Layne’s research has been focused on extraordinary abilities in people with cognitive deficits. She’s recently left a stellar academic career in order to consult directly with families facing the challenges an atypical child will generate. She has been featured on CNN with Dr. Sanjay Gupta, SiriusXM Doctor Radio, The Coffee Klatch – Special Needs Radio, and Rhode Island PBS ‘School Talk’. She is now based at Ghost Ranch, in New Mexico.
Music: “Treat Yo Mamma,” by John Butler Trio.
http://www.lifeworth.com/deepadaptation.pdf
Sorry ‘m just listening to this fascinating conversation –been busy working in this super-cool ebook project, you know– but the scientist you were thinking of who created the so-called ‘God helmet’ was Michael Persinger. I say ‘was’ because he unfortunately passed away just this month:
https://www.dailygrail.com/2018/08/vale-michael-persinger-1945-2018/
Anyway, great stuff. I’m fascinated by the mysteries of the mind and the ‘savant’ states. Particularly when they arise spontaneously due to trauma of some kind –either like the guy who was hit in the head and became a mathematical genius (https://www.livescience.com/45349-brain-injury-turns-man-into-math-genius.html) or the people who, after being clinically dead, ‘return’ with creative abilities they didn’t have before.
PS: I’ve always suspected I may be in the ‘spectrum’ myself. I was always at the top of the class but my social skills were more than wanting. And in this world, unfortunately, ’emotional intelligence’ is considered to be more of an asset than ‘analytical’ or even ‘creative’ intelligence…
So I guess you know about this case, then:
https://www.npr.org/2016/02/22/467680296/stroke-of-genius-how-derek-amato-became-a-musical-savant
I find this stuff amazing as well. No way it should be possible, but so many things "shouldn’t" be possible. Tells you something’s wrong with our paradigm.
Exactly. Which is why we need to keep chipping away at the stone block of said paradigm, as you eloquently put it in one of the previous episodes 😉