Argonne National Lab Breakthrough Turns Carbon Dioxide into Ethanol
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Article
CleanTechnica
Argonne National Lab Breakthrough Turns Carbon Dioxide Into Ethanol
Argonne National Lab says it has created a new eletrochemical process that can convert carbon dioxide and water into ethanol efficiently and at low cost.
New fitness habits being created during Covid?
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Article
Forbes
Could This Be The Start Of A New Golden Age Of Fitness?
The closures of gyms and health clubs earlier this year caused traditional gym-goers to re-evaluate how to stay active. This resulted in a number of new habits being formed like in-home workouts. Now, few people have an excuse to not workout. Could this create…
How to stop procrastinating by using the Fogg Behavior Model
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Article
www.deprocrastination.co
How to stop procrastinating by using the Fogg Behavior Model
B J Fogg is a Stanford professor who came up with a simple model of behavior that helps us understand why we take action or not take action at any given moment.
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Formula 1 driver checks his reaction.
Forwarded from PH Coronavirus Updates 🇵🇭
The announcement by Russia that it will approve a COVID-19 vaccine after less than two months of human testing prompted alarm among global health experts, who said that with no full trial data, the vaccine is hard to trust.
Reuters Article:
https://t.co/9Z3Ygbqcfo
Reuters Article:
https://t.co/9Z3Ygbqcfo
Reuters
Scientists ask: Without trial data, how can we trust Russia's COVID vaccine?
LONDON (Reuters) - An announcement by Russia on Tuesday that it will approve a COVID-19 vaccine after less than two months of human testing prompted alarm among global health experts, who said that with no full trial data, the vaccine is hard to trust.
Wellbeing levels fell with the pandemic but improved under lockdown, data shows
Article
Article
World Economic Forum
Wellbeing levels fell during the pandemic but improved under lockdown, data analysis shows
After a rise in negative emotions at the start of the pandemic, wellbeing improved once lockdowns began – but not for everyone.
Unraveling the Mindset of Victimhood
If socialization processes can instill in individuals a victimhood mindset, then surely the very same processes can instill in people a personal growth mindset. What if we all learned at a young age that our traumas don’t have to define us?
That it’s possible to have experienced a trauma and for victimhood to not form the core of our identity?
That it’s even possible to grow from trauma, to become a better person, to use the experiences we’ve had in our lives toward working to instill hope and possibility to others who were in a similar situation?
What if we all learned that it’s possible to have healthy pride for an in-group without having out-group hate?
That if you expect kindness from others, it pays to be kind yourself?
That no one is ennoscriptd to anything, but we all are worthy of being treated as human?
This would be quite the paradigm shift, but it would be in line with the latest social science that makes clear that a perpetual victimhood mindset leads us to see the world with rose-tinted glasses. With a clear lens, we’d be able to see that not everyone in our out-group is evil, and not everyone in our in-group is a saint. We’re all human with the same underlying needs to belong, to be seen, to be heard and to matter.
Article
If socialization processes can instill in individuals a victimhood mindset, then surely the very same processes can instill in people a personal growth mindset. What if we all learned at a young age that our traumas don’t have to define us?
That it’s possible to have experienced a trauma and for victimhood to not form the core of our identity?
That it’s even possible to grow from trauma, to become a better person, to use the experiences we’ve had in our lives toward working to instill hope and possibility to others who were in a similar situation?
What if we all learned that it’s possible to have healthy pride for an in-group without having out-group hate?
That if you expect kindness from others, it pays to be kind yourself?
That no one is ennoscriptd to anything, but we all are worthy of being treated as human?
This would be quite the paradigm shift, but it would be in line with the latest social science that makes clear that a perpetual victimhood mindset leads us to see the world with rose-tinted glasses. With a clear lens, we’d be able to see that not everyone in our out-group is evil, and not everyone in our in-group is a saint. We’re all human with the same underlying needs to belong, to be seen, to be heard and to matter.
Article
Scientific American
Unraveling the Mindset of Victimhood
Focusing on grievances can be debilitating; social science points to a better way
Bertrand Russell's argument for idleness is more relevant than ever
Article
Article
New Statesman
Why Bertrand Russell’s argument for idleness is more relevant than ever
Russell's observations on the value of leisure were made in an era of mass unemployment – and they are just as pertinent today.
Vitamin D, part 1: back to basics
Article
Article
Deva Boone, MD
Vitamin D, part 1
Vitamin D is a big deal. Recent studies have shown that patients with low Vitamin D levels are more likely to die from Covid-19 than their Vitamin D-rich counterparts,(1) and deficiency in the vitamin has been linked to seven of the ten leading causes of…
Young children would rather explore than get rewards
Article
Article
Young children would rather explore than get rewards
Young children will pass up rewards they know they can collect to explore other options, a new study suggests.
Researchers found that when adults and 4- to 5-year-old children played a game where certain choices earned them rewards, both adults and children…
Researchers found that when adults and 4- to 5-year-old children played a game where certain choices earned them rewards, both adults and children…
Behaviors resembling ADHD may be linked to increased entrepreneurial behavior
Article
Article
ScienceDaily
New study suggests ADHD- like behavior helps spur entrepreneurial activity
Many people have experienced a few nights of bad sleep that resulted in shifting attention spans, impulsive tendencies and hyperactivity the next day -- all behaviors resembling ADHD. A new study found that this dynamic may also be linked to increased entrepreneurial…
‘AeroNabs’ – Inhalable Protection Against Covid-19
Article
Article
UCSF
‘AeroNabs’ Promise Powerful, Inhalable Protection Against COVID-19
UCSF scientists have devised a novel approach to halting the spread of SARS-CoV-2, the virus that causes the disease.
Air pollution is much worse than we thought
Article
Article
Vox
Air pollution is much worse than we thought
Ditching fossil fuels would pay for itself through clean air alone.
Feds say Yale discriminates against Asian, white applicants
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Article
AP NEWS
Feds say Yale discriminates against Asian, white applicants
WASHINGTON (AP) — A Justice Department investigation has found Yale University is illegally discriminating against Asian American and white applicants, in violation of federal civil rights law, officials said Thursday...
It’s Time to Redefine What Sustainable Fishing Means
Article
Article
Oceans on Nautilus
It’s Time to Redefine What Sustainable Fishing Means
Sarah Dolman heard the porpoise’s cries not in the waters where the animal’s voice was actually recorded, but on the sound system at a marine mammal conference held in late...