The Ten Most Beautiful Experiments十个最杰出的实验

The Ten Most Beautiful Experiments十个最杰出的实验 pdf epub mobi txt 电子书 下载 2026

出版者:7-09999
作者:RICHARD RESTAK
出品人:
页数:254
译者:
出版时间:2006-9
价格:191.00元
装帧:HRD
isbn号码:9781400098088
丛书系列:
图书标签:
  • 科学史
  • 实验物理
  • 科学普及
  • 经典实验
  • 科学哲学
  • 物理学
  • 化学
  • 生物学
  • 科学方法
  • 科普读物
想要找书就要到 小哈图书下载中心
立刻按 ctrl+D收藏本页
你会得到大惊喜!!

具体描述

No brain is an island—so argues neurologist and writer Restak (The New Brain) in his latest book, which aims to synthesize emerging research on what he calls "social neuroscience," which examines the relationship between the social lives of human beings and the physical structure of our brains. Much of this research indicates that we're hard-wired to relate to other people, from the new mother who instinctively recognizes the cry of her infant to the twinge of empathy we feel when we see a lost stranger. Restak proposes that we can use this knowledge to understand our own behavior (a jilted lover, for example, feels an attachment and craving for his departed ex because the memory of her quite literally causes brain activity in the regions that control both pleasure and addiction) and potentially even control it (Buddhist monks seem to be able to rewire and enhance their brain activity through meditation). In the end, it's a bit unclear whether Restak wants to be a dispassionate observer of the scientific landscape or a more activist polemicist—the book closes with the claim that "by learning as much as we can about [social neuroscience], we will be in a position to resist manipulation by ads, pop culture, political spin, movies and television... social neuroscience can provide us a path towards... personal and collective liberation." Either way, this book offers a fascinating glimpse into how our brains are built. (Sept. 26) Copyright © Reed Business Information, a division of Reed Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.

From The Washington Post's Book World/washingtonpost.com

Reviewed by Sam Kean No one wants to hear that subliminal messages can make us ruder, more loving or plain prejudiced. Or that the brain sends signals to start moving muscles well before we "decide" to move them. Reducing emotion and memory to maps of synapses undermines our sense of self-control and makes free will seem illusory.

But if traditional neuroscience is disturbing, the really creepy stuff is on the horizon, reports neuroscientist Richard Restak in The Naked Brain. Marketers and politicians would like to literally get into our minds, using the results of brain scans and psychology experiments to alter perceptions of reality. They might use "backward framing" to mold people's memories. (In one experiment, 16 percent of adults remembered seeing Bugs Bunny at Disneyland, where, as a Warner Bros. Looney Tunes character, Bugs could never be.) Or a political party might take advantage of the fact that people trust candidates who resemble themselves. "It would not be all that complicated," Restak writes, "to send you a morphed picture of a political candidate incorporating elements from your own face drawn from, say, your driver's license photo." Each house, each voter, gets a slightly different contender.

Yet despite the hype on the book's dust jacket, Restak is more interested in summarizing science than in speculating how people might be manipulated by it. He rings alarms, but only occasionally; instead, he spends chapter after chapter recapping experiments and supplying newspaper-like quotes from experts. Taken individually, the experiments are fascinating, and Restak, who has written self-help books, encourages readers to try the simpler ones at home. But the constant jumping from one to the next makes The Naked Brain seem less written than pasted together. While the writing is clear, and Restak is sympathetic to how complicated the material can   be for lay readers, there's too much information stacked too closely.

It's a shame because the philosophical discussions lurking in these pages never get the space they need. Take the scant eight pages he devotes to racial stereotyping. Restak suggests that readers visit a Web site where they are asked to sort images that pop onto the screen. First, they sort pictures of white and black people -- half to the left, half to the right. Next round, they do the same for positive and negative words such as "awful," "fantastic" or "lovely." Third, there's a combination round: Good words and pictures of black people are sorted to one side, white people and bad words to the other. Finally, uncomfortably, those pairings are reversed. Many people taking the quiz can sort more quickly and accurately when black and bad are coupled.

So they're bigots, right? Restak differs:

"According to this assumption, automatic responses reveal the 'real' you . . . with the follow-up response [i.e., battling the prejudice] entailing nothing more than an attempt to make nice. But when you think about it, why should those automatic responses over which we have no control be granted precedence over more thoughtful reactions, which reflect our consciously espoused beliefs and values?"

He cites the case of a black man married to a white woman who, in a moment of passion, called her husband a racial slur. The woman's frontal lobe -- which processes reason -- was overwhelmed with anger from a reptilian part of her brain. Restak would argue that it's the interplay of the automatic and thoughtful portions of her mind that determine her "true" personality, with weight given to the latter. The husband didn't see it that way. The marriage disintegrated.

But should it have? For one slip that she "deeply regretted"? Restak devotes just one paragraph to this conundrum. Other tantalizing debates that neuroscience could frame and focus -- Should introverts be allowed (or encouraged) to convert into extroverts by swallowing pills? Should employers screen applicants with MRIs? -- are relegated to the afterword.

But Restak's preference for proven science over speculation reveals another theme of The Naked Brain: Neuroscience has limits. The mind is too intricate for scientists to sort out from a brain scan who will drink Coke or Pepsi, much less to address deeper concerns. "The answers provided by neuroscience aren't necessarily definitive," he writes. "Indeed, they often aren't as valid as information gathered from traditional sources (asking questions, making behavioral observations, etc.)" Keeping limits in mind will be hard, however: Human brains are wired to want more than they have.

