twice as much time talking about themselves as women do, in this conversation Harold was actually talking about Erica’s problems. Surveys by the evolutionary psychologist David Buss suggest that, for both men and women, kindness is one of the most important qualities desired in a sexual partner. Courtship consists largely of sympathy displays, in which potential partners try to prove how compassionate they can be, as anybody who has seen dating couples around children and dogs can attest.
Of course, there are less noble calculations going on as people choose their mates. Like veteran stock-market traders, people respond in predictable, if unconscious, ways to the valuations of the social marketplace. The richer the man, the younger the woman he is likely to mate with. A man’s job status is an outstanding predictor of his wife’s attractiveness. Without being aware of it, Harold and Erica were doing these sorts of calculations—weighing earnings-to-looks ratios, calculating social-capital balances. Every signal suggested that they had found a match.
“The greatest happiness love can offer is the first pressure of hands between you and your beloved,” Stendhal observed. Harold and Erica left the restaurant and walked down the sidewalk past a high-end stationery store unaware that they were already doing the lovers’ walk—bodies close to each other, smiles beaming out at the space in front of them. Harold actually shivered as he escorted Erica back to her car. He felt that he had been extraordinarily witty over lunch, encouraged by her flashing eyes.
As Erica and Harold semi-embraced, they took in each other’s pheromones. Smell is a surprisingly powerful sense in these situations. People who lose their sense of smell eventually suffer greater emotional deterioration than people who lose their vision. In one experiment conducted at the Monell Center, in Philadelphia, researchers asked men and women to tape gauze pads under their arms and then watch either a horror movie or a comedy. Research subjects, presumably well compensated, then sniffed the pads. They could somehow tell, at rates higher than chance, which pads had the smell of laughter and which pads had the smell of fear, and women were much better at this test than men.
Harold and Erica both sensed that this had been one of the most important interviews of their lives. In fact, it turned out to be the most important two hours of their lives, for there is no decision more important to lifelong happiness than the decision about whom to marry. During that early afternoon, they had begun to make a decision. The meal was delightful, but it was also a rigorous intellectual exam that made the S.A.T. seem like tic-tac-toe. Both of them had spent a hundred and twenty minutes performing delicate social tasks. They had demonstrated wit, complaisance, empathy, tact, and timing. They had measured their emotional responses with discriminations so fine that no gauge could quantify them. Every few minutes, each had admitted the other one step closer toward his or her heart.
This is how life works. Deciding whom to love is not an alien form of decision-making, a romantic interlude in the midst of normal life. Instead, decisions about whom to love are more intense versions of the sorts of decisions we make throughout the course of our existence, from what kind of gelato to order to what career to pursue. Living is an inherently emotional business.
Harold and Erica were never more alive than in the first weeks of being in love. If Harold was walking down the street alone, he kept thinking that he saw her face in the crowd. Things that used to bore him he now found charming. When he was out running, he would concoct elaborate fantasies in which he heroically saved her from harm. (Something about the act of running, and the chemicals it releases in the brain, brought out these Walter Mitty imaginings.) According to research by Faby Gagné, of Yorkville University, and John Lydon, of McGill, ninety-five per cent of people in relationships believe that their partner is above average in looks, intelligence, warmth, and sense of humor. (Other research shows that people describe former lovers as closed-minded, emotionally unstable, and generally unpleasant.) Harold now understood why the pagans had conceived of love as a god. It really felt as if some supernatural entity had entered his mind, reorganizing everything and lifting him to some higher realm.
But, in the first few months of their relationship, Harold and Erica were also engaged, as new couples must be, in a sort of map-meld. Each of them had come into the relationship with a mental map of how day-to-day life worked. Once their lives were permanently joined, they discovered that their maps did not entirely cohere. It was not the big differences they noticed but the little patterns of existence that they had never even considered.
Erica thought that dishes should be rinsed and put in the dishwasher right after they were used. Harold left them in the sink for the day and then put all of them in the dishwasher in the evening. For Harold, reading the morning paper was a solitary activity done in silence by two people who happened to be sitting together. For Erica, the morning paper was an occasion for conversation and observations about the state of the world. When Harold went to the grocery store, he bought meal products—a package of tortellini, a frozen pizza, a quiche. Erica bought ingredients—eggs, sugar, flour. Harold was amazed that she could spend two hundred dollars and there was still nothing for dinner.
Gradually, they entered the second stage of map-melding: pre-campaign planning. A house divided against itself cannot stand. Both Harold and Erica subliminally understood that the quirks that seemed charming and lovable in the early stages of love—Erica’s tendency to fire up the laptop in bed at 6 A.M., Harold’s feigned helplessness in the face of any domestic chore—would eventually cause the other to harbor homicidal urges. And so they began to make mental checklists of Things That Would Have to Change. Harold considered himself a neat man, but neatness consisted of taking things that were cluttering the countertops and shoving them into the nearest available drawers. He was apparently smarter than every football coach he had ever watched, but he lacked the foresight to see why you might not want to leave your shoes in the path that leads from the bed to the bathroom.
While they were negotiating these issues, something deeper was going on. It had to do with the familiar pleasure one feels when the internal networks of the mind and the outer patterns of reality suddenly match. Friends who are having a conversation begin to replicate each other’s vocal patterns. People in conversations begin to mimic the body language of the other person, and, the more closely they mimic the body language, the more perceptive they are about the other person’s emotions. As the neuroscientist Marco Iacoboni notes, “vicarious” is not a strong enough word to describe the effect of these mental processes. The brain exists within the skull, but the mind extends outward and arises from the interactions between people or between a person and the environment.
