The findings have just been published in the renowned international journal Cortex. To find out more about the reasons that prevent us from acting sustainably, Daria Knoch and her team have conducted a neuroscientific study. “The fact that people aren’t acting in a more climate friendly way isn’t because we know too little about this critical situation, though.” explains Daria Knoch, Professor for Social Neuroscience at the University of Bern. Despite decades of warnings and political resolutions, however, sustainability remains a long way from being achieved. “Global climate change may be the biggest challenge faced by humanity today. Researchers at the University of Bern have now used brain stimulation to demonstrate that the ability to mentalise with the future victims of climate change encourages sustainable behaviour. Although most people want to see climate change slowed down, many do not behave in an appropriately sustainable way. “When it comes to climate-friendly behaviour, there is often a gap between what we want and what we actually do. What Are They Smoking? Announcing a new paper, a press release by the University of Bern, Switzerland begins: TWTW will finish with the interesting question, which political jurisdiction, country, or state, will hit the energy wall the first – when the public realizes that wind and solar are neither reliable or cheap? Kennedy’s book on Big Science in medicine. Then TWTW will briefly discuss a report by investigation journalist David Rose on Big Green in China followed by a review of Robert F. Afterwards there will be a brief discussion of late season tornadoes and the exaggerations by the Biden Administration.
Then TWTW will review Fake Invisible Catastrophes and Threats of Doom by ecologist Patrick Moore. This week, TWTW will continue to emphasize the need for physical evidence considering the climate alarm raised by the UN Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC) and the US Biden Administration.įirst it will discuss a surprising article in the journal, Cortex, on modification of human behavior to express climate concerns. Scope: As the quote of the week by John Tyndall states, thoughts are incomplete unless they are backed by physical evidence. Number of the Week: $40 Million More after $70 millionīy Ken Haapala, President, Science and Environmental Policy Project (SEPP) Q uote of the Week: “The brightest flashes in the world of thought are incomplete until they have been proved to have their counterparts in the world of fact.” – John Tyndall Brought to You by SEPP ( The Science and Environmental Policy Project