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Self Comes to Mind: The Evolution of Consciousness
 
 

Self Comes to Mind: The Evolution of Consciousness [Kindle Edition]

Antonio Damasio
3.7 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (7 customer reviews)

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Review

'The marvel of reading Damasio's book is to be convinced one can follow the brain at work as it makes the private reality that is the deepest self.' --V. S. Naipaul, Nobel Laureate and author of A BEND IN THE RIVER and THE ENIGMA OF ARRIVAL

'Damasio makes a grand transition from higher-brain views of emotions to deeply evolutionary, lower-brain contributions to emotional, sensory and homeostatic experiences. He affirms that the roots of consciousness are affective and shared by our fellow animals. Damasio's creative vision leads relentlessly toward a natural understanding of the very font of being.' --Jaak Panksepp, author of AFFECTIVE NEUROSCIENCE and Baily Endowed Professor of Animal Well-Being Science, Washington State University

'I was totally captivated by SELF COMES TO MIND. In this work Antonio Damasio presents his seminal discoveries in the field of neuroscience in the broader contexts of evolutionary biology and cultural development. This trailblazing book gives us a new way of thinking about ourselves, our history, and the importance of culture in shaping our common future.' --Yo-Yo Ma, musician

'The epicenter of SELF COMES TO MIND concerns the neurological basis for cognition and the issue of the superposition of a "self' onto the construct which we address as reality. Damasio is both eloquent and scholarly. His command of the themes he approaches is impressive, as is the vigor with which he tackles such recondite issues as the elusive "self," inside the head. A wonderful read, and a recommended one!'
--Rodolfo R. Llinás, Chair and Professor of Physiology and Neuroscience, New York University

'In this astonishing work, Antonio Damasio puts his years of investigation into the processes of the brain to open the impenetrable mysteries of self and mind, where all the contradictions of human experience unite in the ultimate unknown, consciousness.'
--Peter Brook, theater and film director and author of THE EMPTY SPACE and THREADS OF TIME

'Breathtakingly original ... Damasio pushes the idea of homoeostasis further and harder than any previous author has dared, arguing that improved homoeostatic control has driven the evolution of the brain and then the emergence of consciousness.' --Financial Times

'SELF COMES TO MIND is [Damasio's] most ambitious work yet. It is a lucid and important work, and scrambles all the conventional categories of the brain. It turns out that the "higher" parts of the cortex are inseparable from the "lower" parts, and that "you" - the "you" reading these words - emerge in large part from the brain stem, the nub of tissue just above the spinal cord. We arise, in other words, from the place were brain and body meet, where flesh and feeling are emulsified together.' --Wired

'Damasio's continental European training sensitizes him to the reductionist traps that ensnare so many of his colleagues. His is the only one of the many consciousness books weighing down my shelves that feels it necessary to mention Freud's, as opposed to an anaesthetist's, use of the term unconscious.' --The Guardian (Book of the Week)

'Damasio gives a plausible account of the way our sense of self might emerge from neural processes. The book ranges readably from brain anatomy to evolutionary biology.' --Financial Times, Best Books of the Year

'Damasio makes a grand transition from higher-brain views of emotions to deeply evolutionary, lower-brain contributions to emotional, sensory and homeostatic experiences. He affirms that the roots of consciousness are affective and shared by our fellow animals. Damasio's creative vision leads relentlessly toward a natural understanding of the very font of being.' --Jaak Panksepp, Washington State University

'In SELF COMES TO MIND, Antonio Damasio, one of the world's great neuroscientists, addresses the questions fundamental to every one of us. Who are we? What does it mean to have a sense of self? ... This is an exciting book by a wonderful thinker.' --Siri Hustvedt, author of What I loved and The Shaking Woman

'Damasio's DESCARTES' ERROR was widely considered to revolutionize the understanding of the critical role emotion plays in human rationality and decision-making. His latest, SELF COMES TO MIND, explores the way humans ̶ and some animals ̶ develop a sense of self, and examines what this tells us about the nature of consciousness.' --Time Magazine

'A captivating read that demonstrates that we remain a mystery for ourselves.'
--Psychologies (Book of the Month Selection)

Book Description

A profound and groundbreaking new book telling the story of consciousness and the human mind, from one of the world's leading neuroscientists.