A year or so after they were married, Harold and Erica spent a week with Harold’s parents at their house in Aspen. They went riding and rafting and they attended an ideas festival. They sat through panel discussions on green technology and on how to adopt a charter school, and they spent a few hours immersed in the “China: Friend or Foe?” debate. One morning, they attended a talk by a neuroscientist. He was a young man in black jeans and a leather jacket, and he came to the session carrying a motorcycle helmet, as if he’d just escaped from a Caltech revival of “Grease.” He greeted a Finnish TV crew that was making a documentary about his work, mounted the stage, and gave a slide presentation that started with a series of optical illusions, like two tabletops that seem totally different but are actually the same size.
Then he displayed a series of colorful brain-scan pictures and threw out some startling statistics: we have a hundred billion neurons in the brain; infants create as many as 1.8 million neural connections per second; a mere sixty neurons are capable of making ten to the eighty-first possible connections, which is a number ten times as large as the number of particles in the observable universe; the ability to distinguish between a “P” and a “B” sound involves as many as twenty-two sites across the brain; even something as simple as seeing a color in a painting involves a mind-bogglingly complex set of mental constructions. Our perceptions, the scientist said, are fantasies we construct that correlate with reality.
At first, Harold found the talk a little chilling: it seemed that the revolution the scientist was describing was bound to lead to cold, mechanistic conclusions. If everything could be reduced to genes, neural wiring, and brain chemistry, what happened to the major concepts of life—good and evil, sin and virtue, love and commitment? And what about the way Harold made sense of his life as he lived it, the everyday vocabulary of morals, moods, character, aspirations, temptations, values, ideals? The scientist described human beings as creatures driven by deep mechanisms, almost like puppets on strings, not as ensouled human beings capable of running their own lives.
During the question-and-answer period, though, a woman asked the neuroscientist how his studies had changed the way he lived. He paused for a second, and then starting talking about a group he had joined called the Russian-American Folk Dance Company. It was odd, given how hard and scientific he had sounded. “I guess I used to think of myself as a lone agent, who made certain choices and established certain alliances with colleagues and friends,” he said. “Now, though, I see things differently. I believe we inherit a great river of knowledge, a flow of patterns coming from many sources. The information that comes from deep in the evolutionary past we call genetics. The information passed along from hundreds of years ago we call culture. The information passed along from decades ago we call family, and the information offered months ago we call education. But it is all information that flows through us. The brain is adapted to the river of knowledge and exists only as a creature in that river. Our thoughts are profoundly molded by this long historic flow, and none of us exists, self-made, in isolation from it.
“And though history has made us self-conscious in order to enhance our survival prospects, we still have deep impulses to erase the skull lines in our head and become immersed directly in the river. I’ve come to think that flourishing consists of putting yourself in situations in which you lose self-consciousness and become fused with other people, experiences, or tasks. It happens sometimes when you are lost in a hard challenge, or when an artist or a craftsman becomes one with the brush or the tool. It happens sometimes while you’re playing sports, or listening to music or lost in a story, or to some people when they feel enveloped by God’s love. And it happens most when we connect with other people. I’ve come to think that happiness isn’t really produced by conscious accomplishments. Happiness is a measure of how thickly the unconscious parts of our minds are intertwined with other people and with activities. Happiness is determined by how much information and affection flows through us covertly every day and year.”
As the scientist went on to talk about the rush he got from riding his motorcycle in the mountains, Harold was gripped by the thought that, during his lifetime, the competition to succeed—to get into the right schools and land the right jobs—had grown stiffer. Society had responded by becoming more and more focussed. Yet somehow the things that didn’t lead to happiness and flourishing had been emphasized at the expense of the things that did. The gifts he was most grateful for had been passed along to him by teachers and parents inadvertently, whereas his official education was mostly forgotten or useless.
Moreover, Harold had the sense that he had been trained to react in all sorts of stupid ways. He had been trained, as a guy, to be self-contained and smart and rational, and to avoid sentimentality. Yet maybe sentiments were at the core of everything. He’d been taught to think vertically, moving ever upward, whereas maybe the most productive connections were horizontal, with peers. He’d been taught that intelligence was the most important trait. There weren’t even words for the traits that matter most—having a sense of the contours of reality, being aware of how things flow, having the ability to read situations the way a master seaman reads the rhythm of the ocean. Harold concluded that it might be time for a revolution in his own consciousness—time to take the proto-conversations that had been shoved to the periphery of life and put them back in the center. Maybe it was time to use this science to cultivate an entirely different viewpoint.
After the lecture, Harold joined his family and they went downtown to their favorite gelato shop, where Harold had his life-altering epiphany. He’d spent years struggling to dazzle his Mandarin tutors while excelling in obscure sports, trying (not too successfully) to impress admissions officers with S.A.T. prowess and water-purification work in Zambia, sweating to wow his bosses with not overlong PowerPoints. But maybe the real action was in this deeper layer. After all, the conscious mind chooses what we buy, but the unconscious mind chooses what we like. So resolved, he boldly surveyed the gelato selections before him and confidently chose the cloudberry. ♦

