Marcus says, "From a mind's-eye view, brains may seem awfully special, but from a gene's-eye view, brains are just one more elaborate configuration of proteins."
This book is a compilation of very recent research about how the brain as an organ puts itself together. This process is not unlike the process for any other organ, but results in a product that is highly malleable and ripe for environmental adjustment. The book has been explained very adequately by many reviewers, so I will mainly try to provide you with some representative quotes and add only a few comments.
About Nature vs. Nurture:
"The nativists are right that significant parts of the brain are organized even without experience, and their opponents are right to emphasize that the structure of the brain is exquisitely sensitive to experience."
" At the core of our story has been a tension between the evidence that the brain can - like the body - assemble itself without much help from the outside world, and the evidence that little about the brain's initial structure is rigidly cast in stone.....To an earlier generation of scholars, the evidence for innateness and the evidence for flexibility seemed almost irreconcilable. Most scholars simply focused their attention on the stream of evidence they were more impressed with....Both sides have their points. The brain is capable of awesome feats of self-organization - and equally impressive feats of experience driven reorganization. But the seeming tension between the two is more apparent than real: Self-organization and re-organization are two sides of the same coin, each the product of the staggering amount of co-ordinated suites of autonomous yet highly communicative genes."
The above non-debate (to a hard science person) is well-covered, but the jist of the book is more about how the pre-wiring occurs, relying occasionally on computer science analogies:
"Each gene acts like a single line in a computer program."
"As soon as the IF part of the gene's IF-THEN rule is satisfied, the process of translating the template part of the gene into it's corresponding protein commences."
"With one more trick - regulatory proteins - that control the expression of other genes - nature is able to tie the whole genetic system together, allowing gangs of otherwise unruly free-agent genes to come together in exquisite harmony."
"Each gene does double duty, specifying both a recipe for a protein and a set of regulatory conditions for when and where it should be built. Taken together, suites of these IF-THEN genes give cells the power to act as parts of complicated improvisational orchestras."
How do the "billions of neurons in your brain" develop "trillions of connections between them." There is a well done scientific description given, but I also like his caricature description: "Even in a simple organism like a worm, the mechanics of (neuron) migration are so complicated they could have been borrowed from one of John Madden's playbooks. Cell number 1 goes right, number 2 goes left, and cell 3 goes long for a pass."
About language development:
" If language came onto the scene relatively quickly by evolutionary standards, it is because much of the genetic toolkit for building complex cognition was already in place."
"To understand the origin of language will be to understand how a relatively small set of new genes coordinates the actions of a much larger set or pre-existing genes."
"If language arose de novo, it would, I suspect, have to go through a long series of gradual steps, but if language arose by a novel combination of existing elements - such as neural structures for memory, the automatization of repeated actions, and social cognition - it is possible that it could have developed relatively quickly."
"A language module may depend on a few dozen or a few hundred evolutionarily novel genes, but it is likely to depend heavily on genes - or duplications of pre-existing genes - that are involved in the construction of other cognitive systems, such as the motor control system, which coordinates muscular action, or the cognitive systems that plan complex events."
There is lots more, including an appendix on methods for reading the genome, but I'll close with this quote from the final chapter: "In the coming decades, we will all - collectively , as a society - need to decide what we think about biotechnology and what applications we are and are not willing to allow. The debates we have now, about cloning and stem cell research, pale in comparison to debates we are likely to encounter as the technology for manipulating genes advances."
About a personal item:
When I was in school, I decided that I needed to study a concept an arbitrary number of times (say, 5 times), maybe from the different points of view of several scientific disciplines, in order to really learn it. I guessed that synaptic and neuronal pathways could be built up like bicep muscles. Marcus covers this and calls it "synaptic strengthening," along with a lengthy explanation that "More than a hundred different molecules may be involved, and there are at least 15 distinct steps in the process."
I highly recommend this excellent book.