\"Je reicher das Leben an Freude, Genuss und Lust, desto gesünder der Mensch.\" Neueste empirische Untersuchen aus Medizin, Biologie und Psychologie liegen dieser unorthodoxen These der beiden renommierten Autoren zugrunde. Robert Ornstein und David Sobel zeigen eindrucksvoll, wie eine liebevolle Umarmung, ein witziger Film, ein Glas Wein zu einem guten Essen in geselliger Runde mehr bei der Bekämpfung von Krankheiten auszurichten vermögen als Askese, Medikamente und Diäten. Leben Sie also nach dem \"Lustprinzip\". Folgen Sie Ihren Sinnen. Verwöhnen Sie sich und andere. Und erleben Sie, wie aus den vielen kleinen Freuden des Alltags Gesundheit entsteht.
Robert E. Ornstein Ordine dei libri
Questo autore approfondisce la psicologia, esplorando la natura della mente e del cervello umano. Il suo lavoro si concentra su come percepiamo, come pensiamo e come questi processi influenzano la nostra salute e la nostra coscienza, sia individuale che sociale. La sua ricerca pionieristica, in particolare riguardo alla lateralizzazione cerebrale, ha fatto progredire significativamente la nostra comprensione dei processi cognitivi. L'autore si impegna a rendere accessibili al grande pubblico le scoperte cruciali sulla natura umana.






- 1997
- 1996
Evolution des Bewusstseins
- 414pagine
- 15 ore di lettura
- 1995
Das Gehirn, Schlüssel zur Gesundheit
- 347pagine
- 13 ore di lettura
- 1989
- 1988
Multimind (švědsky)
- 224pagine
- 8 ore di lettura
- 1986
Hainer Kober, geboren 1942, lebt in Soltau. Er hat u. a. Werke von Stephen Hawking, Steven Pinker, Jonathan Littell, Georges Simenon und Oliver Sacks übersetzt.
- 1986
Visually and intellectually explores the history, evolution, construction, and chemical and electrical operation of the brain.
- 1983
The mind field
- 141pagine
- 5 ore di lettura
For years, North Americans have been seeking rational, analytical answers to despair and anxiety. But now, this rational Western perception of consciousness has been challenged by an Eastern discipline which brings into sharp focus the travesty and deception underlying many of the contemporary awareness movements. Yet it is also the author's intent to combat the easy criticisms of the super-rationalists who dismiss every new development as the irresponsible inventions of the "guru-of-the-month club." He offers not only the finding of extensive scientific research on the brain, but also the valuable discoveries of personal experience. There is no one who is better qualified to assess our modern approach to matters of the mind than Robert Ornstein, and he does so with clarity, wit and utter persuasiveness.