Better Safe Than Sorry

Our senses have difficulty parsing stimuli linked to a negative event
Performance usually improves with practice, but not if training is a rotten time. A new study shows that people’s ability to identify noises declines when the sounds are paired with putrid smells—a phenomenon that may allow our brain to detect danger more quickly.
In a study published in May in Nature Neuroscience, neurobiologist Rony Paz of the Weizmann Institute of Science in Rehovot, Israel, and his colleagues exposed volunteers to auditory tones presented with no other stimuli or immediately followed by a rancid or fragrant odor delivered through a nose mask.
After this training session, the subjects were played a series of tone pairs—notes of very similar or identical frequencies—and asked whether the tones in each pair were the same or different. The subjects became better at distinguishing tones similar to those that had been presented alone or with a pleasant scent. But their ability to discriminate tones resembling those linked to a foul stench worsened—an effect that persisted one day later.
Such sensory confusion could be an adaptation that allows our defenses to rapidly mobilize. “This likely made sense in our evolutionary past,” Paz says. “If you’ve previously heard the sound of a lion attacking, your survival might depend on a similar noise sounding the same to you.”

Twilight

Little, Brown Books for Young Readers, a division of Hachette Book Group, will host a special International Fan Event, featuring Twilight fans from around the world. Ten fans will be chosen to have a once-in-a-lifetime intimate meeting with international bestselling author Stephenie Meyer. The event coincides with the upcoming release of The Twilight Saga: The Official Illustrated Guide (April 12, 2011; $24.99).
Little, Brown is partnering with the Twilight Saga publishers in Brazil, China, France, Germany, Italy, Mexico, Taiwan and the United Kingdom to bring together each country's respective Twilight fan. The fan selected from each country will receive an advance copy of The Official Illustrated Guide and get to talk extensively with Meyer, who will answer their Twilight-related questions.
"The one thing I miss most about my first book tour was the chance I had then to spend quality time with my readers," said Meyer. "At an event with just ten or twenty people, I was able to get to know everyone a little bit. I could also more effectively answer each person's questions. I'm so excited to have that opportunity again, and to get to spend time with fans from many different places and backgrounds."
"We receive hundreds of travel requests for Stephenie from our foreign publishing partners every year," said Megan Tingley, Senior Vice President and Publisher of Little, Brown Books for Young Readers. "Since it is physically impossible for one author to be in so many places, we thought this would be a great way to bring some fans to her.
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The Official Rules for the sweepstakes to select the fan from the United States (as well as one from Canada), including entry details and eligibility requirements, can be found on TheTwilightSaga.com.
Due to the intimate nature of this event, details regarding the location and timing are being kept confidential. Photos and additional details will be distributed upon the event's conclusion.
The Twilight Saga: The Official Illustrated Guide provides readers with exclusive new material and everything they need to further explore the unforgettable world Stephenie Meyer created in Twilight, New Moon, Eclipse, Breaking Dawn and The Short Second Life of Bree Tanner. The Guide also includes character profiles, outtakes, a conversation with Meyer, genealogical charts, maps, extensive cross-references, and much more. Originally announced as "The Official Guide," The Twilight Saga: The Official Illustrated Guide includes illustrations from several artists, including Young Kim, the illustrator behind the #1 New York Times bestselling Twilight: The Graphic Novel, Volume 1.

New Hi-Res Prometheus Pictures

New Prometheus pictures
The veil of secrecy surrounding 20th Century Fox’s great hope for next summer, Prometheus, has been dense enough to allow the misinformation-spreading monkeys of the internet to have a veritable field day. However, given that seeing is believing, there can be no doubting the veracity of the newest Prometheus materials to surface, they being a fresh batch of high-resolution pictures. Unofficial, phoney and official – such has been the story of the last seven days for Prometheus, the sort-of Alien prequel directed by Sir Ridley Scott. It was all unofficial last weekend, when a test trailer leaked online and duly alluded to a sci-fi movie with a more prevalent action element than perhaps had been anticipated in some quarters.
Then the start of the week witnessed the detonation of a bullcrap bomb, when a bit of fan fiction that had been posted on IMDb began to be circulated under the guise of a detailed plot synopsis. Some gullible were taken in (okay, I admit it. I was fooled and hugely overexcited for about 10 minutes, but then I thought Rebecca Black was an internet-created android, so what do I know?).
And now we’re onto the officially-sanctioned stage of the adventure, as we have the opportunity to pass our eyes over the new set of pictures released into the public domain. Not much of a substitute for a full trailer, but hey, better than nothing, right?
Okay, so we start with this shot of Logan Marshall-Green, a flame-haired Noomi Rapace and Michael Fassbender, who plays the android crew-member of the titular spaceship Prometheus. Curiously, they’re all wielding torches, despite the room they’re in not being particularly dark. And they’ve been kitted out with fancy collars which made me think of Robin Williams’ King of the Moon from The Adventures of Baron Munchausen.
New Prometheus pictures
Then there’s Charlize Theron and Idris Elba on the bridge of a ship, presumably Prometheus itself, the decor looking somewhere between the sheen of J.J. Abrams’ Star Trek (which shares a scripter, Damon Lindelof, with Prometheus) and the battered steamer-look of Scott’s original Alien.
New Prometheus pictures
And speak of the devil, here’s Sir Ridders himself, directing leading lady Rapace.
New Prometheus pictures
Here’s three of the crew in the so-called Ampule Room (Ampule: a small container; container for hypodermic use. Least that’s what it says in my dictionary). Check out the so-Giger-it-hurts quality of the curving design of the chamber.
New Prometheus pictures
And is that a dead ‘space jockey’ from the original Alien in the foreground?
New Prometheus pictures
Is that glowing orb from his, or her, head?
Finally, here’s some kind of alien-yet-familiar space-face.
New Prometheus pictures
Even ignoring the discredited synopsis, most seem to agree that Prometheus will deal with a human crew attempting to discover the origins of Earth on the edge of the universe – they finding that humanity has been guided by outside help in that classic Arthur C. Clarke manner. Looking forward to it.
Prometheus is out in the US on 8 June 2012. It opens in the UK a week earlier

http://www.movie-moron.com/?p=20397

Tinker Tailor Soldier Spy – Review

Tinker Tailor Soldier Spy 2011 Review
Our Tinker Tailor Soldier Spy Review.
Director: Tomas Alfredson
Starring: Gary Oldman, Benedict Cumberbatch, Colin Firth, Tom Hardy, Mark Strong, John Hurt
Release Date: UK – Back In October / US – 9th December