聚焦前沿科技与社会变迁的时代观察 书名:解码数字未来:技术浪潮下的社会重塑与个体选择 内容简介: 本书并非一本回顾经典科学发现的合集,而是深入剖析当前正在发生的、由技术驱动的社会深刻变革。我们正站在一个由数据、算法和连接性定义的新时代的门槛上,目睹着人类社会结构、经济模式乃至个体认知正在经历前所未有的重塑。本书旨在提供一个多维度的、批判性的视角,去审视这场宏大转型背后的复杂动力与潜在后果。 第一部分:数据洪流与权力边界的消融 在数字时代,数据不再仅仅是信息的载体,它已经成为一种新型的、无形的权力资源。本书首先探讨了“大数据”现象如何渗透到社会治理、市场运作和个人生活的每一个角落。我们研究了大规模数据收集、分析与预测模型,如何重构了传统的信息不对称性。例如,算法推荐系统如何从根本上改变了我们获取知识和形成观点的方式,创造出“信息茧房”的现实;以及政府与科技巨头如何利用这些数据,在提高效率的同时,也对公民隐私和自由构成了潜在的挑战。 我们不会仅仅停留在技术描述层面,而是深入探究这种权力转移对社会公平性的影响。自动化决策系统(Automated Decision Systems, ADS)在信贷审批、司法判决甚至招聘过程中的应用,揭示了隐藏在代码深处的偏见问题。本书通过一系列深入的案例分析,阐释了如何识别和量化算法的歧视性后果,并探讨了建立问责制和透明度机制的必要性。我们审视了各国在数据主权和个人数据权利方面的立法尝试,力求描绘出全球范围内关于数据治理的复杂博弈图景。 第二部分:工作形态的颠覆与未来经济的图景 自动化和人工智能(AI)的快速发展,正在以前所未有的速度淘汰旧有的工作范式,同时催生出全新的职业领域。本书的第二部分聚焦于劳动力市场的剧烈震荡。我们详细分析了生成式AI在创意产业、软件开发和知识工作领域引发的冲击波,这远超过去工业革命中体力劳动的替代效应。 我们探讨了“零工经济”在全球范围内的扩张,分析了平台资本主义如何利用技术实现对劳动力的弹性管理,以及这种模式对劳动者的社会保障、职业尊严带来的长期影响。同时,本书也关注那些在技术变革中被遗忘的群体——那些在传统制造业和服务业中面临技能过时的工人。如何通过大规模的、有针对性的再培训计划,实现“包容性技术进步”,是本部分着重探讨的核心议题。我们考察了“全民基本收入”(UBI)等激进的社会政策设想,以及它们在应对大规模技术性失业风险时的可行性与挑战。 第三部分:虚拟渗透与真实世界的边界重构 随着元宇宙概念的兴起和沉浸式技术的成熟,虚拟空间对人类经验的参与度正在急剧增加。本书第三部分探讨了数字现实与物理现实之间的界限如何变得模糊不清。 我们分析了虚拟身份(Avatars)在社交、商业和政治活动中的作用日益重要。虚拟经济(如NFTs和代币化资产)的兴起,正在挑战我们对所有权、稀缺性和价值的传统理解。更深层次上,本书关注的是“临场感”(Presence)的心理学变化:当人们越来越习惯于在高度优化和可控的虚拟环境中互动时,对真实、混乱、不可预测的物理世界的需求和忍耐度是否会发生根本性的改变?我们还考察了深度伪造(Deepfake)技术在信息战、身份盗窃和公众信任危机中的应用,警示了“眼见为实”这一认知基石正面临的瓦解风险。 第四部分:伦理困境与人类能动的性回归 面对技术的飞速发展,本书的最后一部分将焦点拉回到人类的能动性和伦理责任上来。我们不再将技术视为中立的工具,而是视为一种塑造我们价值观和行为的强大力量。 本书探讨了AI伦理学的核心矛盾:如何设计出既高效又符合人类共同价值观的智能系统?这包括对AI决策透明度的要求、机器偏见的纠正,以及“强人工智能”一旦实现,人类在价值排序上的终极定位问题。我们审视了科学共同体、政策制定者和公众之间在风险认知上的巨大鸿沟,强调了跨学科对话和公民参与在引导技术向善发展中的关键作用。最终,本书呼吁读者从被动的技术接受者转变为积极的塑造者,审慎地、有意识地选择我们希望通过技术构建的未来形态。 本书的写作风格力求严谨、务实,避免晦涩的学术术语,但同时保持对复杂问题的深刻洞察力。它面向所有对当代社会变迁感到好奇、寻求理解技术如何影响我们日常生活的读者——无论是政策制定者、行业观察者,还是对未来充满思考的普通大众。它提供的是一套分析工具,而非简单的答案,旨在激发一场关于我们共同数字未来的严肃讨论。

作者简介

Richard Restak,M.D.,is a neurologist,neuropsychiatrist,and clinical professor of neurology at George Washington University's Medical Center.He is the bestselling author of fifteen acclaimed books about the brain,including Mozart's Brain and the Fighter pilot and poe's Heart and the Mountain Climber.He has also written the companion book to several PBS specials.Visit Dr.Restak at www.RichardRestak.com.

目录信息

读后感

评分

评分

评分

评分

评分

用户评价

评分

评分

评分

评分

评分

本站所有内容均为互联网搜索引擎提供的公开搜索信息,本站不存储任何数据与内容,任何内容与数据均与本站无关,如有需要请联系相关搜索引擎包括但不限于百度google,bing,sogou

© 2026 qciss.net All Rights Reserved. 小哈图书下载中心 版权所有