Sunday, January 13, 2008
Wednesday, January 2, 2008
Proust and the squid : the story and science of the reading brain
by Maryanne Wolf
Type: | Book |
Language: | English |
Publisher: | Thriplow : Icon, 2008. |
Editions: | 2 Editions |
ISBN: | 9781840468670 184046867X |
Academic writing for graduate students, by Swales, J., & Feak, C. B.
Swales, J., & Feak, C. B. (2004). Academic writing for graduate students essential tasks and skills. Michigan series in English for academic & professional purposes. Ann Arbor: University of Michigan Press.
Monday, March 26, 2007
Zimbardo: The Resonance of the Accidental Hero
But a major shift is intended in his latest book. He uses an example. A few months ago, someone had a seizure in the subway, and fell in the tracks. There were 45 people, waiting for the train. The noise of the train coming full speed added what can only be imagined as terror and fascination. No one moved. Except this one guy. He had his 2 daughters with him. He turned to the next person, a perfect stranger, and uttered: "Please take care of my daughters" and without further discussion, jumped into the tracks, and held the man. He said "You had a seizure, the train is coming, please don't move" and the train pass over them full speed, and then stopped above them. The fist thing he screamed, still under the train, but unharmed, was "Tell my daughters I'm ok!” Zimbardo wants to shift his personal quest for understanding how situations can make normal people do evil things, to understand what is the matrix of the situation that make normal people do extraordinary, or ordinary, selfless actions. He wants to shift the focus to the hero in the making we all carry inside, just waiting for the situation. Why? Well, as he put it, as he ended his almost 3 hour, fast paced presentation: I would love to see more of them, especially if I'm the guy in the tracks. CH
Subscribe to:
Posts (Atom)