2020/10/24

The World Needs Nuclear Power, And We Shouldn’t Be Afraid Of It

The World Needs Nuclear Power, And We Shouldn’t Be Afraid Of It:

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The World Needs Nuclear Power, And We Shouldn’t Be Afraid Of It

Starts With A Bang

For thousands upon thousands of years, humans have been harnessing the power of nature to provide energy to push our civilization forward. By leveraging fire, we gained the ability to cook food, provide warmth and shelter, and to protect us from predators. Later on, we tamed a variety of animals, using their labor to perform tasks that would be too strenuous or inefficient for humans. Eventually, natural power sources, like the wind, was harnessed through windmills to turn millstones, grinding grain without any human input at all.

An enormous transformation occurred when we began using natural sources — windmills, steam-generating combustion processes, even flowing water — to turn turbines, generating power and providing electricity. Today, the world’s energy needs are still dominantly met through these same processes, with non-renewable fossil fuels like coal, oil, and gas providing the dominant fraction of Earth’s energy uses. We’re powering a space age civilization with the same fossil fuels that emerged during the iron age. Now, more than ever, the world needs nuclear power, and yet fear, rather than facts, governs our policies. Here’s the science of why we should embrace it.

The way a conventional, chemical-based power plant works is simple and straightforward. A fuel source of some variety is burned, releasing energy, which heats up and boils water, generating steam. That steam turns a turbine, which generates electricity, used to provide power for whatever purposes are in demand downstream.

The big problem we have, whether we admit it to ourselves or not, is that this way of generating large amounts of energy has created enormous environmental problems. While the impact of extracting these raw materials in such enormous quantities is no doubt significant, the end products of combusting these fuel sources has fundamentally and significantly changed the chemical composition of Earth’s atmosphere and oceans, leading to global warming, ocean acidification, and other climate-related effects.

The evidence that this has occurred is overwhelming, and it’s a problem that we continue to exacerbate with each passing day on Earth. As more hydrocarbon-based fossil fuels undergo combustion, they increase the concentration of carbon dioxide (CO2) in Earth’s atmosphere, which has risen from pre-industrial levels of about 270 parts-per-million to modern levels of around 410 parts-per-million: a little more than a 50% increase in less than 300 years.

This carbon dioxide increase also extends to the ocean, where carbon dioxide combines with water to create carbonic acid, changing the pH (a measure of acidity) of our oceans on a global scale.

But the most pressing problem is the global warming that has ensued from this additional amount of carbon dioxide. Our global average temperature has risen by 0.98 °C (1.76 °F) since we began accurately measuring it back in 1880, and that rise has accelerated, having increased by 0.18 °C (0.32 °F) per decade over the past 39 years.

Although many different approaches have been proposed to address this problem, it’s clear that any sustainable, long-term solution will include one important component: a transition to energy sources that don’t result in additional carbon dioxide emissions. While most of the ideas put forth — such as the hypothetical Green New Deal — focus on renewable energy sources like solar and wind power, there’s another option that we should seriously reconsider: nuclear fission power.

Yes, it’s true that fission power plants that cut corners could lead to radioactivity-related disasters, such as what infamously happened at Chernobyl in 1986. Meltdown is a risk, occurring at Three Mile Island in 1979. And a poorly contained reactor on a fault line could result in radioactive waste products contaminating the nearby environment due to a natural disaster, such as what occurred at Fukushima in 2011. But even despite these occurrences, nuclear power remains safer, on the whole, than any other large-scale power source in use over all of human history.

The first nuclear reactors to be used for large-scale power generation came online in the mid-1950s, and in that time, there have been a total of over 17,000 reactor-years (where one nuclear reactor operating for a year equals one reactor-year) spanning 33 countries. The three aforementioned incidents are the only adverse ones to be documented in all that time. And yet, when people think of nuclear power, they commonly think of these disasters — as well as the danger of nuclear war, the hazards of radioactive waste, and the destructive power of the atomic bomb — rather than the safe, efficient, and green energy source that nuclear power actually is.

