Psychology Sunday: Joseph LeDoux

JosephLEDOUX

Click Here to Read: Joseph E. LeDoux on Wikipedia.

Click Here to Read: Joseph LeDoux: Memory and Emotion on the NYU CNS website.

Click Here to Read and View:  Interview with Joseph LeDoux on the Big Think Website.

Click Here to Read:  Q+A with Joseph LeDoux By Brian Bergstein on the Technology Review website on June 17, 2014.

Click Here to Read: A Neuroscientist Argues That Everybody Is Misunderstanding Fear and Anxiety By Casey Schwartz on the Science of Us website on July 23, 2015. Continue reading Psychology Sunday: Joseph LeDoux

Writers Wednesday: Paul Celan

PaulCelan

Click Here to Read: Paul Celan on Wikipedia.

Click Here to Read: Paul Celan on the Poetry Foundation website.

Click Here to Read: Paul Celan and the Meaning of Language: An Interview with Pierre Joris on the FlashpointMag.com website.

Click Here to Read: Celan / Heidegger: Translation at the Mountain of Death by Pierre Joris on the Buffalo University website.

Click Here to Read:  Death Fugue by Paul Celan from the Academy of American Poets website. Continue reading Writers Wednesday: Paul Celan

100 years of General Relativity

Einstein_1921

Click Here to Read: 100 years of General Relativity—Part One By Don Barrett on the World Socialist Web Site on December 7, 2015.

Click Here to Read: 100 years of General Relativity—Part Two By Will Morrow on World Socialist Web Site on December 8, 2015.

Click Here to Read: 100 years of General Relativity—Part Three By Bryan Dyne on the World Socialist Web Site on
December 9, 2015.

Einstein delivering a lecture in Vienna in 1921

Lyrical Tuesday from Jane Hall: The Start of Something Big

I chose lyrics that are hopeful and romantic. Too much upsetting news in the world and there has to be hope for the future. This was written by Steve Allen and used as his theme song in the 1950s. Versions are by Steve
Lawrence and Edyie Gorme and  Judy Garland.

Click Here to View:  Steve and Edyie:  The Start of Something Big on YouTube

Click Here to View:  Judy Garland: The Start of Something Big on YouTube

You’re walkin’ along the street, or you’re at a party,
Or else you’re alone and then you suddenly dig,
You’re looking’ in someone’s eyes, you suddenly realize
That this could be the start of something big.

You’re lunching at Twenty-One and watchin’ your diet,
Declining a charlotte russe, accepting a fig,
When out of a clear blue sky, it’s suddenly gal and guy,
And this could be the start of something big.

There’s no controlling the unrolling of your fate, my friend,
Who knows what’s written in the magic book.
But when a lover you discover at the gate my friend,
Invite her in without a second look.

You’re up in an aeroplane or dining at Sardi’s,
Or lying at Malibu alone on the sand,
You suddenly hear a bell, and right away you can tell
That this could be the start of something grand.

This could be the start of something very big,
Why don’t you play your part?
Please give your heart to me….and see.
This could be the start of something wonderful,
Why don’t you take a chance?
Just try romance with me….and see.

Your watchin’ the sun come up and countin’ your money,
Or else in a dim cafe you’re ordering wine,
Then suddenly there he is, and you wanna be where he is,
And this must be the start of something…
This could be the heart of something…
This could be the start of something big.

 

Psychology Sunday: Helen Golden

Click Here to Read: Graduation Speech for the Westchester Center for the Study of Psychoanalysis and Psychothherapy in 1982 by Helen Golden.

Click Here to Read: Review of The Curve of Life: Correspondence of Heinz Kohut 1923-1981 edited by Geojfrey Cocks Reviewed by Helen K. Golden, Ph.D. in Psychoanalytuc Psychology (1995) Vol. 6:1.

Click Here to Read:  Graduation Speech for the Westchester Center for the Study of Psychoanalysis and Psychothherapy in 2007 by Helen Golden.

Click Here to Read: Some Thoughts on Psychoanalytic Change: A Self Psychological View by Helen Golden Contemporary Psychoanalysis,  (1988)  Vol. 24, No. 1. Continue reading Psychology Sunday: Helen Golden