We were never meant to read - TelegraphFirst Faved : Mar 26 2008 by ericFaved : 1 time with noteViewed : 3 timesFave It!
Faves for this Web page
- eric - Mar 26 2008 | books, reading, thepugetnews
This sounds like an interesting book about reading, speculating that the act itself is one of improvisation and that it changes the brain in positive ways.
Quoted: Reading, says Wolf, changed history. More than that, it changes the brain. It creates new pathways in the brain, and, by doing this, makes us think in new ways. When you read, you see letters written on a page, then you recognise them as representations of sounds made by the human voice, then you join the sounds together to make words, then you fit the words together into sentences.
Already a user? Sign In
Add a Fave for this Web page
- What happens when I press Publish?
- Your Fave for this Web page gets shared with the Faves community. You can access it at any time by selecting "My Faves" from the menu above.
- Why do you ask for my email address?
- We use your email address to create an account, so you can easily find your Fave again at a later time.
Related Content from Around Faves
thepugetnews
-
Presentations from Startup School 08.
1 FaverViewed: 5 Times - eric - Apr 28 20081 FaverViewed: 11 Times
- eric - May 12 20081 FaverViewed: 26 Times
