A Brief Tour of Human Consciousness: From Impostor Poodles to Purple Numbers by V.S. Ramachandran

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  • Pub. Date: July 2004
  • 208pp
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    Product Details

    • Pub. Date: July 2004
    • Publisher: Penguin Group (USA)
    • Format: Hardcover, 208pp

    Synopsis

    Leading expert neurologist provides an audacious tour of the human mind based upon medical experience with patients and scientific research.

    ·  Shows how studying bizarre neurological oddities unravels the mysteries of consciousness and human nature.
    ·  V.S. Ramachandran named one of the “hundred most prominent people to watch in the next century” by Newsweek.

    Article adapted from the book will appear in Discover magazine (circulation over 2 million) coinciding with publication A brilliant, wryly humorous, brief tour of the human mind built on first hand experience with patients and a dazzling research career. This long awaited new book by V.S. Ramachandran is akin to the bestselling works about patients by Oliver Sacks What is body image? Why do we blush? What is art?  What is free will? What is self? Until recently, these questions were the province of philosophy, but studies of the brain are now producing explanations based on research anyone can see for themselves in PET scans and MRI images. Neuroscientists such as V.S. Ramachandran are now unlocking the key to what many have considered the metaphysics of our consciousness.  This knowledge of the brain has progressed so rapidly few have yet recognized it for what it is. It will change how we think of human beings, even our very notion of understanding. This is a revolution, already underway that will have impact on all our lives. But until this book, topics such as art, creativity and love have received very little attention from neurology and new findings have not been offered in an approachable way. Dr.  Ramachandran presents new theories and experiments that illuminate the biggest questions we can ask. Picking up where the great earlier thinkers like Freud, and Darwin began, V.S. Ramachandran and his colleagues are forging a whole new science. Walk through a final frontier of human knowledge with the perfect, eloquent, expert guide on this unique brief tour.

    V. S. Ramachandran is Director of the Center for Brain and Cognition and professor in the Psychology Department and Neurosciences Program at the University of California San Diego, and Adjunct Professor of Biology at the Salk Institute. He is also a fellow of the Neurosciences Institute in La Jolla and a fellow of the Institute for Advanced Studies in Behavioral Sciences at Stanford. Dr. Ramachandran has published over 120 papers in scientific journals (including three invited review articles in Scientific American). He is Editor-in-chief of the Encyclopedia of Human Behaviour and author of the critically acclaimed book Phantoms in the Brain, which has been translated into eight languages.

    Publishers Weekly

    What does an amputee who still feels a phantom limb have in common with an avant-garde artist, or a schizophrenic who claims to be controlled by alien implants, or an autistic child who can draw a hyper-realistic horse? According to neuroscientist Ramachandran (coauthor, Phantoms in the Brain), named by Newsweek one of the 100 people to watch in the 21st century, the answer lies deep in the physical structures of the brain, and his new book offers a thought-provoking survey of his area of research. Through examples, anecdotes and conjecture, Ramachandran aims "to make neuroscience... more accessible to a broad audience." In this he succeeds admirably, explaining how the roots of both psychological disorders and aesthetic accomplishment can be located in the various regions of the brain and the connections (or lack thereof) between them. The text is engaging and readable, feeling as though Ramachandran had sat down for an afternoon to explain his research over tea (no surprise, as the book grew out of the author's 2003 BBC Reith lectures). Though the topic of neuroscience might initially seem daunting, readers who enjoy science popularization in the vein of Oliver Sacks, Richard Dawkins (both of whom enthusiastically blurb this book) and Stephen Jay Gould will find much to appreciate here. Agent, Deirdre Mullane at the Joe Spieler Agency. (July) Copyright 2004 Reed Business Information.

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    A Brief Tour of Human Consciousness: From Impostor Poodles to Purple Numbersby Anonymous

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    April 08, 2005: This book was a so-so overview of some mysteries of the brain such as synesthesia and phantom limbs, but it is very brief and uses many of the same examples and makes many of the same points as his earlier book Phantoms in the Brain, which was much better written and more interesting. A Brief Tour is just that and about a quarter of the book (the more interesting material)is written at the end of the book in the notes which you will flip back and forth to from the text anywhere from every paragraph to every 2 or 3 pages, which I found quite annoying. I would suggest reading Ramachandran's book Phantoms in the Brain instead.