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Learn Me Something Nostalgia


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Synopsis: This week on “Learn Me Something,” Aaron and Rich delve into the topic of Nostalgia. Looking to the past with sentimentality isn’t always a negative thing, but at what point does living in the past create a problem for how we define the future?

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\n Many researchers believe that the reminiscence bump reflects the strategies we use to retrieve key memories from our life. As Garry puts it: “I have a vast soup of experiences in my life – how do I wade through to try and find the most important ones?”

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One theory is that that our culture provides a sort of blueprint that we use to determine which memories are important. We will tend to better recall experiences that are culturally-valued, and a lot of those events occur when we are children and young adults. This is the period when we graduate from school or university, work in our first jobs, and have our first romantic partners.\n

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Duration: 1:05:00

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Present: Aaron Stewart, Rich Plumb

\n\nEpisode Links\n
    \n
  • The reminiscence bump: why America’s greatest year was probably when you were young
  • \n
  • When Nostalgia Was a Disease
  • \n
  • Have Smartphones Destroyed a Generation?
  • \n
  • The True Meaning of Nostalgia
  • \n
  • Motivated Reasoning Is Why You Can’t Win An Argument Using Facts
  • \n
  • Look back with danger
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\nFollow your hosts, guests, and the show on Twitter\n
    \n
  • @LMSPodcast on Twitter
  • \n
  • Learn Me Something on Facebook
  • \n
  • @HologramRadio for updates on other interesting podcasts
  • \n
\nSubscribe to Learn Me Something!\n
    \n
  • Get Learn Me Something on iTunes, Google Play, Stitcher, TuneIn, or via RSS.
  • \n
\n

Download: Episode 25: Nostalgia

', '

Synopsis: This week on “Learn Me Something,” Aaron and Rich delve into the topic of Nostalgia. Looking to the past with sentimentality isn’t always a negative thing, but at what point does living in the past create a problem for how we define the future?

\n

\n Many researchers believe that the reminiscence bump reflects the strategies we use to retrieve key memories from our life. As Garry puts it: “I have a vast soup of experiences in my life – how do I wade through to try and find the most important ones?”

\n

One theory is that that our culture provides a sort of blueprint that we use to determine which memories are important. We will tend to better recall experiences that are culturally-valued, and a lot of those events occur when we are children and young adults. This is the period when we graduate from school or university, work in our first jobs, and have our first romantic partners.\n

\n

\n

Duration: 1:05:00

\n

Present: Aaron Stewart, Rich Plumb

\n\nEpisode Links\n
    \n
  • The reminiscence bump: why America’s greatest year was probably when you were young
  • \n
  • When Nostalgia Was a Disease
  • \n
  • Have Smartphones Destroyed a Generation?
  • \n
  • The True Meaning of Nostalgia
  • \n
  • Motivated Reasoning Is Why You Can’t Win An Argument Using Facts
  • \n
  • Look back with danger
  • \n
\nFollow your hosts, guests, and the show on Twitter\n
    \n
  • @LMSPodcast on Twitter
  • \n
  • Learn Me Something on Facebook
  • \n
  • @HologramRadio for updates on other interesting podcasts
  • \n
\nSubscribe to Learn Me Something!\n
    \n
  • Get Learn Me Something on iTunes, Google Play, Stitcher, TuneIn, or via RSS.
  • \n
\n

Download: Episode 25: Nostalgia

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Hologram Radio All AccessBy Hologram Radio