. . . is "interval" or high-intensity training.
It might even help reduce heart disease and Type II diabetes.
[...]. . . is "interval" or high-intensity training.
It might even help reduce heart disease and Type II diabetes.
[...]1. Felix Salmon also recommends the new Bob Pozen book.
2. Are dreams just exercise for the brain? I enjoyed this line: “I argue that dreaming is not a parallel state but that it is consciousness itself, in the absence of input from the senses..."
I'm late to Sam Jones's article about investors who did due diligence on Galleon and decided to stay away, but I think it raises a number of silly ideas which ought to be put to rest.
First, it's worth noting that, ex post, this kind of exercise can be done' [...]
I think this a map of the flora on your skin is potentially really useful, but it also leads to lines like this:
… Your mouth is more like my mouth than it is like your armpit …
One conclusion of the exercise was that the oils on your [...]
When Ned Phelps wrote:
A fruitless clash of economic opposites: In the theory wars, which are as much wars over policy choices, two very bad kinds of theories are driving out good theories. Keynesian economics, which had been nearly forgotten inside the macro field, has found new voices from [...]
As long as it employs utter fools like Chris Edwards, the smart people who work there will have a hard time being taken seriously.
Just saying...
Think about it. Think hard about it.
[...]We're very happy to announce that Shikha Dalmia, a senior policy analyst here at Reason Foundation, has won the first Bastiat Prize for Online Journalism, presented by the International Policy Network. In announcing the award, IPN's Julian Morris said, "Dalmia’s articles for Forbes.com are brilliant exercises in'" [...]