Listen to a psychologist tell a story
Chapter 5
Chapter 5
Chapter 1 Section 5 Do you have the courage to burn your own hands?
Take control of your mind and you can control the pain. ? ?
In 508 BC, the army of the King of Etruscans, Porchenezhan, besieged Rome. ?
In the city of Rome, there was a brave young man named Muzi. Seeing the disaster in his country, he felt very dissatisfied, so he decided to assassinate the supreme leader of the enemy army - Polciena. ?
Unfortunately, being discovered during the assassination, Muzi was outnumbered and captured.Porschener was so enraged that he ordered the altar to be set on fire, in order to torture the young man and make him confess his accomplices. ?
Muzi walked proudly up to the altar and put his right hand in the fire.While he was talking with the king, he kept putting his hand in the fire until it was charred. ?
The strong will and fearless spirit shown by this young Roman shocked Porschena very much. Thinking of the bravery of the Romans, he couldn't help but lose his confidence in capturing Rome.Out of admiration, he released Muzi, and out of fear of failure, he decided to withdraw his troops. ?
Nicknamed Stevola (left-handed), Muzi's image has become a model of invincible will in world literature. ?
Mind walk?
Psychologists have discovered that the human mind has a variety of positive effects on the body.By learning to control the mind, people can control bodily responses, such as the response to pain.So they cite this story from ancient Rome to demonstrate the phenomenon. ?
Muzi's bravery and strength are moving, but we can't help but wonder how he endured the pain of his hands being gradually scorched?In fact, this should be related to psychology. In psychology, it is allowed to make such an assumption: the center of his second signal system, which is connected with the great idea of the motherland he shouted, is so powerful that according to the negative induction Regularity, so that it suppresses the center that causes pain. ?
Prominently excited foci in the cerebral cortex not only suppress pain, but also render it imperceptible.The influence of human psychology on pain perception is so wonderful! ?
(End of this chapter)
Chapter 1 Section 5 Do you have the courage to burn your own hands?
Take control of your mind and you can control the pain. ? ?
In 508 BC, the army of the King of Etruscans, Porchenezhan, besieged Rome. ?
In the city of Rome, there was a brave young man named Muzi. Seeing the disaster in his country, he felt very dissatisfied, so he decided to assassinate the supreme leader of the enemy army - Polciena. ?
Unfortunately, being discovered during the assassination, Muzi was outnumbered and captured.Porschener was so enraged that he ordered the altar to be set on fire, in order to torture the young man and make him confess his accomplices. ?
Muzi walked proudly up to the altar and put his right hand in the fire.While he was talking with the king, he kept putting his hand in the fire until it was charred. ?
The strong will and fearless spirit shown by this young Roman shocked Porschena very much. Thinking of the bravery of the Romans, he couldn't help but lose his confidence in capturing Rome.Out of admiration, he released Muzi, and out of fear of failure, he decided to withdraw his troops. ?
Nicknamed Stevola (left-handed), Muzi's image has become a model of invincible will in world literature. ?
Mind walk?
Psychologists have discovered that the human mind has a variety of positive effects on the body.By learning to control the mind, people can control bodily responses, such as the response to pain.So they cite this story from ancient Rome to demonstrate the phenomenon. ?
Muzi's bravery and strength are moving, but we can't help but wonder how he endured the pain of his hands being gradually scorched?In fact, this should be related to psychology. In psychology, it is allowed to make such an assumption: the center of his second signal system, which is connected with the great idea of the motherland he shouted, is so powerful that according to the negative induction Regularity, so that it suppresses the center that causes pain. ?
Prominently excited foci in the cerebral cortex not only suppress pain, but also render it imperceptible.The influence of human psychology on pain perception is so wonderful! ?
(End of this chapter)
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