Gersande La Flèche started reading The Age of Surveillance Capitalism by Shoshana Zuboff
Was mentioned in the recent Philosophy Tube video essay. Am reading very slowly during Pomodoro breaks from exam prep.
Why can't I read all these books!? 🍋🟩
🍵 Lots of nonfiction, literary fiction, poetry, classical literature, speculative fiction, magical realism, etc.
📖 Beaucoup de non-fiction et de fiction, de poésie, des classiques, du spéculatif, du réalisme magique, etc.
💬 they/them ; iel/lo 💻 blog: blog.gersande.com 💌 Find me on fedi the.bisexuals.town/@gersande or bsky
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Was mentioned in the recent Philosophy Tube video essay. Am reading very slowly during Pomodoro breaks from exam prep.
Thyme Travellers collects fourteen of the Palestinian diaspora’s best voices in speculative fiction. Speculative fiction …
This would have made it on my TBR for the title alone, but also this looks rad as heck.
Suivez le fil de cette enquête où Alain Gravel nous emmène dans la tête de …
Je vole à travers les pages, le cœur un peu brisé.
La théorie du manque de sérotonine est en train d’être complexifiée (voir… debunked)
Surprisingly, it’s likely inflammation. Undoubtedly, you’ve heard of inflammation. It’s what protects the body from infection. Immune cells called cytokines detect an injury or infection and sound an alarm. The alarm summons other immune cells to the site, and their influx cases the inflammation that we recognize as redness and swelling of superficial wounds. However, all parts of the body can inflame, even the brain. And when the brain inflames, it causes sickness behavior that makes us feel exhausted, antisocial and depressed. Sick at home. Alone in bed. Binge-watching Netflix. Sound familiar? Although no one likes being sick, these behaviors are quite prosocial because they isolate us from others and prevent the spread of infection. It’s the brain’s version of social distancing and a small price to pay for protecting others.
La théorie du manque de sérotonine est en train d’être complexifiée (voir… debunked)
Surprisingly, it’s likely inflammation. Undoubtedly, you’ve heard of inflammation. It’s what protects the body from infection. Immune cells called cytokines detect an injury or infection and sound an alarm. The alarm summons other immune cells to the site, and their influx cases the inflammation that we recognize as redness and swelling of superficial wounds. However, all parts of the body can inflame, even the brain. And when the brain inflames, it causes sickness behavior that makes us feel exhausted, antisocial and depressed. Sick at home. Alone in bed. Binge-watching Netflix. Sound familiar? Although no one likes being sick, these behaviors are quite prosocial because they isolate us from others and prevent the spread of infection. It’s the brain’s version of social distancing and a small price to pay for protecting others.
Je n'avais jamais vu le lien entre l'inflammation chronique et la fatigue/anxiété générale/dépression et honnêtement ça m'inquiète. À ajouter à la liste sans fin de trucs à vérifier/chercher.
Je n'avais jamais vu le lien entre l'inflammation chronique et la fatigue/anxiété générale/dépression et honnêtement ça m'inquiète. À ajouter à la liste sans fin de trucs à vérifier/chercher.
No red flags so far, and I like the practical approach the author proposes, a kind of "let's get moving together" approach while also talking about the theories behind everything. While maybe a little less theoretical than I was hoping for, I like the clear language.
No red flags so far, and I like the practical approach the author proposes, a kind of "let's get moving together" approach while also talking about the theories behind everything. While maybe a little less theoretical than I was hoping for, I like the clear language.
I really liked the beginning, but I'm having trouble continuing. Will probably start it again next summer or whenever is the next time I have mental space for a nervewracking read.
I really liked the beginning, but I'm having trouble continuing. Will probably start it again next summer or whenever is the next time I have mental space for a nervewracking read.
First Contact has not been going well. The nations of Earth are rapidly militarizing against …
Started this book this morning and devoured it in one fell swoop.
Really enjoyed this one, it had a lot of the same elements from the first book that I really liked.
I really hope there will be a fourth book?
Seeking uncanny, fun, experimental, creepy, sarcastic, playful, vulgar, inventive, sexual, weird, sweet, and evocative works, …
I've heard nothing but good things about this!
I've heard nothing but good things about this!