#Brainpickings

2024-06-26

> The common assumptions that, if the [person] only thinks, one thought is just as good for his mental discipline as another, and that the end of study is the amassing of information, both tend to foster superficial, at the expense of significant, thought...

> The best mental habit involves a balance between paucity and redundancy of suggestions.

themarginalian.org/2014/08/18/

#JohnDewey #MariaPopova #TheMarginalian #BrainPickings
#SignificantThought #SuperficialThought

Kristian (inactive/moved)z428@loma.ml
2024-04-24

Learned:

As other neuroscientists picked up the thread, they discovered that a barn owl’s brain performs complex mathematical computations to accomplish this spatial specificity, not merely adding and multiplying signals but engaging in a kind of probabilistic statistical calculation known as Bayesian inference.


Owls are amazing.

https://indieweb.social/@mariapopova/112327150097777805

#longread #brainpickings

Joan Combs Dursoeconoprof
2023-07-08
2023-01-01

I have more than 70 tabs open on my phone. Surely some of them must be interesting..
Allow me to share some #BrainPickings to ponder on a quiet #NewYearsDay

First up, an interesting study from August this year that documents historical patterns of bicycle sales and ownership worldwide since the 1960s. The authors also quantify the benefits of #Cycling for transport while noting it is unfortunately still marginal in many countries..

nature.com/articles/s43247-022

HandgunYoga (he/him/his)HandgunYoga@mastodon.world
2022-12-28

@mariapopova
I ❤️ #BrainPickings and missed it and was delighted to find you here! Maria, thank you for your ongoing labor of love. I always enjoy your writing, densely informative yet conversational, and I always learn some gem worth sharing with others. It’s like having a super smart friend introduce me to her even smarter friends. I’m now happily supporting #TheMarginalian like I once subscribed to Brain Pickings. Thanks again for feeding my mind with fact and inspiration.

All is well in the world - the amazing Maria Popova has joined us here. @mariapopova She was one of the first people I followed on the bird site when I joined a very long time ago. She is an amazing writer and collector of ideas and knowledge - her #Brainpickings are a delight to read ..now renamed #Marginalian her website and newsletters are full of fascinating pieces of writing on everything you can imagine from #art #music #science #poetry #nature #literature #letters #love #grief #friendship #inventions and much more... as this place has grown so much and it's very mycelial in nature..thought you might appreciate this recent post of hers about #soundwaves and #mushrooms 🍄😃 themarginalian.org/2022/11/13/

Rui BorgesHomo_viator
2022-11-09

A querida @mariapopova, ou , embarcou no Mastodon.

Ou a beleza.

The Marginalian site. The author, Maria Popova, just joined the #fediverse.
Ferdi F. Zebua 🌏FerdiZ@mastodon.cloud
2021-12-27
2021-05-24

@luka I just listened to your "traven" album on Bandcamp and I love it! Funny I stumbled into your profile from searching #BrainPickings just to see if there's a fediverse profile for it. What do you use for making your music may I ask? I want to get started with learning the basics of music making myself, by remixing songs I like.

Luka Prin/ce Lucijaluka@sonomu.club
2020-10-24

"Joy is not a function of a life free of friction and frustration, but a function of focus — an inner elevation by the fulcrum of choice. So often, it is a matter of attending to what Hermann Hesse called, as the world was about to come unworlded by its first global war, “the little joys”; so often, those are the slender threads of which we weave the lifeline that saves us."

#BrainPickings
brainpickings.org/2020/10/21/1

Watsonwatswo
2020-07-27

Nick Cave on Living with Loss and the Central Paradox of Grief as a Portal to Aliveness
“The paradoxical effect of losing a loved one is that their sudden absence can become a feverish comment on that which remains… a luminous super-presence.”
By Maria Popova brainpickings.org/2020/07/27/n

Luka Prin/ce Lucijaluka@sonomu.club
2020-05-05

"In the final years of his life, the great neurologist Oliver Sacks reflected on the physiological and psychological healing power of nature, observing that in forty years of medical practice, he had found only two types of non-pharmaceutical therapy helpful to his patients: music and gardens."

via #BrainPickings

2020-03-11

"Remember your humanity, and forget the rest."

