Amazon.com Review
With neuroscience steadily replacing psychology, philosophy, and even religion as a model of self-understanding, it's time we take a look back at the history and meaning of this curious branch of research. Washington University historian Stanley Finger charms and invigorates the reader with Minds Behind the Brain, a look at thousands of years of brain science in the form of biographical sketches. Nineteen great scientists whose brilliant insights, determined work, and resistance to cultural expectations brought this three-pound, lumpy beige ball increasing respect--from the ancient Egyptians discarding it upon death to our own view of it as the seat of consciousness.
Ramon y Cajal, Sperry, Galen, and Descartes are among the researchers Finger chooses to illuminate. Their peers, colleagues, and times are also portrayed vividly; the unavailability of human corpses for dissection until very recently, the still-raging debate on vivisection and animal research, and religious resistance to certain findings have all worked against these men and women. Well-chosen illustrations help humanize these figures, as does the author's careful balance between depictions of research and personal lives. How did Descarte's dog figure in the philosopher's understanding of the soul? Find out in Minds Behind the Brain. --Rob Lightner --This text refers to an out of print or unavailable edition of this title.
From Publishers Weekly
Cognitive science is now all the rage; contradictory, up-to-date hypotheses on how the mind works or doesn't work crowd bookstore shelves. It wasn't always thus. Finger (Origins of Neuroscience) complements the current vogue for brain books with a wide-ranging and detailed set of profiles reaching back to the distant past. Each chapter describes a figure or pair of figures whose ideas and treatments of the brain "dramatically changed the scientific or medical landscape." Finger points first to the Egyptian grand vizier Imhotep (c. 2600 B.C.), probable author of the ancient field medicine manual now called the "Edwin Smith Surgical Papyrus"; he moves swiftly to Hippocrates, who proposed the brain as the seat of consciousness. Finger's last chapter covers the neurobiologists Roger Sperry and Rita Levi-Montalcini, who both studied nerve growth in the 1940s and '50s; Sperry later studied patients who had lost their corpus callosum, the bridge connecting the brain's two hemispheres. Changing religious beliefs, animal dissections, advancing research technologies and pure chance, Finger demonstrates, have all played roles in the advance of our knowledge about minds and brains. Although the level of explanation and detail positions this study uncomfortably between academic and popular science writing; it will, however, please readers already interested in the history of science and curious about what generations of scientists past believed, guessed or found out about the brain. (Feb.)
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这本书带来的最大收获,或许是一种全新的感知世界的方式。在阅读过程中,我对自身的日常体验产生了强烈的共鸣和反思。比如,作者探讨了决策疲劳和注意力资源的有限性时,我立刻联想到了自己工作和生活中那些低效的时刻。这使得书本上的理论不再是遥远的抽象概念,而是直接作用于我个体经验的解析工具。我开始有意识地调整自己的生活习惯,试图去“优化”我的“生物硬件”。更令人称奇的是,作者在描述复杂情感如“怀旧”或“共情”时,所采用的语言既科学又富有诗意,他成功地捕捉到了人类体验的精髓,没有将情感简化为纯粹的化学反应。这种平衡感极佳,既保持了科学的客观性,又尊重了人类经验的主观性。最终,这本书让我对“心智”这个概念的理解,从一个模糊的哲学议题,转变成了一个可以被科学审视、被细致拆解的、充满魅力的复杂系统。
评分这本书的叙事方式真是太迷人了,作者似乎拥有一种魔力,能将那些晦涩难懂的神经科学概念,编织成一个个引人入胜的故事。我记得有一次,我读到关于某个特定脑区在记忆形成过程中所扮演的复杂角色的描述时,几乎能想象出神经元之间那电光火石般的交流场景。那种感觉就像是拿到了一个上帝视角的通行证,能够窥探到思维产生的源头,理解那些看似随机的想法和行为背后,其实有着精妙的生物学逻辑。作者的笔触细腻入微,即便是对我这样一个对科学并非科班出身的人来说,阅读起来也毫不费力,反而充满了探索的乐趣。他没有沉溺于复杂的术语,而是巧妙地通过类比和生动的例子,将大脑这个宇宙级的难题,分解成可以被理解的单元。读完后,我对“我是谁”这个问题有了全新的认识,不再仅仅停留在哲学层面,而是开始从更深层次的生理结构和化学反应中去寻找答案,这无疑是一种令人振奋的智力旅程。这本书成功地架起了科学与大众之间的桥梁,让那些原本高高在上的知识变得触手可及,充满了人性的温暖和对未知的敬畏。
评分阅读体验上,这本书的文字力量简直是无与伦比的,它有一种沉稳而富有节奏感的韵律。作者的语言风格成熟老练,用词精准,却又不失文学的美感。他似乎深谙如何运用排比和反问来引导读者的思绪,使那些严肃的科学论述也充满了画面感。我特别欣赏他对待科学史的态度,没有将前人的研究简单地视为过时的理论,而是将其置于一个不断发展的历史脉络中,清晰地展现了科学是如何一步步逼近真相的。这种对科学探索过程本身的尊重,让整本书的基调显得尤为真诚。我感受到的不是冰冷的知识灌输,而是一群伟大头脑在历史长河中共同攀登高峰的壮阔史诗。读罢全书,我不仅学到了很多关于大脑运作的硬核知识,更重要的是,我收获了一种对严谨求实、不断质疑的科学精神的深刻认同。这是一种潜移默化的影响,远超书本内容本身所能承载的重量。
评分我必须承认,这本书的结构组织得极为巧妙,它不像传统教科书那样刻板僵硬,反而更像是一部精心编排的交响乐。从开篇对大脑基本构造的宏观描绘,到逐步深入到微观层面的信号传递,每部分的过渡都如行云流水般自然流畅,丝毫没有突兀感。尤其让我印象深刻的是作者在讨论意识的起源和复杂情绪处理那几章的处理方式。他没有急于给出一个确定的结论,而是呈现了当前学术界主要的几种假说和相互之间的辩论,这种开放式的讨论态度,极大地激发了我的批判性思维。我发现自己常常读完一个小节后,会合上书本,在房间里踱步思考,试图在脑海中重构作者所描绘的那个复杂的网络图景。这不仅仅是一本知识的传递工具,更像是一面镜子,映照出人类认知局限的同时,也点燃了对突破这些局限的无限渴望。阅读过程中,我多次感到那种“原来如此!”的顿悟时刻,这种智力上的满足感,是很少有书籍能够给予的。
评分坦白说,这本书的深度和广度都超出了我原本的预期。我原以为它会侧重于介绍某一个特定的研究领域,但作者的视野显然更为宏大,他成功地将认知科学、神经生物学、心理学乃至部分哲学思考融汇一炉,构建了一个多维度的“大脑地图”。例如,书中对睡眠周期与记忆巩固之间关联的阐述,就结合了生理指标的观测数据和行为学的实验结果,分析得鞭辟入里。我甚至觉得,这本书更像是一本为未来的研究者准备的“入门宝典”,因为它不仅展示了已知的成果,更清晰地指出了当前科学面临的那些尚未攻克的难题。这种坦诚的“未完成感”,恰恰是它最吸引人的地方——它没有给人一种知识已穷尽的错觉,反而激励读者去思考“下一步是什么”。对于那些真正对人类认知边界感到好奇的人来说,这本书提供了一个坚实而又充满活力的起点,让人忍不住想要深入挖掘更多细节。
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