Taking John le Carré’s classic Cold War thriller and turning it into an exciting film is a daunting task. After all, the novel is incredibly slow-paced and there aren’t any explosions or car chases – the protagonist doesn’t even carry a gun. Anyone attempting to use the source material to tell an exciting story would need to have a lot of skill, luck or both.
Thankfully, Tomas Alfredson (Let the Right One In) is exactly the right man for the job, and he’s managed to do everything right in bringing the story to the screen. The cast are English, the setting is mid seventies and the pace is impeccable.
Gary Oldman leads possibly the greatest British cast in film history as George Smiley, a man forced out of his top-level job working for the Circus, the highest echelon of Intelligence. But Smiley is soon drafted back – from his unique position on the sidelines, he is required to observe the Circus and discover which one of his former colleagues has been selling secrets to the Russians for almost ten years.
Tinker Tailor Soldier Spy 2011 Review
Where to start with a film that’s practically perfect on almost every detail? How about the cast? The line-up of talent here is simply wonderful, with legendary actors like John Hurt and Roger Lloyd-Pack mixing it up with newer faces like Colin Firth, Tom Hardy, Mark Strong and Benedict Cumberbatch. Each one brings an amazing touch of quality to the film – a sadness, a knowing sense of being displaced by time itself. The most incredible part is how much of the characters are hidden behind the actors’ eye and yet you can almost hear their thoughts. Special mention goes to Benedict Cumberbatch, simply because the man who played TV’s Sherlock Holmes manages to share most of his screentime with Oldman and never looks the weaker man.
Oldman’s quiet, subdued performance as Smiley dominates the film – as well it should – and the depth of sadness and thought that he gives the role is nothing less than outstanding. Contrary to any other thriller protagonist ever, Smiley’s lead weapon is his mind and the scene where he reduces David Dencik’s Toby Esterhase to tears just by talking to him is perhaps the most powerful piece of film to appear on the screen this year.
The excellent cast are supported by the equally talented director. Alfredson’s sedate, thoughtful style perfectly compliments the film. The director’s use of long shots provides the audience with a sense of voyeurism, as though we are spying on the spies (fitting, giving the theme of the film). Alfredson allows events to unfold at their own pace and allows tension to seep through the film, rather than force it in the audience’s face. The effect is spellbinding – at once treating the audience as intelligent and forcing them to observe every little detail as though they too were spies. Is that waiter’s hand trembling because he is nervous? Is that man being watched? It’s an unusual treat indeed for a film audience to be expected to pay attention.
Taking the classic thriller and transferring it to the screen might have been an impossible task, but thanks to the talents of the cast and crew, Tinker Tailor Soldier Spy is one of the best films of the year. Just pay attention and expect a different kind of thrill to the one cinema usually provides.
Our Grade: A

New movie brings 'The Three Stooges' into present day (video)

The Farrelly brothers bring "The Three Stooges" into present day but leave their classic slapstick comedy style intact.
Moe, Larry, and Curly stumble into a murder plot and wind up starring in a reality TV show while trying to save their childhood orphanage.
In FOX's 2012 comedy film, Sean Hayes plays Larry, Will Sasso plays Curly and Chris Diamantopoulos plays Moe.
"Jersey Shore" stars Snooki, JWoww and The Situation play themselves in the movie.
Get stooged April 13, 2012.

Reactions to the trailer have not been good.
Slashfilm says, "When passion projects ms go bad, the go very, very bad."
Boston Herald says the trailer is "waaaay worse than a poke in the eye!"
The Guardian says, "The promo is all breasts, bums and reality TV stars. It's no wonder Penn, Del Toro and Carrey ran a mile."
What did you think of the trailer? Thumbs up or thumbs down?

Wanted: High school bands for 10th annual battle at Jewish Community Center of Syracuse

The folks at the Jewish Community Center of Syracuse are crossing the t's and dotting the i's for the upcoming 10th anniversary edition of its annual high school battle of the bands.
The event will start at 7 p.m. Saturday, Jan. 14, at the JCC's Schayes Family Gymnasium, 5655 Thompson Road, DeWitt.
The winning band will receive $200 cash, six hours of recording at SubCat Music Studios and a featured slot in a spring showcase at the JCC's teen center, The SPOT, in Shoppingtown.
Admission will be $6 for general view, $9 for VIP view. For every student that attends, $1 of the admission is donated back to the student's school music department.
What's left?
Setting the lineup of the 10 bands of high school musicians that will compete, of course.
Interested bands must register, and pay an entry fee of $40, by Jan. 2. Interested band leaders can call Ilario Huober at 445-2360, ext. 133, or send an email to thespot@jccsyr.org. Entry forms can be downloaded at jccsyr.org or picked up at the JCC front desk.
http://blog.syracuse.com/entertainment/2011/12/wanted_high_school_bands_for_1.html

CNY Weekend: Music, openings and holiday memories

Lots to do this weekend in Central New York. Here are the best bets:
Thursday's Best Bet: Paul Davie, of Liverpool, will perform in a tribute to John Lennon and George Harrison with Central New York musician, Bob Halligan at Shifty's.
Friday's Best Bet: The folks in Seneca Falls have a weekend full of activities scheduled to celebrate the 65th anniversary of the release of the Frank Capra Christmas classic “It’s a Wonderful Life.”
Saturday's Best Bet: Jazz saxophonist Branford Marsalis (right) will perform at 8 p.m. Saturday at the SRC Arena at Onondaga Community College.
Sunday's Best Bet: “Elf,” “A Christmas Story” and a holiday sweater party at the Landmark Theatre.

未来生活进行时:“触摸”科技——体验未来精彩无“触”不在

曾几何时,大部分人都使用各种全键盘式手机,双手没有一刻不处于高度按键作业中。尽管已经有人用手写笔键盘,只不过手机那么小的屏幕写字并不方便。不过,美国多久,市面上出现那么一部分人,他们已经使用了一种全新的手机产品,食指自如地在手机屏幕上“滑来滑去”,这种操作方式真是帅爆了!一时之间,这种“滑来滑去”几乎成为大众追求的lifestyle,逐渐流行,成为标志性象征。直到今天几乎无人不知iPhone,无人不晓Apple。似乎没有人会再怎么怀疑触摸屏会被谁替代。正如微软前总裁比尔盖茨曾预言未来时说的那样:“未来世界触摸屏必将无所不在!”
但若追问一句,未来,究竟是这样“滑来滑去”好呢?还是那种“点来点去”(手指轻点屏幕的手势)更有机会呢?

