V.S. Ramachandran

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Kat Fatland argues that the Internet changing our brains isn’t necessarily evil at Good. An excerpt:

“Think about how many tools you use in your daily life without even thinking about it. You drive a car to work (or ride a bike… the principle is the same). You use your GPS device, cell phone, iPod, and other tech devices so flawlessly that, according to Ramachandran’s principle, they may as well be extensions of your very self.

Sound scary? It’s not. We’ve been using tools for centuries—it’s what distinguishes us from most species of lesser intelligence. And we haven’t just used tools, we’ve relied on them. In Clark’s book, he cites the wristwatch as an example. Human lives are drastically different now than they were before we had the ability to know the time right down to the minute. Before clocks were widespread, and people had only the sun or the church bells to tell them it was noon, scheduling was virtually nonexistent. Or think about the pen and paper. These tools have changed the very fabric of how we exist with each other in the world—and few would argue these changes have made our lives worse.”

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Neurologist V.S. Ramachandran briefly discusses bizarre brain disorders.

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Yesterday, I put up a post about the neurological phenomenon Synesthesia, in which the senses merge, allowing some people to taste colors, smell words and identify numbers by their “personalities.” Here’s a Time video, featuring neuroscientist V.S. Ramachandran, which demonstrates this disorder.

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