Brain Topics

Brain Info ...

The Best Toys To Stimulate The Brain ... They appear to be strictly about fun when in fact they stimulate the brain and help it develop and grow...

How To Create A Powerful Artificial Brain! ... I have thought a lot about this possibility, and found that the first thing we need is the right database, then the second is the right algorithm. That’s all we need to create that super brain...

What Is The Brain Board Game? ... It should be noted that Scrabble is not an easy brain board game and some time is needed to master the game... The brain board game is one of the best ways to exercise your brain so that you are empowered with enhanced memory, concentration, thinking speed and the reasoning and cognitive ability... This is desired by most people and they don't realize that there is a very simple way of achieving the same- the brain board game...

Video Games For The Brain ... Brain Age™: Train Your Brain in Minutes a Day for Nintendo DS™ will help players flex their mental muscles... In fact, a recent Time magazine article cited Brain Age in its exploration of the trend of people looking for ways to exercise their brains....

What're The Best Wii Children's Games? ... Super Mario Galaxy is, of course, among all-time-favored Wii children’s games. Mario has been loved by gaming fans ever since the tiny little Italian plumber graced the gaming screen...

Tenants of the house,
Thoughts of a dry brain in a dry season.
—T.S. (Thomas Stearns)

When Western people train the mind, the focus is generally on the left hemisphere of the cortex, which is the portion of the brain that is concerned with words and numbers. We enhance the logical, bounded, linear functions of the mind. In the East, exercises of this sort are for the purpose of getting in tune with the unconscious—to get rid of boundaries, not to create them.
—Edward T. Hall (b. 1914)

I don’t know but a book in a man’s brain is better off than a book bound in calf—at any rate it is safer from criticism. And taking a book off the brain, is akin to the ticklish & dangerous business of taking an old painting off a panel—you have to scrape off the whole brain in order to get at it with due safety—& even then, the painting may not be worth the trouble.
—Herman Melville (1819–1891)