(Mlive.com) A new study says that the brains of people who hold conservative views are structured differently than those who hold liberal views.
Perhaps political ideology is hard-wired into our brains. A study out of the University College London suggests that the brains of those who hold right-wing views are structured differently than their liberal colleagues.
Because only adults were studied, it's unclear if the results of the brain differences were shaped by nature [genetics] or by a person's life experiences [nurture]. It
is possible that the differences are a result of physiology.
Prof. Geraint Rees, who led the research on conservative brains, was quoted in Time as saying, "It is very surprising because it does suggest there is something about political attitude that is encoded in our brain structure through our experience or that there is something in our brain structure that determines or results in political attitude." More>>
Reptilians vote Republican
Wisdom Quarterly (COMMENTARY)
Conservative cowards? Right-wing whiners? Full of fear and hate, promoting xenophobia and war?
In Buddhism, "fear" (bhava) is a poison of the mind just like greed, hatred, and delusion. It is usually not mentioned separately because it is included as a kind of hatred (dosa, aversion). Where hate seeks to destroy what it is averse to, fear seeks to escape it.
- 2010's Top Cryptozoology "Monsters" (AOL)
Looking back at 2010 in cryptozoology (the study of hidden or unknown creatures): Monsters lurk in our fears, imaginations, and in our lakes and forests. Sea serpents, tall hairy creatures, unicorns, blood-sucking doglike animals -- they've all been in the news this year. They're either real, mythical, or unknown beasts that share the world with humans.
Nagas mix with humans to create "hybrid" bloodlines with easier-to-possess individuals