Descubra como viver uma vida mais equilibrada com o nagomi , antiga filosofia japonesa que o ajudará a aceitar as imperfeições suas, dos outros e do mundo que nos cerca. Alegrias e tristezas, oportunidades e adversidades, essas são as cores da vida. Nagomi nos convida a abraçar tudo isso — tudo o que a vida nos apresenta — para que possamos viver de forma pacífica e harmoniosa. De origem japonesa, nagomi representa equilíbrio, conforto e paz, dentro da alma e da mente. Esse conceito de felicidade nos guia para uma maior compreensão e fortalecimento dos aspectos positivos da vida, garantindo, assim, sabedoria para tomar decisões responsáveis. A prática do nagomi nos torna resilientes para enfrentar situações ruins e garante que a felicidade esteja sempre presente em nossas vidas.
Kenichirō "Ken" Mogi (茂木 健一郎 Mogi Kenichirō) is a Japanese scientist. He is a senior researcher at Sony Computer Science Laboratories and a visiting professor at the Tokyo Institute of Technology. According to the profile posted at his personal blog, his mission is "to solve the so-called mind-brain problem."
After graduating from the University of Tokyo in 1985 with a degree in science and in 1987 with a degree in law, Mogi received in 1992 a Ph.D. with the thesis "Mathematical Model of Muscle Contraction".
Ken Mogi was Japan's first TED speaker. He presented in 2012 March.
Mogi has published over 50 books, most of which are written in Japanese. They cover not only brain science but also includes, but not limited to, philosophy, history, art, education, and linguistics. His books have been frequently used as a source of university entrance examinations. His book "Nō to Kasō" (脳と仮想, "Brain and Imagination") has received 2005 Hideo Kobayashi award, and another book "Ima Koko kara Subete no Basho e" (今ここからすべての場所へ, "From Here, to Everywhere") has received 2008 Takeo Kuwabara academic award.
So ganz anderes Denken als in unserer westlichen Welt üblich und gewohnt. Sehr lesenswert. Kann helfen, im Alltag mal anders mit Situationen umzugehen.
Schön zu lesen, aber ohne konkrete Handlungsempfehlungen. Man soll sich durch Beispiele aus der japanischen Kultur inspirieren lassen und so zu mehr Harmonie und Lebensfreude finden. Es fühlt sich gut an, während des Lesens und das ein oder andere kann man bestimmt für sich mitnehmen.