Bertrand Russell on How to Heal an Ailing and Divided World – Brain Pickings
brainpickings.org/2019/11/13/e

#einstein #bertrandrussell #manifesto #humanism #humanity #wisdom #brainpickings.org

Luka Prin/ce Lucijaluka@sonomu.club
2020-01-21

does anyone know or would recommend a (or more) podcast that would be equivalent or close to articles by Maria Popova from BrainPickings?

#podcast #BrainPickings

Maria Popova: By the Book - The New York Times

I don’t have a nightstand per se — my bedroom is rather ascetic, with only a bed nestled between the constellation-painted walls. I do tend to keep a rotating selection of longtime favorites near or in it, to dip into before sleep — “The Little Prince” (which I reread at least once a year every year, and somehow find new wisdom and pertinence to whatever I am going through at the moment), “The Lives of the Heart,” by Jane Hirshfield, “Hope in the Dark,” by Rebecca Solnit, Thoreau’s diaries, “How the Universe Got Its Spots,” by Janna Levin. Of the piles that inevitably accumulate in every room of my house, friends’ books I have recently read and loved tower nearest the bed — part synonym and part antonym to the lovely Japanese concept of tsundoku, the guilt-pile of books acquired with the intention of reading but left unread. Currently among my anti-tsundoku: “Time Travel,” by James Gleick, “Searching for Stars on an Island in Maine,” by Alan Lightman, “Little Panic,” by Amanda Stern, “Inheritance,” by Dani Shapiro, and an exhibition catalog — which, in her case, is part poetry and part philosophy — by Ann Hamilton.

Lovely interview.

#books #reading #MariaPopova #BrainPickings #blog

https://www.nytimes.com/2019/02/07/books/review/maria-popova-by-the-book.html

The Best Books on Writing, NYC, Animals, and More: A Collaboration with the New York Public Library – Brain Pickings

#book #recommendations #lists #MariaPopova #Library #brainpickings

https://www.brainpickings.org/index.php/2013/07/29/nypl-books/

Maria Popova: What I Read - The Atlantic

In the evening, after devoting a half hour or so to meditation or yoga, I’ll finish the remaining two Pickings articles for the following day and pre-schedule some tweets for the morning. I do some reading before bed: I read and review a lot of books, 10-20 a week (some are art/design, so mostly visual titles). I live and die by Google Reader, but it can become quite a guilt thing with all the items I haven’t gotten to. So, every Sunday night at 11 pm, I’ll declare “Google Reader bankruptcy” by marking all of my items as “read” — and then I’m able to start afresh on Monday morning.

The quote above really struck me; I tend to love reading internet content and getting apps for doing so, but it makes anxious, sad, and non-productive to see so many items unread; reading shouldn’t be like that…reading is a more contemplative experience. I don’t know if I’ll use his method, but I will try to ignore the itching.

#BrainPickings #MariaPopova #reading #books #writing #blog

https://www.theatlantic.com/business/archive/2011/07/maria-popova-what-i-read/331709/

I’m Maria Popova, and This Is How I Work

Maria Popova is the mind behind Brain Pickings, a highly influential and addictive curation of the best content from the web and beyond. As she describes it, Brain Pickings is “your LEGO treasure chest, full of pieces across art, design, science, technology, philosophy, history, politics, psychology, sociology, ecology, anthropology, you-name-itology.” Maria reads hundreds of things a day (yes, a day!) and posts the best to her blog and constantly-updating Twitter feed. Though Brain Pickings takes over 450 hours of work each month, it’s not all Maria does—she’s also an editorial director at Lore, a social network for higher education. We talked to Maria about how she manages it all—from the playlists that keep her inspired to the apps that keep her organized.

Knowing what people do and replicate is one of the things I’m trying to apply to my life.

#productivity #workspace #BrainPickings #MariaPopova #reading #writing #books

https://lifehacker.com/im-maria-popova-and-this-is-how-i-work-5942623

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