"spirituality" videos

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neuroscience perspective on empathy, compassion.
compassion and brain neurons!

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Quote from smallStops:

May I ask : what are you doing yourself? :)

I'm thinking that this site, i.e. Elite Trader, should be about trading and related matters only, and that you should fuk off and find a site more suited to your goody goody spiritualistic, pseudo religious preaching.
 
Quote from Mysteron:

I'm thinking that this site, i.e. Elite Trader, should be about trading and related matters only, and that you should fuk off and find a site more suited to your goody goody spiritualistic, pseudo religious preaching.

wow. What is really upsetting you?
 
brain scan of a monk actively extending compassion shows activity in the striatum, an area of the brain associated with reward processing



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http://www.sfgate.com/health/articl...ditation-compassion-3689748.php#photo-3165600

Stanford neuroeconomist Brian Knutson is an expert in the pleasure center of the brain that works in tandem with our financial decisions - the biology behind why we bypass the kitchen coffeemaker to buy the $4 Starbucks coffee every day.

He can hook you up to a brain scanner, take you on a simulated shopping spree and tell by looking at your nucleus accumbens - an area deep inside your brain associated with fight, flight, eating and fornicating - how you process risk and reward, whether you're a spendthrift or a tightwad.
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"The Buddhist view of the world can provide some potentially interesting information about the subcortical reward circuits involved in motivation."
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stress reduction
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People who meditate show more left-brain hemisphere dominance, according to meditation studies done at the Center for Investigating Healthy Minds at the University of Wisconsin-Madison.

"Essentially when you spend a lot of time meditating, the brain shows a pattern of feeling safe in the world and more comfortable in approaching people and situations, and less vigilant and afraid, which is more associated with the right hemisphere.

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improved perception
Volunteers who spent an average of 500 hours in focused-attention meditation during a three-month retreat in 2007 were better than the control group at detecting slight differences in the length of lines flashed on a screen.
 
I wonder what parts of the brain get activated when listening to forgiveness.
:D :D :D
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now, going into trust. Trust and believing (:) ) go together.
Believing.

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:D :D :D
 
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