Thankfully, the science behind nuclear power is actually simple, and helps us understand why we shouldn’t fear it the same way we fear nuclear bombs or nuclear war. Instead, there’s a well-understood process that goes on inside the atom, and can generate enormous quantities of power, enough to power our global energy needs for centuries, without the polluting side-effects of fossil fuels.

The physics behind nuclear power. In conventional (chemical-based) fuels, reactions occur between the electron configurations of various atoms, releasing up to ~0.0001% of the fuel’s mass as energy. In nuclear-based reactions, it’s the atomic nuclei themselves that are split, releasing approximately ~1000 times as much energy for the same amount of fuel. In particular, fissionable material (like uranium-235) only needs one simple ingredient — a neutron for the nucleus to absorb — to trigger a fission reaction.

Although other fuels can be used, the good news about nuclear power is that it’s self-sustaining: each U-235 nucleus that absorbs a neutron in turn emits three new neutrons when it splits apart, releasing energy and sustaining the reaction. So long as enough neutrons continue to interact with fissile material, the reaction will occur. This releases heat, which is used to boil water, generating steam, and turning a turbine, the same as a chemical-based reactor. Only, with nuclear, there’s no carbon dioxide waste produced.

Nuclear’s energy output is entirely controllable. One of the big concerns raised with renewable sources of energy like wind and solar are that they’re not controllable. If it’s not windy, you don’t generate wind power; if it’s not sunny (or if it’s night), your solar panels’ output drops tremendously. But the rate of nuclear output can be controlled in a straightforward manner, simply by controlling three factors: control rods, temperature, and a medium (usually water).

Remember what causes a nuclear reaction: the availability of neutrons for the fissile material to absorb. If you put more (or fewer) control rods in, you absorb more (or fewer) of the available neutrons, changing how much interacts with the fissile material. If you increase the temperature, you increase the rate of the reaction; if you decrease it, the reaction rate drops. And the presence of a medium, such as water, can also act as a neutron absorber, but that comes at a cost: you wind up with tritiated water, which itself is radioactive for a period of a few decades.

Still, this is an enormous win: we can generate more or less power as needed, up to the plant’s maximum safe capacity.

There’s no risk of a nuclear bomb, and the waste is eminently manageable. A lot of people, quite understandably, fear the risk of a nuclear explosion. Fortunately, the risk of a nuclear explosion is absolutely zero when it comes to a nuclear power plant. Put simply, the fuel used inside every nuclear reactor — as demanded by the International Atomic Energy Agency — isn’t sufficiently enriched to make a runaway chain reaction even a possibility. The material isn’t capable of creating a nuclear explosion.

That said, there will be nuclear waste produced. Some of it will be useful for repurposing, like the plutonium used in thermoelectric heating and energy generation for deep space missions, while other material (like tritiated water) will need to be stored and managed. According to the World Nuclear Association:

  • Radioactive waste comes out as high-level waste,
  • which usually needs ~5 years of underwater storage followed by ~45 years of dry storage,
  • allowing radioactivity and heat levels to drop,
  • and by then it's become low-level waste,
  • which can be packaged and stored underground for long-term disposal.

Although we still have to overcome the “not in my backyard” (NIMBY) mentality when it comes to nuclear, this is essentially a scientifically solved problem.

We can fully transition to nuclear in under 20 years. Building a new, country-wide (or global) set of reactors to power the world will require a sustained investment. New power plants, reactors, cooling towers, etc., will all need to be constructed. Sufficient quantities of nuclear fuel will need to be mined, extracted, and appropriately refined. Supply chains will need to be constructed, and waste management will be an ongoing need to address. Above and beyond the existing infrastructure that we have today, it will require an enormous and sustained investment of resources.

But the payoff will come. While humanity has, to put it lightly, done a dismal job of addressing the climate crisis up until this point, that can all change. If we can simultaneously replace:

  • coal, gas, and oil-based power plants with nuclear ones,
  • our gasoline-based automotive infrastructure to electric power,
  • industrial, commercial, and residential heat and power needs into electric rather than fossil fuel-based solutions,

We can eliminate more than 80% of our fossil fuel uses, including practically all of the non-sustainable ones. We can transform the world for a long-term payoff with a short but significant up-front investment.

