Quick links from the past week in mind and brain news:

The New York Times has a fantastic article on non-medical ways of dealing with auditory hallucinations and the growing hearing voices movement.
Steven Pinker has been doing talks recently on the psychology of violence and published and article in Edge outlining his main arguments.
The Neurophilosopher has a great post on how the brain makes sense of complex visual scenes and hybrid images.
Frontal Cortex looks just published research suggesting that depression may be overdiagnosed.
The New York Times has an article and video on how families cope with epilepsy and the stigma which is sadly still attached to the disorder.
The Times reviews Zimabardo’s new book The Lucifer Effect.
The Memory Hacker: Popular Science magazine looks at how one man is attempting to develop implantable chips to enhance memory function.
Time magazine is Getting Serious About Happiness in an article on the first PhD programme in positive psychology.
This month’s Prospect Magazine has an
Scientific American has a
BBC Radio 4’s 
April 9th’s New Yorker has a cracking article on the current controversy on whether it’s possible (or even valid) to diagnose bipolar disorder in children.
This short book is made up of two separate lectures of Searle’s, originally published in France, along with an extensive introduction. The introduction is Searle’s tour through the history of philosophy, establishing the ‘basic facts’ as it were, to the point where we are now. A point at which we have dealt with many small problems and can now ‘advance very general accounts of mind, language, rationality, society, etc.’. This ‘large-scale philosophy’ is possible, Searle argues, because of the unity of mind with biology, and, secondly and a consequence of this, the new openness within philosophy to accounting for empirical evidence (for a particularly choice quote from the introduction, see
Professor Philip Zimbardo, famous for the
This week’s international edition of Newsweek has several articles on how researchers have found that physical exercise can sharpen the mind and boost brain function.
BBC News 
The Bad Science column is always a great read, but this week’s 
