ZIG skrev:
Det kan være Eels på plade og Eels på scenen foregår i parallelle universer....?
Zig
ZIG skrev:@gurdet
Det kan være Eels på plade og Eels på scenen foregår i parallelle universer....?
@dreamz
Jeg var lidt fristet af James Blakes nye.....men jeg ved, hvordan det går. Jeg lytter to gange med begejstring og så smider jeg den ud.
I stedet for det luftige vil jeg have det jordnære:
En moden mands værk.
Vidunderlige sange og hans stemme spiller en lige så vigtig rolle som hans guitar.
Zig
Jeg tror ikke, man bør slutte, at fordi man ikke selv interesserer sig for (indsæt whatever), så kan heller ingen andre ærligt gøre det.
We seem to give more attention to the signals we send, vs. interpreting the signals of others. For example, we think more about what we will wear than about the judgements we form based on what other people wear.....
For our distant forager ancestors, their most important public speaking probably happened in situations where they were being accused, and needed to defend themselves. Since the generic accusation behind any specific accusation was that one wasn’t doing enough overall for the band, and maybe should be exiled or killed, our ancestors should have been eager to collect examples of the help they have given, especially unheralded help. So we may have inherited a habit of doing helpful things, and not calling attention to them, but remembering them so we could mention them later if called on to defend ourselves.
More generally, our ancestors probably acquired the habit of consciously thinking about actions that others were likely to challenge or criticize. They’d continually come up with explanations of what they did and why, and be ready to tell those stories, even if they didn’t actually have to explain or justify most of them. And because they were rarely asked to justify or explain the judgements they made about others, they didn’t get into as much of a habit of explaining those.
This theory predicts that we in fact give just as much mental attention to buying as to selling, and just as much to interpreting signals as to sending signals, because these are in fact on average equally as important to us. But we give a lot more conscious attention to the side that needs to be explained, because that is what consciousness is about – consciousness helps much less to make decisions than to explain and justify them.
Brugere der læser dette forum: Google [Bot] og 1 gæst