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It makes sense. And really, it's a good thing. In society, we need a balance of people who have a healthy dose of fear, along with others who aren't afraid to make changes.
So .. um .. what's that they say about "fools rushing in"? ..
Are you suggesting that it's a bad thing? Perhaps libs are just too dumb to realize they should be scared.
No, not at all. Liberals fear certain things too - like a President Sarah Palin, for example. Actually, that's a fear that I believe most Americans share.
So .. um .. what's that they say about "fools rushing in"? ..
Making changes doesn't amount to being a fool. You have to know how to make changes wisely and rationally, just as it wouldn't make sense to keep things the same forever. If you don't change and evolve at least a little bit, you stagnate, and eventually, die.
No, not at all. Liberals fear certain things too - like a President Sarah Palin, for example. Actually, that's a fear that I believe most Americans share.
Yeah, I wonder where Matt Damon's fear center is located?
No, not at all. Liberals fear certain things too - like a President Sarah Palin, for example. Actually, that's a fear that I believe most Americans share.
I continue to be amazed at the fascination you guys have with her. Nobody here mentioned Palin...but you felt the need to take a jab at her.
Isabel Dziobek, Stefan Fleck, Kimberley Rogers, Oliver T. Wolf and Antonio Convit. "The ‘amygdala theory of autism’ revisited: Linking structure to behavior." Neuropsychologia, Volume 44, Issue 10, 2006, Pages 1891-1899
"These laboratories have trained animals on a variety of learning tasks and found that drugs injected into the amygdala after training affect the animals' subsequent retention of the task. These tasks include basic classical conditioning tasks such as inhibitory avoidance, where a rat learns to associate a mild footshock with a particular compartment of an apparatus, and more complex tasks such as spatial or cued water maze, where a rat learns to swim to a platform to escape the water. If a drug that activates the amygdalae is injected into the amygdalae, the animals had better memory for the training in the task. If a drug that inactivates the amygdalae is injected, the animals had impaired memory for the task."
"Despite the importance of the amygdalae in modulating memory consolidation, however, learning can occur without it, though such learning appears to be impaired, as in fear conditioning impairments following amygdalar damage."
Also see here
[url]http://www.wired.com/wiredscience/2010/12/social-networking-amygdala/[/url]
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