Ignite Your Intuition: Improve Your Memory, Make Better Decisions, Be More Creative and Achieve Your Full Potential - Softcover

Karges, Craig

 
9781558746763: Ignite Your Intuition: Improve Your Memory, Make Better Decisions, Be More Creative and Achieve Your Full Potential

Inhaltsangabe

Extraordinist Craig Karges is known to millions of television viewers for his remarkable demonstrations of extraordinary phenomena on The Tonight Show with Jay Leno, Larry King Live, and many other TV shows. He presented his one-man touring show "Experience the Extraordinary" at performing arts centers, universities and corporate events in over 150 cities worldwide in 1998.

Readers will learn how to use their intuition to solve problems, make decisions, come up with creative ideas, forecast their future, and even learn how to be in the right place at the right time. Karges reveals to readers proven techniques to program the subconscious mind for success including visualization, affirmations, and goal setting. They will learn how to use their subconscious to achieve personal goals and become the individuals they truly want to be.

Karges also delves deeper into the power of the subconscious disclosing how to use dreams to solve problems and gain powerful insights about life. He reveals how it may be possible to know the unknown — how to exploit your natural psychic abilities. Readers will learn how to recognize these powers, develop them, and use them in daily life. Karges includes exercises, games, and stunts that help readers test and enhance subconscious skills, while amazing their friends at the same time.

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Über die Autorin bzw. den Autor

Craig Karges is known to television viewers for his entertaining demonstrations of extraordinary phenomena as seen on The Tonight Show with Jay Leno, Larry King Live, CNN Headline News, CNBC, E! Entertainment Television, Lifetime Television and The Nashville Network. Karges has been honored as "Entertainer of the Year" by the National Association for Campus Activities, Campus Activities Magazine, and the International Psychic Entertainers Association. The National Speakers Association has also designated him as a Certified Speaking Professional. His performance is an entertaining blend of mystery, humor, psychology and intuition using total audience participation. He lives in Wheeling, West Virginia.

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Chapter One
The Extraordinary Computer Between Your Ears

The growth of the human mind
is still high adventure, in many ways
the highest adventure on Earth.

— Norman Cousins

Your brain weighs about three pounds and it looks like a soft, wrinkled walnut. Pretty unimpressive looking at first glance. However, it has been in the making for about five million years. Whether you consider what it does or how it is constructed it is, by far, the most extraordinary organ in your body!

The human brain can store more information than all the libraries in the world! It is the cause of that violent outburst that you were so embarrassed about as well as the force behind the best idea you ever had and the most charitable action you ever took. Your brain regulates all bodily functions and is responsible for your most primitive behavior as well as your most sophisticated accomplishments. All of your thoughts and emotions, indeed your personality, is inside that three-pound organ. You can receive a heart or lung transplant and still be yourself but if you were able to receive a brain transplant, you would no longer be you! Scientists have studied the brain for hundreds of years yet it remains so mysterious that many consider it humankind's ultimate frontier.

Your brain is a biological organ but it is also like an amazing machine, a supercomputer. It is miraculous! Your brain is truly one of the most amazing things in the universe. Think of it this way—the human brain is the only object capable of contemplating itself!

We, as human beings, tend to sell ourselves short. We stand in awe of computers, yet inside each of our brains lies ten times the amount of AT&T's entire communication networking system! We marvel at other animals like dolphin or ants. We can sit and watch an ant colony and be fascinated by it. How do they create such a complex structure? How do they communicate? An ant has about five hundred brain cells. That's the amount a person loses from drinking one glass of wine! But don't worry, we each have about 100 billion brain cells—that's as many as there are stars in the sky.

Each brain cell, or neuron, connects with all the others. Imagine, 100 billion electrical connections going on inside your head right now! Think of it this way: Imagine everyone in the world (about 5.5 billion people) talking on the phone to each other at the same time. That's a complicated image, isn't it? But to get an idea of the complexity of what is happening inside your head, you have to expand on this image. Take those same 5.5 billion people, put them on eighteen telephones each, have them all talking to each other at the same time and, if you can picture that, you can begin to understand the complexity of the communication process inside your brain!