未来,并不是一个孰优孰劣的问题,而是取决于我们最终会选择什么。
尽管苹果并不是触摸屏的创造者,但是的确是它让我们今天的生活中滑来滑去的行为无所不在。其实iPhone之前人类就已经开始将触摸感应应用于手机,液晶屏消费品的设计上,比如 早期的Palm,索尼爱立信,HTC等就已经开始尝试应用。并且,缔造下里程碑意义事件的也不仅仅只有iPhone,比如微软的Surface,以及亚马逊的Kindle,同样对于人类进步和生活的改善具有革新性的重要价值。
但是, 触摸屏真的会是我们的未来吗?会不会出现一种颠覆性的操控方式呢?谁知道呢?
所以,预见未来最好的方式,是从当下寻找各种可能性。事实上,人类已经实现了许多种不同形式的触控技术,以下分享几个在未来更符合人们需求的极有可能出现在我们生活中的触控技术创新和应用案例:

1. Microsoft Surface :缔造未来美好生活愿景的鼻祖



2008年CES大会上发布的Microsoft Surface产品

2011年CES大会推出Surface 2.0,展示其重磅技术PixelSense

Microsoft Surface是一个由微软所开发,结合硬件与软件的新技术,用家可以直接用手或声音对屏幕作出指令,毋须再依赖会令手部劳损的鼠标与键盘。Microsoft Surface基于Windows Vista平台,这款外型像咖啡桌的大型触控式电脑未来可望出现在餐厅、饭店、零售点,或赌场等生活中的各种不同场合.如果执行起来流畅,这样的未来还是很让人期待,并且会成为现实。并且,微软对于触控未来的发展方向与领域研究,已经产生了非常重要的指向性影响。
随着微软surface之类的大型显示设备的出现,又给触摸屏提出了新的要求:面积更大、更薄、成本更低,如果能够提供力反馈则更好。似乎有点贪心,可是,科技真的就这么一一地做到了。

2. Perceptive pixel 多点触控大型显示器 —— 触摸屏越大越好


人类不可能在一个几寸的移动手机屏上完成未来一切操作,人们总是对广袤的视野有着不端的追求。可以在更大的范围内进行操控吗?既要适应便携式的口袋机屏幕,更要提供多种大屏幕广视线操作的要求,才是我们想要的!答案当然是:可以。
在温哥华开幕的SIGGRAPH 2011大会上,Perceptive Pixel公司发布了世界上最大的多点触控显示器,尺寸超乎想象——达到82英寸。该显示器拥有6英寸厚的“轻薄”设计,因为点距比较大,分辨率和同时发布的一款28英寸触控显示器一样,均为1920*1080,刷新率120Hz。触控响应时间小于1ms。

3. Pressure-Sensitive Computing 压力感应触控技术——触摸如此“温柔”


压力感应触控技术Z-touch来自于美国F-origin公司,此一触控技术很早就推出,其原理也相当简单,即是透过由上而下的压力进行感应,可以手写输入、也可以精确辨识手指位置,其最大特点就是不需要ITO导电层,因此可避免相当多与显示面板结合时的问题,包括贴合、降低透光率等问题,不过也由于其感应原理相当简单,要达到精确办识的目的,则需要相当精密的技术。在价格上,与电阻式差不多,远低于电容式。下图所展示的Impress展示了物理压力感知屏的工作设计原理。



所以,无疑这一技术将会广泛地被应用于接下来的产品中。除了广泛应用这一技术的各种电子书,电子阅读器产品之外。传说中的iPhone 5开发者版本中就有这项功能。此外,包括SONY等厂商都已经将这一技术推向了消费者市场。



4.薄膜触摸屏——更轻薄的触控感应技术


早在2008年苹果就申请了一个专利,在触摸屏的两层面板之间加入了透明的软垫,试图让触摸屏能够像键盘那样实现力反馈。其原理很简单,却很有吸引力,虽然我们还没看到真正能用的产品。也许几年后我们才会在新一代i字头的产品上看到它,当人们按上去的时候,感觉也许像是按到一张柔软的鼠标垫一样。如果苹果不再快一点的话就会被追上了。
2010年,纽约大学开发出的新产品实现了惊人的效果,用两层带印刷电路的薄膜制作的触摸屏,引起了不少企业的兴趣。最终,这些轻薄而不显眼的触控板可能将在无形中嵌入到任意一个物体表面上,开启一个多重触控交互的新领域。

5. KEYTEC MAGIC TOUCH ORI —— 灵犀触动, 随心而动


Displax公司发布了一项全新的大幅面多点触控技术,它的交互性可以将任何一种非导电平面或曲面转化为多点触控屏幕。此外,KeyTec早就已经实现了在多种不同材质面板,玻璃上实现触控感应技术。这么一来,《黑客帝国》,《少数派报告》等各种空间站点来点去操控大局的画面就会马上成为现实,从技术上说,已经可以。这么一来,我们童年的各种科幻英雄瞬间都弱爆了!
KEYTEC MAGIC TOUCH ORI – Interactive Mirror

6. 生活应用,触摸未来进行时


福特汽车:全新触摸操控车载应用系统“MyFord Touch”
用户只需进行简单的个人设置即可轻松使用——福特的目标是在汽车上实现这样的环境。这也正好顺应了近年来家电产品的开发趋势”。在2010年1月7日开幕的“2010 International CES”首日举行的主题演讲会上,美国福特汽车(Ford Motor)总裁兼首席执行官艾伦·穆拉利(Alan Mulally)介绍了该公司为在车内提供使用各种互联网服务的环境而开发的全新操作界面“MyFord Touch”。
MyFord Touch还能通过手机等与各种互联网服务联动。此次首先实现了与微博服务“Twitter”、互联网音乐电台潘多拉(Pandora)、互联网广播电台“Stitcher”的联动。另外,为了尽快实现与其他服务的联动,福特还计划向第三方技术人员公开相关应用的开发环境等。

