The psychology of learning is perhaps probably the most heated topics in fashionable psychology, and there are lots of conflicting theories and factors of view on this area. And this is all happening at a time when virtually nobody who’s educated about the sport, including me—a former highschool player who’s in two fantasy leagues and nonetheless watches NFL games every Sunday (and Monday and Thursday)—feels comfortable with soccer’s impression on youngsters. How it can alter their brain chemistry, how a handful of younger players die each year, how we’re solely starting to understand the extent of the damage that is being done. That’s why so many of the folks I interviewed for this text made a point of claiming that the NFL’s youth efforts, while brilliant, are completely devious. Again and again, I heard comparisons between the league’s advertising work and that performed by the coal industry or Massive Tobacco, …