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Kennedy Saves the World

Kennedy Saves Your Dreams

Kennedy Saves the World

FOX News Podcasts

News Commentary, News, Entertainment News, Society & Culture

4.5813 Ratings

🗓️ 11 August 2021

⏱️ 24 minutes

🧾️ Download transcript

Summary

How do lucid dreams occur? Why do we have recurring dreams? Do our dreams have meaning? Can you control your dreams? This week, Kennedy sits down with neuroscientist at Northwestern University Dr. Moran Cerf who studies the science behind dreams to answer all these questions and more. Follow Kennedy on Twitter: @KennedyNation  Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices

Transcript

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0:00.0

Some follow the noise.

0:03.3

Bloomberg follows the money.

0:05.4

Because behind every headline is a bottom line.

0:09.3

Whether it's the funds fueling AI or crypto's trillion dollar swings,

0:13.8

there's a money side to every story.

0:16.5

And when you see the money side, you understand what others miss.

0:20.8

Get the money side of you understand what others miss.

0:22.3

Get the money side of the story.

0:50.4

Subscribe now at Bloomberg.com. Welcome to this episode of Kennedy Saves the World, and I am going to spice up your lucid dreams, your dreamscape.

0:55.3

So have you ever had a crazy dream, and in the middle of it, you realize you're dreaming? And then you're able to do really, really cool stuff. Not everyone has that ability. But if you've heard

0:59.9

about lucid dreaming, I think you probably want to experiment with how to do it because it may

1:05.8

make you a less anxious, more creative person. This according to my guest, he is a neuroscientist,

1:13.4

and he actually works in the neuroscience program at Northwestern University. And he is a professor

1:19.1

of neuroscience and business at the Kellogg School of Management. That's very exciting. Dr. Moran

1:25.5

Surf joins me now. Welcome to Kennedy Saves the World.

1:29.1

Thank you. It's a pleasure to be here. So tell me how you do this because right now,

1:33.2

according to the literature I have about your work, you are eavesdropping on individual nerve cells

1:39.9

and you are implanting electrodes in the brains of patients to figure out what is happening,

1:47.0

and you are looking at their behavior, their emotions, and decision-making,

1:52.0

as well as their dreams. So tell me about that.

1:55.0

Okay, so the way by which we study the brain is working with patients who undergo brain surgery for clinical purposes.

2:05.0

So these people have some problem that requires surgery clinically.

...

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