What should you talk about? Well, this is determined simply by what thoughts immediately rush to your mind. What you are thinking may be exactly what they are thinking, so let the conversation guide itself based on your intuition.
Welcome any thoughts that come your way at this point, no matter if they are dark, light, scary, or welcoming. Allow yourself to feel them, thus letting the other person feel them, too.
Stay open to the possibilities of the conversation so that the other person remains comfortable sharing with you. Things uncovered during this time may shock you, but you must remain receptive to whatever is found.
This can be freeing for both you and the other person, so let it run its proper course. Try taking guesses at what the other person is feeling.
Once the reasoning is understood, you can move on to proposing solutions to either lessen or increase said feelings. Become a listener that listens to understand, not a listener that listens to respond. Listen more than you talk for maximum understanding.
Empathy is lacking in our world not by design or default but by choice. Empathy exists in all of us, but the world has a way of making us decide to turn it off for our own benefit. One way to tune in better to your own empathy towards others is by allowing yourself to acknowledge your own feelings first. Empathy goes a long way into understanding others. While mind reading is something anyone can do, only ones with patience and dedication will be able to succeed.
Once your skill begins to develop, be careful not to use it to take advantage of or hurt others. It can be a tool used for great good, and it should not be warped for other purposes. You will also be asked to submit four short assignments during the semester. They include requests for you to think about some issue, previews of your major paper, and reports of participation in psychology department experiments.
Serving as a participant is an excellent way to get a feel for what research on the human mind actually consists of, and to learn about areas of ongoing research that are not covered in the lectures or textbook.
You will receive detailed guidelines about the writing assignments, beginning in the second week of class. Students are responsible for knowing what constitutes plagiarism; please refer to pp.
Papers that are late will be subject to a late penalty of ten percentage points about a letter grade per day. The late penalty will be waived only in cases of sickness, inescapable conflicts, or other emergencies, and only with a letter from your House Master or Senior Tutor or, in the case of freshmen, Assistant Dean of Freshmen.
Students intending to write a thesis should plan ahead to avoid deadline conflicts; this course has not allowed assignment deadlines to be moved in order to accommodate thesis deadlines. Assistance in Writing: Harvard has a number of sources of support for assistance in writing.
We encourage you to use them, especially if your first assignment shows that you could use the help. It will be given during a class period and will last about an hour and a quarter.
The final exam will cover the entire course. It will be given during the exam period and will last three hours. The readings are keyed to the lectures. When page numbers are given, begin reading at the major section heading on the indicated page. Making the familiar seem strange. Examples of remarkable feats of the human mind: seeing, thinking, moving, emotions about things, emotions about people.
HTMW: Chapter 1, pp. Psychoanalysis Freud ; Behaviorism Skinner. Components of the modern approach: Cognition; computation; neuroscience; evolution.
Gray: Chapter 1; Chapter 2; Chapter 15, pp. Tuesday, February Evolution. Where life and mind come from. The Environment of Evolutionary Adaptedness. Gray: Chapter 3, pp. HTMW: Chapter 3, pp. Phony dichotomies in nature and nurture. Gray: Same as February 12; also chapter 10, pp. HTMW: Chapter 1 pp.
The major parts of the brain and what they are for. Neurons, neural circuits, and elementary information processing. Gray: Chapter 5; Chapter 8 pp. Gray: Chapter 8, pp. HTMW: chapter 4, pp. Attention, memory, mental representation, consciousness.
HTMW: Chapter 2 pp. Instructions for first major paper and paper preview. Deductive and probabilistic reasoning. Gray: Chapter 10, pp. Mind Reading and Hypnosis. How to read minds. Mind reading techniques of Lior suchard. Mentalism secrets revealed. Derren brown tricks of the mind. How to read others mind through eyes. How to read women's mind. Mind control language patterns.
Mind Reading with Computer Practicing the techniques listed in the book a person can easily become master of mind reading.
0コメント