福特计划2010年内上市配备MyFord touch的汽车。争取2015年之前在80%的北美销售车型上配备MyFord touch。





康宁:A Day Made of Glass… Made possible by Corning.
这是 Corning(康宁)的玻璃概念视频,以生产特殊玻璃和陶瓷材料闻名全球的康宁公司(Corning),日前推出一支相当吸引人的广告片,片中讲述高科技触摸屏玻璃在未来世界扮演重要角色,成为生活中不可或缺的必需品。


如果,未来真的如盖茨说的用触摸解决一切⋯⋯

我们的键盘和鼠标真的会被完全取代吗?触摸屏也许会成为公共场所显示器、自动柜员机、公共信息查询系统、手持设备的标准配置,但是想想看,如果让我们一天8小时举着手臂点来点去???这样相比而言,我还是宁可用鼠标和键盘算了。
不过,可幸的是,未来当然不仅仅是触摸屏那么简单!
不论触摸界面能够变得多么完美,人们总想尝试着让自己完全不受外物束缚,不靠任何硬件外设,可以达到与计算机屏幕碰触吗?当然!我们身体的每一个部位,都能以一种创新的方式实现与科技之间的互动,向计算机发送指令。 这,就是感应操控技术,这一技术的意义远远大于任何创新科技的价值,能实现太多从前人们不敢想象的可能。下周和大家一起体验一把它的神奇吧!
资料整理、编辑:Vivian Peng @DamnDigital (原创内容,转载请注明来自DamnDigital)

The Office, "Christmas Wishes": Best Lines of The Night

This year's holiday episode of The Office kicks off with Andy being a authoritarian, but adorable, choral director, leading the crew in his rendition of "Rudolph the Red-Nosed Reindeer." It's the first Christmas in history without Michael Scott playing Santa, and the Nard Dog has big shoes to fill. In true Dunder-Mifflin style, they're throwing a big bash and Andy decides to grant everyone in the office one Christmas wish.

One Christmas miracle comes in the form of a "darkly erratic" Robert California, while another highlight is one of the most epic air guitar sessions ever seen on the small screen. Ultimately, though, this episode is about Erin's lingering feelings for Andy, and his own confusion about whether or not he reciprocates. I'm not sure how to feel about this. Are we supposed to be happy that they could possibly get back together? Or do we just want Erin to get a sweet boyfriend who adores her even faster? "Christmas Wishes" is hands down one of my favorite episodes of the season. To find out my favorite lines from this awesome episode, just keep reading.
  • "Now look, I may not have a great laugh like Santa or a flying sled. But I'll tell you what I do have: a Prius, a heart of freaking gold, and an American Express green card." — Andy, on his holiday wishes
  • "It actually makes me like Christmas less. Me. Christmas." — Angela, on Andy's caroling
  • "Just give me "plain baby Jesus lying in a manger" Christmas!" — Stanley, on Christmas after seeing Lewis Black
  • "I actually appreciate the human intimacy. I feel like a kitten being cradled by a gorilla." — Robert California, on Kevin's hug
  • "Good thing I brought my falconry gloves." — Dwight, putting away a porcupine
  • "You can't click on these Kardashian links, that's why you have so many viruses." — Ryan, to Kelly on her computer problems
What did you think of this week's episode, "Christmas Wishes"? Chime in below!
Photo courtesy of NBC

Publish your Blog as a Magazine with Google Currents

Google’s widely anticipated alternative to Flipboard is finally here. It’s called Google Currents and the next screenshot should you give an idea of what Currents is all about.
Google Currents Producer
google currents logoGoogle Currents is a Flipboard like app that lets you read blogs, news websites and other online publications in a magazine format on your mobile phone and tablet devices. The app is available for both Android and iOS platforms.
One big advantage with Google Currents is that you can read your subscriptions offline and it will even download the embedded images for offline access.
You can get Google Currents now from the Android Market and the iTunes Store. This is currently available only for US users but there’s at least an easy workaround for iPhone /iPad users.

Publishing to Google Currents

As a web publisher, you can package one or more RSS feeds, image slideshows, tweets, videos, social network updates and any other HTML content into an “edition” and publish it to Google Currents which others can then subscribe to on their tablet or mobile phone.
[*] Digital Inspiration is also available on Google Currents.
There’s no programming required as Google Currents provides an web editor (screenshot) for publishers to create these bundles. You can also pull content from Google Docs and ePUB ebooks into Currents. The default layouts are beautiful but advanced users may apply their own CSS styles to further customize the appearance of their magazine.

Read RSS Feed with Google Currents

Google Currents can also be used as a RSS reader to follow feeds that are not available as standalone editions. Simply subscribe to any RSS feed inside Google Reader and then pull it directly into Google Currents using Add More –> Library –> Google Reader. The plain feed will automatically be served in a magazine layout similar to other editions.

Google Currents vs Flipboard, etc.

There are quite a few reading apps – like Flipboard, Yahoo LiveStand, Pulse, Zite and AOL Editions -  that let you publish (and consume) online content in a magazine format. However, Google Currents is probably the only app that will share advertising revenue with publishers which is obviously a big incentive.
The other difference is that some web publishers can publish standalone apps in the Android and iTunes store using the Google Currents platform.  That is, they can create their own “edition” inside the Currents Producer as before but users won’t have to download the Google Currents app in order to use those standalone apps.
In other words, you can create your own Android and iOS apps for your blog but without writing a single line of code. Google will even handle the publishing and approval part. It can’t get easier than this!
When Amazon introduced blog publishing for Kindle, there was a concern that people would publish someone else’s RSS feed as their own and monetize it through the Kindle Store. That is however unlikely to happen with Google Currents as it only lets you include content from domains that you have verified through Google Webmaster Tools.

link http://www.labnol.org/internet/google-currents-magazine/20546/

生命的“动力”

