Exercise

Overview

From ancient Greek gymnasiums to Roman military drills, physical movement has long been viewed as essential to human beings flourishing. Even Aristotle claimed a sound mind required a sound body.

1440 Findings

Hours of research by our editors, distilled into minutes of clarity.

  • Exercise improves brain blood flow, stimulates neural growth, and more

    In study after study, exercise has been shown to have dramatic effects on human biology, especially in reducing some of the long-term harms associated with chronic stress. In the brain, exercise has host of benefits, including improved memory retention, sleep, cognitive functioning, and more.

  • Microtears in muscles from exercise cause fibers to grow back larger

    Putting muscle contractions under progressively more load or stress causes damage that requires rest to repair, creating stronger or more enduring muscle over time. Muscles adapt to the increasing demand by improving their efficiency, such as increasing the number of mitochondria housed in hundreds of thousands of muscle cells.

  • VO2 max measures the body's ability to use oxygen to produce energy

    VO2 max is the maximum rate at which the body can use oxygen to aerobically produce energy—adenosine triphosphate—for use during intense exercise. Aerobic exercise increases VO2 max, counteracting age-related decline by increasing the body's capillary count and remodeling the heart's left ventricle, increasing the amount of blood it pumps.

  • Modern bodybuilding evolved in the 19th century

    The origins of modern progressive resistance exercise are traced to ancient Greece, where a repeat Olympic victor carried a calf every day until it grew into a full-sized cow. This 56-minute comedy and history podcast journeys through the rise of modern bodybuilding, which took off during the 19th century.

  • Why sitting is bad for you

    Prolonged inactivity, like sitting for long periods, slows metabolism, weakens muscles and bones, and impairs insulin function. It is becoming increasingly clear that when these negative changes persist over time, the cumulative effect is an increased risk of cardiovascular disease, diabetes, and many cancers.

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