Why we should take laughter more seriously | Sophie Scott | TEDxExeter.

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  • čas přidán 7. 09. 2024

Komentáře • 3

  • @PC-rh4yh
    @PC-rh4yh Před měsícem +1

    I have witnessed laughter as an extraordinary tool of cruelty, as a weapon of exclusion, especially a fake laughter of a group against another - not laughter at all.

  • @rozalinagutman3868
    @rozalinagutman3868 Před 2 lety +1

    Laughter gives power to the powerless, when nothing else is possible to reclaim justice... and relieves emotional suffering from the related to power abuse trauma. I was excited to rediscover obscured for centuries musical joke of Bach, composed around the time of retaliatory Imprisonment of visionary composer-neuroscientist who set out to break the rules of music composition that suppressed emotional freedom! And then, cascade of discoveries followed that Eureka! moment, climaxing in evidence for one of the root causes of inter hemispheric imbalance, caused by emotional repression- Bach Sensory Deactivation Effect, named after visionary innovator and composer with neuroscientist mindset. Nothing can be more powerful over trauma than experiential musical joke at cognitive dissonance. Like nothing else it propels intellectual leadership over the power abuse both to an individual and to the society.

  • @Jessinking
    @Jessinking Před 2 lety +1

    hi! i found you by searching mental health. may is national mental health awareness month. would you be interested in doing a collab with me on that topic?