The uncomfortable truth is this: we are a space-age civilization that has chosen to eschew technological advances in energy generation because of fear and inertia. We are powering the 21st century with 18th century technology, which has had disastrous effects on our environment that we have ignored for far too long. While there are many possible ways forward to address this problem, nuclear power has the proven track record of success necessary and the flexibility to be an integral, and potentially the primary, resource in humanity’s arsenal in the fight against climate change.

For many years, we have let fear, rather than facts, control the narrative over nuclear power. While the conventional story around nuclear power focuses on the few disasters that have occurred, nuclear’s track record tells a different story: one of unparalleled safety, successful waste management, and abundant, affordable, green energy. The world needs nuclear power now more than ever. If we can overcome our entrenched biases against it, we just might solve one of the biggest problems facing our world for generations to come.

Follow me on TwitterCheck out my website or some of my other work here

I am a Ph.D. astrophysicist, author, and science communicator, who professes physics and astronomy at various colleges. I have won numerous awards for science writing since 2008 for my blog, Starts With A Bang, including the award for best science blog by the Institute of Physics. My two books, Treknology: The Science of Star Trek from Tricorders to Warp DriveBeyond the Galaxy: How humanity looked beyond our Milky Way and discovered the entire Universe, are available for purchase at Amazon. Follow me on Twitter @startswithabang.

2020/10/23

Cézanne: A life: Danchev, Alex: 9781846681707: Amazon.com: Books

Cézanne: A life: Danchev, Alex: 9781846681707: Amazon.com: Books




Cézanne: A life Paperback – October 3, 2013
by Alex Danchev  (Author)
4.3 out of 5 stars    100 ratings
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 Today we view Cézanne as a monumental figure, but during his lifetime (1839-1906), many did not understand him or his work. With brilliant insight, drawing on a vast range of primary sources, Alex Danchev tells the story of an artist who was never accepted into the official Salon: he was considered a revolutionary at best and a barbarian at worst, whose paintings were unfinished, distorted and strange. His work sold to no one outside his immediate circle until his late thirties, and he maintained that 'to paint from nature is not to copy an object; it is to represent its sensations' - a belief way ahead of his time, with stunning implications that became the obsession of many other artists and writers, from Matisse and Braque to Rilke and Gertrude Stein.

Beginning with the restless teenager from Aix who was best friends with Emile Zola at school, Danchev carries us through the trials of a painter tormented by self-doubt, who always remained an outsider, both of society and the bustle of the art world. Cézanne: A life delivers not only the fascinating days and years of the visionary who would 'astonish Paris with an apple', with interludes analysing his self-portraits, but also a complete assessment of Cézanne's ongoing influence through artistic imaginations in our own time. He is, as this life shows, a cultural icon comparable to Monet or Toulouse.


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4.3 out of 5 stars

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Homage to Bird
2.0 out of 5 stars Not for Art Lovers
Reviewed in the United States on August 21, 2019
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The late Alex Danchev was a professor of International Relations at the University of St. Andrews. Late in his unfortunately short life (he died just short of his 61st birthday), he took to writing biographies of artists, Braque and this book on Cézanne.

That Danchev was not trained as an art historian is most evident in this book about one of Western art's greatest and most important painters. Danchev read seemingly everything about Cézanne in English and much in French. Consequently, he gives us minute details about the lives of Cézanne and his contemporaries. Yet there is nothing here that follows the stylistic development of Cézanne's paintings, much less explains how Cézanne went from crude paintings of thick impastos applied with a knife to the light, airy works where the subject is as much the relation of strikes of color to one another as anything else. To make up for this lack of insight into the artist and his work, Danchev gives us an overabundance of lengthy quotations: from ancient writers that Danchev imagines Cézanne was thinking of in a particular situation to contemporaries to figures from many decades after Cézanne's death such as Samuel Beckett (not commenting on Cézanne but presenting views on life that Danchev imagines Cézanne had).

