When we walk, some kind of magic happens to our brain . And scientists from Stanford explained why.
JK Rowling said: "There is nothing better than a night walk that gives you new ideas." Charles Dickens worked hard for 5 hours, and then performed his 10-12 mile exercise. “I could not preserve my health otherwise,” he insisted.
But perhaps the philosopher Søren Kierkegaard best formulated the thesis: "The best thoughts visited me on a walk, and I don’t know any such cumbersome thoughts that a walk would not save."
A study by Stanford University (2014) suggests that rigorous scientific evidence is behind magic. In their experiments, Stanford researchers asked a small group of participants to conduct a series of tests to measure divergent thinking, coming up with fresh and creative ideas, and to evaluate the results. :
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