Is the “left brain right brain” distinction a myth?

A friend just sent this article from the Guardian: http://www.theguardian.com/commentisfree/2013/nov/16/left-right-brain-distinction-myth I'm quite grateful for this, as the whole question of left-right hemisphere differences was supposed to have been thoroughly refuted in the 90s (most popularly by Jerre Levy).  On our website (www.remember-to-breathe.org) which uses Dan Siegel's interpersonal neurobiology as the basis for understanding the brain,… Read More »

Spiral dynamics and more – a bit of playfulness for the holidays

            Here’s an interesting (intuitive/speculative!) chart – playfully done; don’t take rigid categories too seriously!) – looking at psychologist Clare Grave’s developmental theory which has been popularized (unfortunately, to some extent) by Don Beck as “Spiral Dynamics.”  There’s some interesting parallels with Sri Aurobindo’s symbolic (the lowest levels), typal (mythic,… Read More »

Intimations of Infinity

From "Yoga Psychology and the Transformation of Consciousness: Seeing Through the Eyes of Infinity" THE VIEW FROM INFINITY Intimations of Infinity While India – the home of yoga psychology – has always placed great value on intellectual understanding, the yogic tradition takes direct spiritual experience to be the foundation for any valid intellectual view. In… Read More »

The contribution of Indian psychology to the emergence of a subjective and spiritual age

Nearly 100 years ago, Sri Aurobindo wrote, in “The Human Cycle,” of the emergence, world-wide, of a new, deeper and more subjective attitude in various areas of human endeavor, including the arts, education, sociology, politics, economics, even in criminology.  Since that time, a number of authors have written in great detail of the kinds of… Read More »

POSITIVE EMOTIONS, OPTIMAL FUNCTIONING AND THE HEART BRAIN

Several decades ago, psychologist Mihaly Csikszentmihalyi studied the experience of creative artists.  This was in the 1960s, and many of them described extraordinary states of creativity during which they felt “in the flow”.  Since then, the science of positive psychology has discovered many surprising things about the power of positive emotions to foster optimal functioning. … Read More »

Interpersonal neurobiology and Indian psychology – the “hub” of the wheel of awareness, Part I

I began this exploration of interpersonal neurobiology (IPNB) and Indian psychology by exploring the connection between the functions of the mid prefrontal cortex (MPFC) and what in Indian psychology is known as the “buddhi” or, as Sri Aurobindo translates it, the “intelligent will.” I chose this because Dan Siegel, the originator of IPNB, puts so… Read More »

Interpersonal neurobiology (IPNB) and Indian psychology: Part I

I’d like to take some time to talk about “interpersonal neurobiology” (or more simply, IPNB).  It’s the “brainchild” (pun intended) of psychiatrist Dan Siegel (who was trained as a pediatric psychiatrist).  Why IPNB?  I think among all the attempts at understanding the mind and consciousness among modern scientists, IPNB may provide one of the best… Read More »