Hilary Spurling showed with her outstanding two-volume biography of Matisse that a non-art historian can write incisively about art and an artist, but Danchev proves himself not up to her level.
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Cher Carter
1.0 out of 5 stars This is not a biography
Reviewed in the United States on July 15, 2020
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I purchased this book to learn about Cezanne's life, both personal and artistic. This is not a biography. It barely provides any information about Cezanne's life and certainly not in a chronological manner. It does provide many quotes from Zola novels and comments by others, but I gave up 1/3 of the way through, feeling I knew--let alone understood--no more about Cezanne and his development as an artist than I did before I opened the book. A huge disappointment.
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Sharon Knettell
4.0 out of 5 stars Extraordinary scholarship, very good read.
Reviewed in the United States on January 4, 2013
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As an artist I am often leery of biographies of artists as they tend to glamorize the more salacious aspects of an artists life.-This did not- perhaps because Cezanne was more monk-like in his dedication to his art. I learned a great deal about his extraordinary work methods- his insistence, in trooping out day after day painting and experiencing his landscapes. This is contrary to much current practice of landscape copiers- I can't even call them painters, who snap photos and retire to the studio to finish them up. I was teaching a figurative workshop in Scottsdale, Arizona- a place of breathtaking vistas when I passed a 'landscape class'. The students were all inside, lined up on long tables, while the instructor showed them how to copy the small pictures taped next to their canvasses. Cezanne was one with his landscapes. He felt them and it it extaordinarily evident in the originality of his painting of them- they are not mere renderings.

He painted his apples and portraits with the same intense scrutiny, strangely he painted his nudes from his head or old school drawings.

There are some wonderful descriptions of his methodology and the artist matierials he used. Danchev describes the colors and pigment Cezanne used- useful to any painter. I would have loved a bit more of that.

The only quibble I have with this book is a lay person trying to get inside a head of a painter- Danchev did a fair job, but I wish art writers or critics would like Adam Gopnik take drawing lessons from Jacob Collins just to see what a struggle it is to learn how to draw. Maybe then we would have better art critics and biographers who are more in tune with their subjects.

The picture reference could be better- they are small- but this should impel a visit to a museum so see them- well worth the trip.

