The Brain and Mind discussion
Psychology
>
New book recommendation
date
newest »


Cheers,
Aaron,
The Book Reporter

Cheers,
Aaron

How We Decide
You Are Not So Smart: Why You Have Too Many Friends on Facebook, Why Your Memory Is Mostly Fiction, and 46 Other Ways You're Deluding Yourself
The Believing Brain: From Ghosts and Gods to Politics and Conspiracies How We Construct Beliefs and Reinforce Them as Truths

Just finished this. Very interesting. It ties into the type of books like How We Decide that deal with the unconscious/conscious parts of behavior. Free Will is a argument between the two.


Thanks!
Angst: Origins of Anxiety and Depression

http://www.loveslit.blogspot.com/2013...
Is the topic more valid or scientific because it comes from a nuerosurgeon?

Sorry to be blunt. See Sam Harris dissing this book."
De-lurking to say an ironic "Amen!" ;)
I agree that science had nothing to do with it - other than being a prop.


I do like anything by Antonio Damasio particularly "Self Comes to Mind". The book "On Intelligence" was write back in 2005, so it isn't new, yet I thought it offered a fabulous layman's view of the brain by Jeff Hawkins.
Currently, I'm reading "The Believing Brain" by Shermer. He manages to cover a large range on topics in the area of "Confirmation Bias" and other evolved brain deceptions. I think this book is prescient in today's lock step world.
Another insightful source of state-of-the-art brain science is the http://brainsciencepodcast.com/. Dr. Ginger Campbell is an emergence room physician who has made a hobby out of interviewing the leading brain scientists.
I'm glad to have found this group and have begun to build up my Goodreads compatriots.
dgp

Cheers,
Aaron


I second your recommendation. While I found it a bit dry in places, Churchland's book fascinated me (I'm a neuropsychologist), informing important ideas in my book as well as my work with patients.

http://brainsciencepodcast.com/bsp/20...
Dr. Lucas, your book looks quite engaging.

I will check out that podcast now. Thanks.
If anyone wants to read on really weird psychological experiments people used to do before ethics, I would recommend Alex Boese - Elephants on Acids. It's an entertaining read.




Don't know why I missed this when it came out, and I've now ordered it. Unfortunately it's not available through Kindle so I've had to order the hard-back (always do that anyway for a book that I want to live with me), meaning that because of the way I travel I won't meet up with the book for a couple of months. Having looked at the reviews and excerpts, however, I can't resist a few opening comments, and will return to the subject once I have got the book.
No-one should worry about biological determinism, which includes the provision that we have two legs each and such elementary social necessities at the level of the brain as empathy. It is perfectly feasible that there are correlations between personality types and political orientation; but the first rule of statistical study is that correlation does not imply causation; there often can be, and indeed usually is, an external factor lying behind two or more linked phenomena. In the case of the left/right dichotomy and personality, that may be genetic predisposition, but it may also be the childhood socialization process. Identical twin studies are often brought forward to rule out the latter, but again, there can be exogenous factors such as the well-attested paranormal linkages between twins or the social circumstances in which separation takes place. It is seldom that identical twins are separated to different countries or cultures.
None of that is to deny that different types of people resulted from evolution, it is just to say that the association of personality types with the interplay between 'tribalism, inequality, and differing perceptions of human nature' as put forward by the author seems to attribute them to a late stage of human socialization. The formation of human personality, that is to say, the differentiation between more or less empathetic characters, kinder or crueller people, stronger or weaker personalities, took place at an early stage of human evolution, when people were learning to live in social groups. There was no 'economy' at that time, before language by the way, in any sense of the modern term, and certainly no economic inequality. Until a very late stage of social development, the individual, in today's sense, did not exist. She was a member of the group, and all of her attitudes, fears, hopes and behaviours were expressions of her group membership.
So my problem with the book is founded on a worry that it is inappropriate to try to match today's political stereotypes, being expressions of a very recently emerged individualism, to any aspect of our ancestors' personalities, at least until all other causative factors have been ruled out, and that is very far from being the case.
And in case you think that I am not completely off-beam, you can find my ideas fully expounded in my book: "Agent Human: Consciousness At The Service Of The Group" on Kindle. It exists in paper-back (sorry!) and I will send you a free copy if you ask me for it (mgbell@agenthuman.com).
What If?: Serious Scientific Answers to Absurd Hypothetical Questions
I really enjoyed this book! It was quirky and full of interesting scientific explanations of really bizarre questions!
It's a bit off topic from psychology/neuroscience, but I think anyone who enjoys non-fiction/science would love this!
I really enjoyed this book! It was quirky and full of interesting scientific explanations of really bizarre questions!
It's a bit off topic from psychology/neuroscience, but I think anyone who enjoys non-fiction/science would love this!

Thanks for the recommendation. I'm always hunting for new things to read and, rather unfortunately, I find them. I have another pile of new books!
David wrote: "Thanks for the recommendation. I'm always hunting for new things to read and, rather unfortunately, I find them. I have another pile of new books!"
Sounds like a classic case of Tsundoku. ;)
Sounds like a classic case of Tsundoku. ;)


I have not read it but i have read a few mentions/comments/quotes out of certain books that explains how the brain is not like a computer. which makes me wonder what your book is about.

I didn't post this to promote my book, but most of you might be interested in "yes, I do exist" which is the story of the only person ever to achieve a perfect score on the ASVAP.
I look forward to reading the books recommended here when time permits.
Books mentioned in this topic
Collective Mind (other topics)Collective Mind (other topics)
What If?: Serious Scientific Answers to Absurd Hypothetical Questions (other topics)
Our Political Nature: The Evolutionary Origins of What Divides Us (other topics)
The Righteous Mind: Why Good People Are Divided by Politics and Religion (other topics)
More...
New book, read the review at New York Journal of Books:
http://nyjournalofbooks.com/review/wh...