文/若水投稿。
我们为什么生存?或者可以说,我们因为什么而存在?这个问题涉及到了生命的意义,很多人还没有来得及思考或许就已经结束了生命。关于“我是谁?”这样的问题,很多人都试图用自己的语言来解答,这是一个艰深的问题,却又是一个再简单不过的问题(或许是源于看问题的层次与角度)。今天我想讨论的不是“我是谁”这样宏大的问题,因为在以前的思考中,对于这个问题我曾尝试解答过,我想说的是前些日子刚刚得到的一些体会,就是“生命的动力”这样一个问题,这个问题在我的理解,更偏向于思想方面的解答,而不是偏重于生物学方面,这里需要提前表明的我的观点。我们每天面对自己生活的时候,究竟是那种力量让我们去面对这未知的一切?是来源于生活本身?还是来源于身边其他的人?又或是来源于我们自己?看看我的一些思考能否给大家带来一些新的看法。
第一种看法,我们的动力来源于生活。得到这样一个观点源于那天几个老同学的聚会。让我暂且称他为L,我们因为一个现实生活的问题产生了一些讨论,问题的背景大概是关于出行乘车难的问题。在我的分析,或许是由于居民生活水平普遍提高,目前的出租车资费已经与人们的收入有些脱节,简单的理解就是定价有些过低,加上车辆数量不多,最终导致一到上下班高峰期,就打不到车。我认为适当的提高资费并增加车辆数量或许能够解决一些问题,而L不认同我的观点,他认为出租车已经赚得够多了,而且服务态度还不好,不应该通过这种方式来调节乘车难的问题。对于这个社会问题来说,其实有着很多方面的原因,比如城市交通规划不够合理,再比如城市的公交系统不够完善等等。我是经常要打车的,只不过我比较理解出租车司机真实的生活状态,就银川这样的西部城市来说,五元的起步价确实是非常的低廉,出租车司机的月收入并没有一些人想象的那么高,毕竟开出租车是比较辛苦的工作,出于对这些情况的了解,我还是站在了的士司机的一边,认为适当的提升价格对于供需双方都有一定的促进。L自己是有私家车的,他认为他之所以要买私家车,就是因为出行难,打车难。这样的回答也能够理解。于是我将这个问题转化了一下,问他究竟是什么逼迫了他? L就是上面这样的观点:都是生活所逼迫。逼迫可以理解为一种动力,我进一步问道“生活是什么?”他的回答是“衣食住行”。让我尝试解释一下:他认为衣食住行的逼迫,就是自己生活的动力。这个观点我们先不来评论对错,我只说说自己的看法,我想要生活的好一些,究竟是生活本身逼迫了我让我产生了动力去得到更好的生活呢,还是因为其他的东西?我们每个人都可以思考这样的问题。小时候我们上学,或许是因为父母的管教,而长大了我们结婚生子,也是因为父母么?这或许算是我们自身的需求吧?在我看来生活只是让我们明白了自身生存的需求,却并不是最终的动力。就上学而言,又有了另一个观点,就是我下面要提到的:是身边的人给了我们动力。
第二种观点:我们的动力来源于其他人。这种观点似乎很容易被一些人接受。当我们还没有离开父母的时候,父母帮我们安排好了很多事情,比如上学、工作,有些人甚至连结婚生子都由父母来安排。中国儒家文化中有“孝”这样的说法,或许有些人认为听从长辈的安排就是“孝”。很多人在完成一些艰苦的事情的时候,也会有这样的想法:“为了谁谁谁,我一定能够做到”。似乎身边的人就是我们的动力,为了他们能够过的好一些,就应该拼命的积累财富,就如同父母为了孩子,丈夫为了妻子等等。我其中一个同学就有着这样的观点,我暂称他为C,C认为生活并没有逼迫我们自己,而是“人”逼迫了“我”,这里的人是将“我”排除在外的,C认为自己没有必要逼迫自己,只有其他人才能逼迫自己去做一些自己不太愿意做的事情。比如自己的父母或者自己的爱人让自己要变成一个什么样的人,再比如身边的朋友做了一些事情而自己不得不去参与。对于这样的观点,我自己的看法是人与人之间是存在着微妙的关系,但是这些关系并不是生硬的强拉在一起,而是因为一些更深层的原因。比如感情。当我们对身边的人产生一些感情的时候,我们就会不由自主地做出一些决定,这里的感情包括爱与恨。当我们爱或者恨身边的人时,我们会比较在意对方的一些举动,因为这些举动会对我们自身产生一定的影响,这其中最大的影响或许就是动力。我相信很多人都听说过“亲和力”这样的概念,但是完全能够解释这个概念的人,或许真的没有几个。在我的理解,亲和力就是一种感情力,它可以影响到人与人之间的关系,进而影响事情的发展。这样一来,问题似乎也清楚了一些,我们的动力并不是直接来源于其他人,而是来源于我们与其他人的一些关系,比如上面列举的感情,还有一样我没有分析,就是利益,利益同样能影响到我们,成为我们的一部分动力。这真的是问题的答案么?我们为什么那么看重感情,又为什么受利益的驱使?这就引出了最后一种观点:我们的动力来源于我们自己。
第三种观点:我们的动力来源于我们自己。L也好,C也好,我都用这样一个观点来回答:不是生活逼迫我们,也不是身边的人逼迫我们,而是我们自己逼迫自己。当我们想要过更好的生活的时候,我们内心的欲望被激发出来,比如占有欲,然而资源却是有限的,于是我们开始逼迫自己找更好的工作,赚更多的钱,所有的这些并不是表面上看的那样,我们想要过上好的生活,或者想要让身边的人对自己刮目相看,而是想要满足自己的一些欲望(好生活、被人认可也算得上一种欲望吧),仅此而已。我们每天朝九晚五辛勤的工作,哪怕是前一天喝个烂醉,也要挣扎着起床开始新的一天,并不是为了“今天还能赚多少钱”,金钱只是一种表面的幻象,最核心的动力其实是来源于我们的内心。先是“我们想要得到”,才是“因为想要得到而产生动力”,这就是一个满足欲望的过程。
其实还有一种观点,有些人应该能够体会的到。林则徐有个对联:“海纳百川,有容乃大;壁立千仞,无欲则刚。”人之所以能够生存,生存的欲望所产生的动力只是一部分,更多的是来源于生命本身。宇宙孕育了人类这样的生命,除了宇宙赋予的生命能量之外,还造就了能让我们自己产生动力的内部源泉,有种说法是“人类自身的小宇宙”,我更偏重于“心灵的力量”。是我们的内心给了我们源源不绝的动力,让我们能够有勇气面对每天的未知世界。
那么上面的这个问题:是生活逼我还是别人逼我,还是我逼我?期待你的回答。
左岸记读完,我想到一个人——马斯洛,想到了他的需求层次理论,若水的这三个观点,可以看作是马斯洛需求层次理论的生活版。无论是哪一种动力都与每个人当时的需求相关,也就是说他正奋斗于那个层次。
尼采有一句警世格言:“成为你自己!”如果说弗洛伊德为我们提供了心理学病态的一半,那么马斯洛则将健康的那一半给我们补充了完整。
人作为一个有机整体,具有多种动机和需要,包括生理需要(人们最原始、最基本的需要,如吃饭、穿衣、住宅、医疗等等。若不满足,则有生命危险。这就是说,它是最强烈的不可避免的最底层需要,也是推动人们行动的强大动力)、安全需要(要求劳动安全、职业安全、生活稳定、希望免于灾难、希望未来有保障等)、归属与爱的需要(个人渴望得到家庭、团体、朋友、同事的关怀爱护理解,是对友情、信任、温暖、爱情的需要)、尊重需要(包括自我尊重、自我评价以及尊重别人。尊重的需要很少能够得到完全的满足,但基本上的满足就可产生推动力)和自我实现需要(这是一种创造的需要。有自我实现需要的人,似乎在竭尽所能,使自己趋于完美。自我实现意味着充分地、活跃地、忘我地、集中全力全神贯注地体验生活)。自我实现的需要是超越性的,追求真、善、美,将最终导向完美人格的塑造,高峰体验代表了人的这种最佳状态。
来源http://www.zreading.cn/archives/2666.html