All in all it is a wonderful book and a good read. It leads to a greater appreciation and understanding of the enormous impact Cezanne had on art.
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Amazon Customer
5.0 out of 5 stars A masterful biography
Reviewed in the United States on February 24, 2013
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This is an impressive work: prodigious research, lively presentation, and written from a very compassionate point of view. Working my way through the biography, I felt each chapter giving me a bit more information or another point of view until by the closing chapters I felt I had acquired a satisfying sense of who the man was from his own words, from the events of his life, from contemporary accounts, and from other appreciations (notably for me the wonderfully sensitive and expressive Rilke). But the book is work. It is written beautifully but organized less than helpfully with footnotes all collected at the end and illustration legends at the front. This is a shame, because the illustrations are well discussed and the footnotes are themselves full of fascinating information. But the laborious layout is a minor matter compared to the pleasure of reading this warm and intelligent account.
27 people found this helpful
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Hilary
5.0 out of 5 stars The book is great. I just have to comment that I bought ...
Reviewed in the United States on February 17, 2015
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The book is great. I just have to comment that I bought both the kindle and hardcopy edition - so I could actually read an art book in bed! I go between them but do most of the reading on the kindle because the illustrations and footnotes are linked. You can click on them see the reference and click back without flipping through the enormous volume. Since images of Cezanne's work are easily found I recommend the kindle version for this brilliant and, from the viewpoint of a painter, satisfying biography.
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careful
1.0 out of 5 stars A great story made dull and boring
Reviewed in the United States on July 27, 2018
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I love Cezanne and like any famous artist had an interesting life but I found myself losing the will to live while reading this. Like wading through syrup.
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PVreader
5.0 out of 5 stars Best biography for Cezanne
Reviewed in the United States on November 28, 2014
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The writer looks far beyond the cliches which have accumulated regarding Cezanne's life and career over the years. The illustrations are both pertinent and well produced. Do not mistake this for a 'coffee table' book.
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Sheila La Farge
5.0 out of 5 stars The best book on Cezanne's life
Reviewed in the United States on May 15, 2017
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I reordered this as I lost my first copy. The best book on Cezanne's life.
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CGKent
4.0 out of 5 stars Keep going to the end
Reviewed in the United Kingdom on July 31, 2015
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Not as easy a read as I thought it was going to be. Cezanne's life was not filled with fascinating incident. He lived almost exclusively an inner life, unlike some of those who followed him such as Picasso or Matisse. A biographer is obliged to flesh out the story with the lives of those who meant most to his subject. So what we have is a lot of Emil Zola, Cezanne's great childhood friend, in existential musings. This is not uninteresting but Danchev does draw it out a little too much. Where the author scores heavily is in his writing about Cezanne's progress as a painter and in discussing the paintings themselves. despite the longueurs, this is a worthwhile read.
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Riverman
5.0 out of 5 stars The Cezannian Revolution
Reviewed in the United Kingdom on February 21, 2013
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At times I seemed to lose my way in this book. That might have been due to my lack of attention, but some sections read like little discrete essays and these sometimes seemed to derail the narrative of Cezanne's life. The section on pages 328 to 330, for example, is like a small essay on Cezanne's relationship with trees. However, this is a small criticism. As W.H. Auden observed, a shilling life will give you the facts and Alex Danchev's marvellous biography will give you far more than that. His motivation for writing the book appears to have been a burning desire to understand Cezanne's genius, and I doubt that there is a better reason for doing so. Towards the end of the book, and following a fascinating account of a meeting between two young artists and Cezanne in 1906, at the end of his life - a meeting that resulted in a remarkable series of photographs of Cezanne painting the Mont Saint-Victoire and which are reproduced in the book - he gets to the heart of the matter:

'At the core of the Cezannian revolution is a decisive shift in the emphasis of observation, from a description of the thing apprehended to the process of apprehension itself. Cezanne insisted that he painted things as they are, for what they are, as he saw them. The issue is what he saw - how he saw.'

Drawing extensively on the reactions of Cezanne's contemporaries and those who have ever since tried to understand his significance, Alex Danchev has, to my mind, written a profound and moving biography, and one that is worthy of its subject.
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Thanissaro Bhikkhu ON FORMULAS AND BEING SENSITIVE ALL THE TIME

Steven Goodheart

The Skillful Teachings of Thanissaro Bhikkhu


ON FORMULAS AND BEING SENSITIVE ALL THE TIME


We like to think that if we had it all figured out, we wouldn’t have to pay so much attention—that if there were some formula we could memorize, that in itself would take care of things so we wouldn’t have to put so much effort into the meditation, put so much effort into being present. We’d like just to plug into the formula and let things go on automatic pilot—but that’s missing the point. The point is being attentive, paying careful attention, being sensitive, all the time.
~
This is a quality the Buddha calls citta: intentness, attentiveness, really giving yourself fully to what you’re doing right now. When you’re intent, insight comes not as a formula that allows you to be inattentive, but as a sensitivity to what’s going on right now so you can read what’s happening, continually. In other words, you’re trying to strengthen this quality of being attentive, this quality of being present, because when you’re really present you don’t need all the other formulas. You recognize the signs of what’s going on: when the breath is too long, when the breath is too short, when the breath energy in the body is too sluggish, when it’s too active. Being attentive is what enables you to notice these things, to be sensitive to them, to read what they’re telling you.
~
So the insights you gain are not necessarily wise sayings that you can write down in little books of wisdom. Insight is a greater and greater sensitivity to what’s going on. Don’t think that you’d like to have things explained beforehand, or to sit here trying to come up with little rules or memory aids: “Well, when this happens, you should do this; and then, when that happens, you should do that.” You’re trying to develop the quality of being able to listen, able to read what’s happening in the present moment, all the time, so that you won’t need those memory aids.
~
If you’re looking for the little formulas or the little nuggets of wisdom that you can wrap up and take home, in hopes that they’ll allow you to drop the effort that goes into being so attentive, it’s like the old story of the goose laying the golden egg. You get a golden egg and then you kill the goose. That’s the end of the eggs. The goose here is the ability to stay attentive, to be present, to be fully engaged in what’s happening with the breath. The insights will come on their own—you keep producing, producing, producing the insights—not for the sake of taking home with you, but for the sake of using them right here, right now.
~
You don’t have to be afraid that you’re not going to remember them for the next time. If you’re really attentive, your sensitivity will produce the fresh insights you need next time. It will keep developing, becoming an ability to read things more and more carefully, more and more precisely, so that you won’t
have to memorize insights from the past. It will keep serving them up, hot and fresh.
❀❀❀
Thanissaro Bhikkhu
Sensitivity All the Time
~
http://www.accesstoinsight.org/.../meditations.html...