If each neuron could only touch two other neurons, the number of possible configurations in your brain would be two to the 100-billionth power! That number would take you about nine hundred years to write out at one second per digit! In reality, because each neuron connects with all the others, the possible configurations are impossible to understand.

These busy little neurons send, receive and store signals that add up to information. Everything we do and all we know depends on the transfer of signals from neuron to neuron. A neuron has one big tentacle, its axon, and many smaller ones, its dendrites. The axon sends the signals which are received by the dendrites of other neurons. This is an electrochemical process that occurs at a point between cells called a synapse. This is as technical as we are going to get (aren't you happy!). But let me give you an extraordinary fact about dendrites, the receiving tentacles of the neuron. Believe it or not, we have over 100,000 miles of dendrites in our brains! In other words, the total length of dendrites in your brain could encircle the Earth—four times!

You might think that as we develop as human beings, the amount of connections among the neurons in our brains would increase. However, it appears that the opposite is true. There may be more connections in an infant than in a fully developed adult. Development seems to be about refining certain connections and not about making new ones.

Think about this: In the first weeks of life, a baby's babbling includes almost every sound of every known language! However, infants lose their ability to make sounds that aren't in the language they are learning to speak. The point is that the brain has enormous potential to do many things, such as learn the thousands of languages in existence, but we may only learn one or a few. What human beings are capable of is astounding; what we accomplish is often disappointing.

Can your brain physically grow? Consider this extraordinary experiment conducted by Mark Rosenweig and Marion Diamond at the University of California at Berkeley. The scientists took three brother rats and separated them into one of three environments:

  1. Enriched: One of the brothers was placed in a large cage with other rats. This group was given new toys to play with daily, as well as food, water, etc.

  2. Standard: One brother was placed with two other rats in a small cage with food and water.

  3. Impoverished: One brother rat lived by itself with food and water.


The experiment concluded that the rats in the enriched environment had an actual increase in the weight of their brain! Ten percent was average.

And, what about the idea that we only use 10 percent of our brain? This figure and similar ones have been thrown around for years. I have been guilty of doing it myself during my entertainment and speaking engagements. Some people argue that only 10 percent of the brain has been mapped. We know that huge sections of the brain can be damaged and we can still function normally and we know that damage to certain small areas of the brain can be disastrous. Perhaps all of our brain is used at some point. We don't really know. What we do know is that we are far from knowing the limits of the mind's capabilities and our full potential. Compare your brain to your computer. Most of us only use a small percentage of our computer's power; it is the same with our personal computer power, our mind power.

In many respects, the brain is like a supercomputer. Scientists have spent more than a decade trying to develop a computerized version of the brain called a neural network. But these neural networks are very primitive when compared to the human brain. For example, while the human brain contains 100 billion neurons, its electronic counterparts typically contain the equivalent of a few thousand neurons (called neurals), or less. Each neuron in the brain has at least forty-six different attributes, such as the ability to interpret what you see or what you hear. The average electronic neural has about five attributes. Robert Hecht-Nielson of HNC, Inc. (a neural network firm in San Diego) says creating a brain-like computer is hundreds of years away. He likens the creation of this theoretical computer to the difficulty of developing spaceships that fly faster than the speed of light.

The entire notion of creating computers with artificial intelligence (A.I.) has been steadily losing ground. In the 1970s and 1980s, scientists specializing in A.I. were confident that they would someday replicate human intelligence by creating a computer that could learn and reason. Marvin Minsky was one of those scientists, a pioneer in A.I. In 1970 Minsky felt that within three to eight years a computer with the intelligence of an average human would be a reality. Thirty years later, no one has even come close to creating a machine that thinks like a human.

What about the chess-master-defeating IBM super-computer, Deep Blue? As you probably recall, Deep Blue defeated grand-master Garry...

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