14 SEP 2011 by ideonexus

 Stimulation and Inhibition

Pavlov's data on the two fundamental antagonistic nervous processes—stimulation and inhibition—and his profound generalizations regarding them, in particular, that these processes are parts of a united whole, that they are in a state of constant conflict and constant transition of the one to the other, and his views on the dominant role they play in the formation of the higher nervous activity—all those belong to the most established natural—scientific validation of the Marxist dialec...
Folksonomies: instinct marxism inhibition
Folksonomies: instinct marxism inhibition
  1  notes

The two antagonistic nervous processes as a validation of Marxism.

03 SEP 2011 by ideonexus

 Pavlov's Conditioning and Humans

The dog [in Pavlov's experiments] does not continue to salivate whenever it hears a bell unless sometimes at least an edible offering accompanies the bell. But there are innumerable instances in human life where a single association, never reinforced, results in the establishment of a life-long dynamic system. An experience associated only once with a bereavement, an accident, or a battle, may become the center of a permanent phobia or complex, not in the least dependent on a recurrence of th...
Folksonomies: psychology conditioning
Folksonomies: psychology conditioning
  1  notes

Humans can be conditioned by a single experience, while the dog must have regular conditioning to continue salivating at the sound of a bell.

19 APR 2011 by ideonexus

 Science Virtue and its Impact on History

So proud men have thought, in all walks of life, since Giordano Bruno was burned alive for his cosmology on the Campo de' Fiori in 1600. They have gone about their work simply enough. The scientists among them did not set out to be moralists or revolutionaries. William Harvey and Huygens, Euler and Avogadro, Darwin and Willard Gibbs and Marie Curie, Planck and Pavlov, practised their crafts modestly and steadfastly. Yet the values they seldom spoke of shone out of their work and entered their...
Folksonomies: history science virtue
Folksonomies: history science virtue
 2  2  notes

Scientists prove their virtue in their actions.