Touch By Tiffany Field

 Touch By Tiffany Field

An essay on the importance of touch to children's growth and development and to the physical and mental well-being of people of all ages.

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Touch, second edition Kindle Edition



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Review

An interesting, well-written book with an extensive bibliography.


Library Journal

Award

Winner in the 2002 AAUP Book, Jacket, and Journal competition for excellence in design in the category of Jackets.


Endorsement

In the hands of Tiffany Field, touch, 'the mother of the senses,' finds its muse. An engagingly written book coursing from the physiology lab to 'new age' therapy, Touch never fails to stimulate.


Lewis LeavittProfessor of Pediatrics and Medical Director, Waisman Center on Human Development and Mental Retardation, University of Wisconsin-Madison

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Summary

An essay on the importance of touch to children's growth and development and to the physical and mental well-being of people of all ages.

The first sensory input in life comes from the sense of touch while a baby is still in the womb, and touch continues to be the primary means of learning about the world throughout infancy, well into childhood. Touch is critical for children's growth, development, and health, as well as for adults' physical and mental well-being. Yet American society, claims Tiffany Field, is dangerously touch-deprived.

Field, a leading authority on touch and touch therapy, begins this accessible book with an overview of the sociology and anthropology of touching and the basic psychophysical properties of touch. She then reports recent research results on the value of touch therapies, such as massage therapy, for various conditions, including asthma, cancer, autism, and eating disorders. She emphasizes the need for a change in societal attitudes toward touching, particularly among those who work with children.

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Touch

by Tiffany Field

 4.25  ·   Rating details ·  20 ratings  ·  3 reviews

Why we need a daily dose of touch: an investigation of the effects of touch on our physical and mental well-being. Although the therapeutic benefits of touch have become increasingly clear, American society, claims Tiffany Field, is dangerously touch-deprived. Many schools have "no touch" policies; the isolating effects of Internet-driven work and life can leave us hungry for tactile experience. In this book Field explains why we may need a daily dose of touch.


The first sensory input in life comes from the sense of touch while a baby is still in the womb, and touch continues to be the primary means of learning about the world throughout infancy and well into childhood. Touch is critical, too, for adults' physical and mental health. Field describes studies showing that touch therapy can benefit everyone, from premature infants to children with asthma to patients with conditions that range from cancer to eating disorders.


This second edition of Touch, revised and updated with the latest research, reports on new studies that show the role of touch in early development, in communication (including the reading of others' emotions), in personal relationships, and even in sports. It describes the physiological and biological effects of touch, including areas of the brain affected by touch, and the effects of massage therapy on prematurity, attentiveness, depression, pain, and immune functions. Touch has been shown to have positive effects on growth, brain waves, breathing, and heart rate, and to decrease stress and anxiety. As Field makes clear, we enforce our society's touch taboo at our peril. (less)

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Paperback, 250 pages

Published October 10th 2014 by Bradford Book (first published January 1st 2014)


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Ralph N

Aug 03, 2019Ralph N rated it it was amazing

Tiffany Field shows us the importance of touch throughout our lives -- how it can affect physical and cognitive development in children, and how it can make or break our health. Must-read on a relatively taboo subject in American society.

