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How Brains Make Up Their Minds
 
 

How Brains Make Up Their Minds (Hardcover)

by Walter Freeman (Author) "Who is really in charge: you or your brain? ..." (more)
3.5 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (2 customer reviews)

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Product details

  • Hardcover: 180 pages
  • Publisher: Weidenfeld & Nicolson (26 Aug 1999)
  • Language English
  • ISBN-10: 0297842579
  • ISBN-13: 978-0297842576
  • Average Customer Review: 3.5 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (2 customer reviews)
  • Amazon.co.uk Sales Rank: 303,997 in Books (See Bestsellers in Books)

Product Description

Amazon.co.uk Review

Raise your arm. Now: which came first? The raising of your arm, or the decision to raise it? Walter Freeman's admirably articulate and very difficult little book on the biological foundations of consciousness comes up with a surprising answer: action precedes consciousness of action. Consciousness has better things to do than involve itself with simple motor actions; rather, it establishes the parameters within which action occurs by itself. We are not divine homunculi, directing action independent of the physical constraints of cause and effect. But neither are we ghosts in the machine of the body, observing, and taking credit for, actions which are in reality dictated by conditioned responses and blind fate. Minds are like weather systems: at once evanescent and remarkably robust. Freeman's grasp of philosophy is unprecedented among experimental biologists, and he writes at the leading edge of that movement that makes study of the mind the venue for the long-awaited reconciliation of science and the humanities. This book would make a poor introduction to the subject: it is too much part of the ongoing debate, and readers would do better to tuck a few Dennetts, Calvins and Penroses under their belts first. But this caveat takes nothing away from Freeman's contribution or importance, and the book is a fine addition to Steven Rose's "Maps of the Mind" series, which looks to be the most diverse and rigorous science series for many years. --Simon Ings


Product Description

How do we exercise our will? The erosion of Descartes' concept of the soul in the machine by recent developments in neuroscience leaves us with the challenge of understanding how we control our behaviour and make sense of the world around us. Do our genes and environments determine all that goes on in our brains, or do we create ourselves through what we believe and how we behave? In How Brains Make Up Their Minds, the distinguished US neuroscientist Walter J. Freeman charts the brain's mind, progressing from single nerve cells, through cooperative assemblies of these cells, to the emergence of complex patterns of brain activity. By drawing on new developments in brain imaging and theories of chaos and nonlinear dynamics, he shows how brains create intentions and meanings. The result is an original and stimulating synthesis of neuroscience and philosophy that argues that the power to choose is an essential and inalienable property of brains, and, moreover, the foundation for the development and flourishing of individuals and societies.

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Average Customer Review
3.5 out of 5 stars (2 customer reviews)
 
 
 
 
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51 of 52 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars this is a fascinating book a gifted exposition, 24 Jan 2001
By A Customer
This is a fascinating book. Walter Freeman has taken the most vexing problem in neuroscience today and offered a compelling and well reasoned explanation. How does a mind emerge from a brain? Schopenhauer call a version of this problem "the universal knot", and there are thousands of years of discussion about how the mental relates to the physical, the age old mind-body problem. Freeman has devoted his life to neurobiological research, and teaches in the graduate school at the University of California, Berkeley. In this book (which builds upon his two previous books and 350 articles)Freeman moves effortlessly between the fields of neurobiology, philosophy, the history of science, engineering and computer science, mathematics, and non linear dynamics, to weave together a comprehensive explanation to the universal knot. Part of Freeman's task is to appeal to a wide audience and not merely to those interested in a particular discipline, and to balance breadth with appropriate level of depth. Interdisciplinary studies are tricky that way, as depth in one area can become alienating to one reader, but too much breadth can seem to only cover the surface. This book strikes that delicate balance quite well, and anyone with an abiding interest in this topic will find plenty to be captivated by. The book is also poetically written. Freeman is devoted to a form of emergentism that allows for the realities of imagination, creativity, and free choice to exist in brains. Unlike many neurobiological researchers, his ideas of causality are explicit and his philosophical biases well articulated and direct. He is critical of chemical and structural determinisms which attempt to reduce, in their severe forms, our experience to a form of epiphenomenalism. Instead, Freeman argues, with impressive brain evidence, philosophy from Thomas Aquinas and pragmatists such as Merleau Ponty, and modeling from nonlinear dynamics to show how brains become minds--minds capable of making choices. "I hope to encourage the belief that people have the power to make choices. I will do this by explaining the neural mechanisms through which goals emerge within brains and find expression in goal directed actions"(p.7)
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6 of 6 people found the following review helpful:
2.0 out of 5 stars not up to expectations, 12 Jan 2005
After Ramachandran's Reith Lectures 2003, it seems hard to find a reading about neuroscience as exciting. Had I read 'How Brains Make Up Their Minds' three or four years ago, I might have thought that this was a very detailed and exhaustive book. But in 2005 it looks old. It addresses academic debates which do not seem to me of crucial importance and it is overly conservative in its philosophical excursions. If you expect some excitement from this book you might discover that you can find it only in the title.
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