(4:41
minute YouTube Video)
Uploaded on Jan 7, 2011
Created by: Michelle Sherliza, OP
Music: Instrumental - Starry Night
My Comment to the original author:
“Beautiful.
Thank you for this.
I'm posting it on my personal blog / website. Stan G. Webb© - In retirement [http://stangwebb.blogspot.ca/2016/01/secrets-of-old-age.html].”
Followers and readers: If you liked this, please comment on her YouTube channel. This took a lot of knowledge and hard work. I'm hoping she will do more of these.
Music: Instrumental - Starry Night
My Comment to the original author:
“Beautiful.
Thank you for this.
I'm posting it on my personal blog / website. Stan G. Webb© - In retirement [http://stangwebb.blogspot.ca/2016/01/secrets-of-old-age.html].”
Followers and readers: If you liked this, please comment on her YouTube channel. This took a lot of knowledge and hard work. I'm hoping she will do more of these.
Other Words of Wisdom:
“Spend
more time alone with your thoughts, because the presence of others
can inhibit your creativity. Spend time with just your
thoughts—distracted by neither other people or technology—and
your ideas will be unfettered.” ~ Isaac
Asimov
Personally,
my favourite book written by Isaac Asimov is “An
Intelligent Man's Guide to Science” a general guide to the
sciences written by Isaac
Asimov. It was first published in 1960, so it is now a little out
of date. However, a subsequent version: “The
new intelligent man's guide to science Hardcover – Jan 1 1965” is
still available from Amazon.
Isaac Asimov Home Page. Here you'll find a comprehensive collection of resources pertaining to Isaac Asimov (1920-1992), the quintessential author, who in his lifetime wrote over 500 books that enlightened, entertained, and spanned the realm of human knowledge.
Like the character Sheldon (played by Jim Parsons), on the TV series “The Big Bang Theory” it is thought by many the Asimov had an eidetic memory (ie: sometimes called a photographic memory.) Asimov was a long-time member and vice president of Mensa International, albeit reluctantly;[9] he described some members of that organization as "brain-proud and aggressive about their IQs".[10] He took more joy in being president of the American Humanist Association.[11] The asteroid 5020 Asimov, a crater on the planet Mars,[12] a Brooklyn, New York City elementary school, and three distinct awards have been named for writer, chemist, and humanist Isaac Asimov. Three distinct awards have been named for writer, chemist, and humanist Isaac Asimov:
- The Isaac Asimov Award for Undergraduate Excellence in Science Fiction and Fantasy Short Story Writing is the original name of an annual award open to undergraduate college students and given to the author of the best science fiction or fantasy short story. Established by the magazine Asimov's Science Fiction and the International Association for the Fantastic in the Arts, the award is typically given for character-driven stories of the type published in that magazine. The award is now known as the Dell Magazines Award.[1]
- The skeptical organization CSICOP created an Isaac Asimov Award, established in 1994 "to honor Asimov for his extraordinary contributions to science and humanity". The first recipient was Asimov's friend Carl Sagan.[2] Stephen Jay Gould was also a winner.[3]
- In 1998, the American
Humanist Association awarded its first Isaac Asimov Award to
Eugenie Scott.
Awardees since then have included Robert
Sapolsky, Neil
deGrasse Tyson, Steve
Wozniak, Richard
Leakey and Lynn
J. Rothschild.
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