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Ryan Mizzen

May 26, 2019Ryan Mizzen rated it it was amazing

A phenomenal must-read book for everyone about the importance of touch!

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happy in wisconsin

5.0 out of 5 stars A must for massage students

Reviewed in the United States on October 6, 2011

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Having been a certified massage for over 10 years, I know the power of touch. Tiffany Field has been involved in research for several years, and she knows her work. This book is well documented, and discusses many studies on the power and healing capabilities of touch on everyone from premature babies to nursing home residents, and all of us in between. It should be required reading for every massage student, maybe every student in the health field.

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sarah

5.0 out of 5 stars Great book - good condition

Reviewed in the United States on January 2, 2020

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Great read and came in good condition.

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Ruth I Olafsdottir

5.0 out of 5 stars A must read For all humans and those who want ...

Reviewed in the United States on May 22, 2016

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A must read

For all humans and those who want to be.

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Angie

5.0 out of 5 stars Useful

Reviewed in the United States on February 18, 2013

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Great information for parents and anyone in the MT field. This book will enlighten you to the "need" all humans have for touch.

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Zen

5.0 out of 5 stars Wonderful information within and sage ways to connect and encourage ...

Reviewed in the United States on October 19, 2014

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This book was a welcomed addition to my library...Wonderful information within and sage ways to connect and encourage health in our infants and children. I highly recommend it. Linneah @ www.ld.massagetherapy.com

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FM FS

1.0 out of 5 stars I needed customer service to intervene. Someone should've noticed.

Reviewed in the United States on September 1, 2017

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I was charged twice. Once for the ebook and again for the hardback book.

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Penny E. Goldman

3.0 out of 5 stars great book.

Reviewed in the United States on August 7, 2015

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great book.

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Bruce Jones

2.0 out of 5 stars Old news mostly.

Reviewed in the United States on November 5, 2014

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Disappointing.

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Liz Tipping

5.0 out of 5 stars A must for anyone intrerested in babies and infant massage

Reviewed in the United Kingdom on November 2, 2003

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Tiffany Field is one of the most prolific researchers into infant massage, working from the Touch Research Institute in Miami. This book brings together much of Dr. Field's research and gives a comprehence look at the importance of touch in our society today.For anyone writing articles on massage or introducing massage onto neonatal units it is a must, there is so much useful information.

This book starts by showing the importance of touch, how as children (and adults) we hunger for touch, especially in schools and institutions where it has become difficult for teachers to even give a hug to a distressed child in their care for fear of it being mis-interpreted.

The book continues to show how we use touch for communication and how touch can improve development, and subsequently how touch deprivation can affect the growing child both physically and mentally.

There is a comprehensive list and description of many touch therapies including a chapter on infant massage.

The book concludes with brief summaries of many of the studies on massage therapy with both children and adults.

I found the book very comprehensive and very easy and enjoyable to read.

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19 people found this helpful

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Ms J Burke

5.0 out of 5 stars Five Stars

Reviewed in the United Kingdom on March 25, 2018

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Fab item. Prompt delivery. Many thanks

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hairhead79

5.0 out of 5 stars Excellent book

Reviewed in the United Kingdom on September 17, 2012

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I bought this book as it was a requirement for a course i was doing. I have to say i thoroughly enjoyed the book. It is not as i expected. It was extremely easy to read & very insightful for the course i was doing but for me personally

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catherine smith

5.0 out of 5 stars New parents must read

Reviewed in Australia on June 22, 2018

Verified Purchase

Really special information for all parents, has really changed my life

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Janice Pridding

1.0 out of 5 stars ... my son so I don't know what it was like.

Reviewed in the United Kingdom on November 25, 2014

Verified Purchase

Sorry it was a present for my son so I don't know what it was like.

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