《死神来了5》720p高清版下载啦!(迅雷+电驴+磁力下载)

《死神来了》前四部我都看过,虽然感觉情节很假,但还是蛮惊险的,而且非常有创意,所以每一部都会看。第一部为飞机失事,第二部为连环车祸,第三部为过山车脱轨,第四部是赛车场意外。说实话这个系列的片子还蛮血腥的,不过比起《电锯惊魂》系列好多了。如果你喜欢看这类电影,我向你严重推荐十大最血腥电影。最新的第五部在美国和香港早就上映过了,可是为什么迟迟没有在内地上映呢?据说原因就是由于该影片内容过于血腥,禁止国内上映。这下有看头了,我最喜欢禁片了,哈哈!
死神来了5 720P
  死神来了5,这次又会是灾难呢?拉开新故事序幕的将会是一场吊桥倒塌事件,一个男子的预感救了一群参加公司组织的野外拓展活动的同事,令他们遭遇了悬索桥坍塌的意外灾难侥幸逃生。但是这群倒霉蛋们注定无法顺利逃生,在与时间的可怕赛跑中,他们发了疯一样寻求逃脱死神的魔掌,其中包含激光眼睛手术、针灸等新意场景。
  终于等到出高清版了,还是720P的!下载方式包括迅雷、电驴和磁力,不懂什么是磁力下载的点这里。不上图了,好像真的很血腥……
  《死神来了5》720p电驴下载
  《死神来了5》720p磁力下载
  《死神来了5》720p迅雷下载

英雄无敌3_经典地图_下载

地图来源:游戏人的家 \ 地图行会 \ maps4heroes
    地图已打包,需要者请留言~
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    BT地图实用技巧 | WOG地图下载 from songfx
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    国外作品:
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    *技巧:打开地图编辑器,点击上排最后一个按钮[通过的能力],隐藏路线立刻暴露,打起来也许轻松一些。
 来源   http://www.cnblogs.com/diystar/diystar/archive/2010/02/10/1667220.html

最长的拥抱

童瑶素颜出镜
童瑶素颜出镜



童瑶造型似邻家女孩
童瑶造型似邻家女孩


 由著名导演杨亚洲、杨博执导的时尚励志纯爱电影《最长的拥抱》已在北京杀青。该片由新四小花旦之一的童瑶、“断臂钢琴师”达人秀冠军刘伟及倪萍主演。童瑶在片中饰演一个叛逆的北漂女孩,为了更贴近人物全程素颜上阵,似邻家女孩般清纯可人。
  电影《最长的拥抱》中,北漂女孩“小北”初来北京,在面对繁华世界和各种诱惑时误入歧途,选择自杀。恰巧被无臂青年“宫平”所救,随后在小北与宫平的接触中,小北渐渐体会到善良、关爱的可贵,决定走出阴霾,性格也由最初的叛逆、张狂变得阳光、开朗。由于之前有片约在身,童瑶差点错失“小北”这一角色,在导演眼中,童瑶是在想到小北这个人物时的第一人选,所以不惜延迟开机两个月,终于等来了童瑶。而童瑶也不负重望,用自己特有的感觉把小北这个本不讨喜的角色刻画的生动鲜活,并且可怜可爱。在拍摄过程中,童瑶为突出小北外面叛逆、内心纯净的性格,选择素颜上镜,在服饰上也以简单的素色服装为主,干净清爽,效果让人眼前一亮,宛如邻家少女般纯净、无暇。
  该片由中盟世纪传媒投资拍摄,也是中盟世纪与杨亚洲导演的第二次合作。为此,杨导还特意找来儿子杨博一同联合执导。据悉,这也是父子首次联合执导的作品,杨导对这次的合作非常满意,并表示希望影片可以去冲击国际上的一些电影节。