Product details

  • Format: Kindle Edition
  • File Size: 1015 KB
  • Print Length: 385 pages
  • Page Numbers Source ISBN: 0307378756
  • Publisher: Cornerstone Digital (31 Aug 2011)
  • Sold by: Amazon Media EU S.à r.l.
  • Language English
  • ASIN: B005CUSDRA
  • Text-to-Speech: Enabled
  • Average Customer Review: 3.7 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (7 customer reviews)
  • Amazon Bestsellers Rank: #57,319 Paid in Kindle Store (See Top 100 Paid in Kindle Store)
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Antonio R. Damasio
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Customer Reviews

Most Helpful Customer Reviews
18 of 18 people found the following review helpful
Format:Hardcover
Damasio discusses the phenomenon of consciousness mainly from the perspectives of neurobiology and evolutionary biology, but also makes interesting points about the philosophical, psychological and cultural significance of his ideas. If you are an interested layman like me rather than an expert, then you might find it helpful to read Chapters 1, 10 and 11 first in order to gain a broad understanding of the framework being offered. Chapters 2-9 are often highly detailed and technical, and threaten information overload if delved into unprepared.

As the title of the book indicates, Damasio argues that in order to be conscious a brain needs to construct 'maps' or 'images' of the knower as well as of the known. Subjectivity requires a subject, but the subject isn't a soul or a homunculus but a self which is being continually generated by interacting neural structures. In the course of evolution, processes supplying a protoself developed into processes supplying a core self, which in turn developed into processes supplying the autobiographical self typical of humans.
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40 of 42 people found the following review helpful
Format:Hardcover
Having had a longstanding interest in philosophy of mind and the problem of consciousness, I was looking forward to reading this book. Damasio has clearly acquired a reputation over the last few years, though I had not read anything of his previously. As a consultant physician with a reasonable knowledge of neuroanatomy and neuroscience, I felt reasonably well equipped to negotiate the trickier parts of the text. As I progressed through the text, however, I became more and more frustated by Damasio's apparent inability to edit out what is not essential to the idea being communicated. There is simply to much detail in all the wrong places. The result of this is that really important ideas are almost completely submerged under a mass of information, much of which is only marginally relevant to what is being communicated.

This is a common fault with some scientists, but should be corrected by firm editing. There is simply too much information in relation to the ideas presented, even though some of the ideas are original and controversial. I found myself having to take a deep breath each time I picked it up, wondering if I could really be bothered wading through all the background noise to harvest the occasional nuggets of gold. I did make it to the end, but I can't honestly say the journey was worth it.
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7 of 7 people found the following review helpful
Format:Hardcover|Amazon Verified Purchase
The merits of this book lie in the clarity of expression, which makes difficult material accessible to a lay audience, and encourages us to think about the whole area of consciousness and the self. The author's main theme is the influence of inputs from the body on consciousness. In itself this represents an advance on much of twentieth century consciousness studies, with its tendency to view the brain as an isolated computer.

Problems arise with the degree of emphasis on bodily inputs, at the expense of inputs from the external world. The author focuses almost exclusively on inputs from the body to the brain stem. This approach looks to ignore a lot of what has been going on in recent neuroscience, where there is a model of sensory inputs from the external world that are evaluated in the orbitofrontal cortex. Processing here directly correlates to subjective experience, with this region projecting to the basal ganglia areas that are important in determining behaviour.

Damasio does lay stress on the role of dopamine and other neuromodulators, but does not bring out the fact that although the nuclei producing these molecules are in the brain stem, it is the basal ganglia that are substantially responsible for their release into the rest of the brain. He also fails to say much about how sensory inputs are processed by the amygdala and orbitofrontal before being signaled to the body, creating an interactive process rather than the simple feed forward implied in this book. In all Damasio has given us a model that is in significant conflict with some recent research. This is not to say his position is wrong, but he needs to provide more justification as to why his picture is at such variance with this research.
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Popular Highlights

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&quote;
There is indeed a self, but it is a process, not a thing, and the process is present at all times when we are presumed to be conscious. &quote;
Highlighted by 13 Kindle users
&quote;
I believe conscious minds arise when a self process is added onto a basic mind process. &quote;
Highlighted by 12 Kindle users
&quote;
countless creatures for millions of years have had active minds happening in their brains, but only after those brains developed a protagonist capable of bearing witness did consciousness begin, in the strict sense, and only after those brains developed language did it become widely known that minds did exist. &quote;
Highlighted by 12 Kindle users

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