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Transcript Provided by YouTube:
00:00
Okay, I’m not a licensed dog trainer. Do they license dog trainers? Whatever, but I can
00:04
brea- [laughter]
00:05
Aw, that was so good too!
00:08
[laughter]
00:09
That was so real.
00:22
Though, not with the actual sleeping park- park?
00:26
Were his patients just gullible idiots or were thhrwwr
00:30
Except for your eyes, you’re dreaming big dreams and likely feeling- you’re dreaming
00:34
big br-dreams, basically, you’re all hot and bothered, I digitsba hmmm hmmm hmmm hmmm.
00:41
Even if you’ve never taken an illicit drug or been to a cheesy dinner theater where the
00:45
main gah arh gah.
00:47
If you had something traumatic happen to you, you may have dragahbrgbrgr.
00:51
Have I ever told you about my dream to have someone hypnotize me to think I’ve never seen
00:55
Star Wars before so I can watch it again for the first time?
00:59
I think that’s a bad idea.
01:01
Do you think I… I’d be like “this movie sucks.”
01:04
This is terrible.
01:06
3-PO!
01:08
Instead, he had discovered the sleep stage we now call REM or “rabid eye movement.”
01:13
Did you hear “rabid?”
01:14
Yeah, I heard “rabid.”
01:14
Rabid eye movement? [growling]
01:18
It’s similar!
01:19
Pbrrbrbrbrbrbr
01:20
Immediately transitioned to the irregular [bleep].
01:23
Hhnn hhn
01:25
Okay I have a burp here… come on out!
01:30
Get it out. Burp burp. Get it out.
01:32
He designed the famous operant chamber or Skinner box a pha
01:37
What? Did anyone else understand that?
01:39
And this is all interesting and weird and sometimes a little gross but that’s what
01:44
But if brain wave readings show us anything its that there’s a lot going on in your brain
01:48
when you dream, and the physiological function theory suggests that dreaming may promote
01:52
neural development and preserve neural pathways by…
01:57
And the physiological function theory suggests that dreaming may promote neural development
02:01
and preserve neural pathways…
02:05
This is similar to the theory that dreams are pot of, pot, pot of, pot of cognitive…
02:10
By this model dreams draw on our understanding of …. ah nnnnnggg nggggg nnnnggg..
02:15
When German physician Franz Mesmer started all manner of
02:19
too fast.
02:21
During which, he claimed to align their internal magnetic
02:24
fler hee har
02:26
In addition to his magnetic quackery, other physicians didn’t appreciate Mesmer’s kitschy
02:30
penchant [laughter]
02:32
penchant I should probably just say penchant.
02:34
This camp suggests that like actors caught up in an intense.. inanin inanintense… inanin
02:41
inanin inanin… inananananananan… in an intense role… inanin inaninaninaninananinaninaninan….
02:47
inanin. Like actors caught up in an intense role of…
02:53
We’ll be talking about memory in an upcoming lesson
02:55
[blows raspberry]
02:56
Ach.. Aclini…
02:58
A clinician… Clinician is a terrible word.
02:59
A clinicia… Argh!
03:01
[Laughter]
03:02
We don’t file away ever single one of our… [laughter]
03:14
…do exactly what you’d ess.. esspect…
03:16
…complex world of enqwuiwwy… enqwuiwwy… [laughter]
03:21
During his famous coke years in the late twenties and thirties he bl- I skipped a thing!
03:25
Skipped a thing
03:26
…just goes to show that whether you’re a psychologist, a neuroscientist, or a philosopher,
03:30
how our various states of consciousness provide a rich, complex world of inquiry to contemplate,
03:35
showing yet again what a ma– hen ha mh mh mh mh mh…
03:40
We’re all continually reinforcing, shaping, and refining each other’s behaviours both
03:45
internally, intentionally, and accidentally, and externally… all of th–
03:51
A perplexing period…
03:54
..observabubble behaviour [laughter]
03:58
words are weird.
03:59
In everyday life we’re all continually reinforcing, shaping, and refining each other’s behaviours,
04:04
both intentionally and accidentally. We do this with both poth-itive…
04:11
poth-itive…
04:12
Nor is hypnosis a relia- relia- reliabl- blah-
04:16
[laughter]
04:17
And some people are just better at this than others which is essentially what bleeing blagh
04:25
[bleep]
04:25
The resulting withdra-aghl… aghl… the resulting withdrahhhhhhl
04:30
He didn’t study human stomachs, though, ’cause of the dis.. the.. the… the procedures were
04:34
terrible … and and cruel
04:38
if you’re wondering why.
04:39
Our various states of consciousness provid– eughhh.
04:43
The research that’s gone into how …
04:45
[burp]
04:48
yah I can hear it in my mouth
04:53
just try’na make you quit.
04:58
It’s gonna be good it’s gonna be good when I get it.
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This post was previously published on YouTube.
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Photo credit: Screenshot from video.