"هل من الممكن أن تترك الهاتف/البلاي ستيشن/الإكسبوكس من يدك؟".
جملة تسمعها غالبًا من والديك.
أراهن أنك تتجادل مع والديك كثيرًا حول أمور تتعلق بالهواتف. هل تريد هاتفًا، لكنهما يمانعان؟ أم أنك تملك هاتفًا، لكنهما يعتقدان أنك تستخدمه أكثر من اللازم؟ أو يجبرانك على تركه خارج غرفتك خلال الليل في حين تريد أن تقضي بعض الوقت في التصفح قبل النوم؟ على أي حال، النتيجة هي: جدالات بينك وبين والديك حول الهواتف. أُقدِّم لك عالم المخ وصاحب المؤلفات الأكثر مبيعًا دين برنيت، سيشرح لك دين لماذا يخطئ والداك أحيانًا في آرائهما المتعلقة بالهواتف (ولماذا يصيبان أحيانًا مع الأسف)، وكيف يمكنكم جميعًا فهمها فهمًا أفضل، وكيف يمكن منع نشوب الخلاف حولها. ستعرف من هذا الكتاب: لماذا تجد إغلاق التيك توك صعبًا؟ كيف يمكن أن تفيد ألعاب الفيديو دماغك؟ كيف يصيبنا سناب شات بالحزن (والكثير من المشاعر الأخرى المعقدة)؟
لأن الشاشات يمكن أن تكون مفيدة، ويمكن أن تكون ضارة، لكنها قطعًا لا تستحق أن تخشى منها.
Dean Burnett is a neuroscientist and psychiatry lecturer at the Centre for Medical Education at Cardiff University and is the author of the Guardian’s most-read science blog, Brain Flapping. He lives in Cardiff.
The following is from his website:
This is the website for Doctor Dean Burnett, neuroscientist, lecturer, author, blogger, media pundit, science communicator, comedian and numerous other things, depending on who’s asking and what they need.
Although employed as a tutor and lecturer by the Cardiff University Centre for Medical Education in his day job, Dean is best known for his satirical science column ‘Brain Flapping‘ at the Guardian, and his internationally acclaimed debut book ‘The Idiot Brain‘.
Dean Burnett was born and raised in Pontycymer, a working-class former mining village in the South Wales valleys, which explains his strong Welsh accent. After completing his A-levels he attended Cardiff University to complete a BSc in Neuroscience. After working several jobs he returned to Cardiff University as part of the Psychology School where he completed a neuroscience PhD in the role of the hippocampus in configural learning.
Alongside his studying, Dean developed an interest in comedy, eventually taking the plunge and trying stand-up in 2004, a hobby he maintains to this day. His interest in comedy and science lead to him combining the two and attempt to write humorous takes on topical science stories. This eventually resulted in a regular blog on the Guardian website in 2012, which is still going strong today.
When our children are old enough that this becomes an issue for them, I'll give them this book.
For me, I was hoping essentially for something I could recommend to acquaintances as a sort of more robustly researched neuroscientist's antidote to The Anxious Generation, rather than recommending they listen to a 2-hour episode of a podcast by two rather flippant journalists who are a bit of an acquired taste. This isn't exactly that, though it isn't not that. Maybe more children's books should have footnotes and citations. Anyway, I found this to be balanced and nuanced, not Pollyanna-ish about technology's impact on children but also not as alarmist.
كتاب خفيف لطيف جذاب يشدك من اول صفحة معلوماته دسمة وحلوة والموضوع نفسه شيق ومفيد جدا للمراهقين دكتور دين دائما بيبهرنا بأسلوبه الكوميدي وعلمه الغزير شكرا د برنيت وفي انتظار كتابك القادم إن شاء الله