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E-grāmata: Consciousness: A User’s Guide

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  • Formāts: 416 pages
  • Izdošanas datums: 01-Oct-2008
  • Izdevniecība: Yale University Press
  • Valoda: eng
  • ISBN-13: 9780300135312
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  • Formāts: 416 pages
  • Izdošanas datums: 01-Oct-2008
  • Izdevniecība: Yale University Press
  • Valoda: eng
  • ISBN-13: 9780300135312

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What is the nature of consciousness? What is the connection between what happens in our brains and what passes through our minds? This volume provides an introduction to consciousness that seeks to do justice both to the science and to the philosophy, the mechanics of mind and the experience of awareness. The text opens with a general discussion of the brain and of consciousness itself. Then, exploring the areas of brain science most likely to illuminate the basis of awareness, Zeman focuses on the science of sleep and waking and on the science of vision. He describes healthy states and disorders - epilepsy, narcolepsy, blindsight and hallucinations after a stroke - that provide insights into the capacity for consciousness and into its contents. He also tracks the evolution of the brain, the human species and human culture, and surveys the main current scientific theories of awareness, pioneering attempts to explain how the brain gives rise to experience. Zeman concludes by examining philosophical arguments about the nature of consciousness. A practising neurologist, he animates his text with examples from the behavioural and neurological disorders of his patients and from the expanding mental worlds of young children, including his own.
A note to the reader x
Preface xi
Introduction 1(10)
Part I: Introducing consciousness
11(64)
As sweet by any other name? Consciousness, self-consciousness and conscience
13(24)
Introduction
13(1)
The history of `conscience' -- and her cousins
14(2)
`What do you mean by . . .?'
16(16)
Consciousness
16(5)
Self-consciousness
21(9)
Conscience
30(1)
A note on awareness
31(1)
Consciousness in other tongues
32(3)
Consciousness in prospect
35(2)
`The nerves in the brain, oh damn'em': a sketch of the human nervous system
37(38)
Introduction
37(1)
The simple nervous system
38(9)
Cells
38(4)
Neurons
42(2)
Neuronal neighbours
44(1)
Interconnections
45(2)
Simplicity embodied
47(1)
The complex nervous system
47(26)
Neurons -- and their neighbours
48(19)
Interconnections redrawn
67(6)
Conclusion: the nerves in the brain
73(2)
Part II: The capacity for consciousness
75(78)
The springs of awareness: the structural basis of consciousness (i)
77(34)
Introduction
77(1)
The electricity of the brain
78(17)
On the electroencephalogram of man
78(6)
The EEG today
84(3)
The patterning of conscious states
87(4)
Cognitive potentials
91(4)
Controlling consciousness
95(10)
Epidemic stupor
95(2)
A wonderful net
97(2)
The chemistry of consciousness
99(3)
The place where consciousness dwells
102(3)
Why do we sleep?
105(4)
Conclusion: the conditions for awareness
109(2)
The brothers of death: pathologies of consciousness
111(42)
Introduction
111(1)
Faints, fits and funny turns
112(12)
Faints
112(5)
Fits
117(6)
Funny turns
123(1)
Opium, alcohol and other anaesthetics
124(8)
Opium
124(2)
Alcohol and other anaesthetics
126(4)
Awareness under anaesthesia
130(2)
Varieties of coma
132(3)
Hysteria and trance
135(3)
Did you have a good night?
138(6)
Insomnia
138(2)
Hypersomnia
140(2)
Parasomnia
142(2)
The measurement of awareness
144(5)
Conclusion: anatomising consciousness
149(4)
Part III: The contents of consciousness
153(88)
From darkness into light: the structural basis of consciousness (ii)
155(42)
Introduction
155(1)
Light and the evolution of vision
156(7)
Light
156(1)
Light and life
157(1)
Life and vision
158(5)
The retina: sensitive pigment
163(5)
Capturing quanta
163(3)
Communicating contrast
166(2)
Analysis and integration: the cortical visual areas
168(7)
En route to the visual cortex
168(1)
Area 17
169(3)
Multiple maps
172(3)
Seeing things
175(11)
The wood from the trees
175(3)
Binding
178(1)
Constancy
179(2)
Recognition
181(2)
Imagination
183(1)
The roving eye
184(2)
Paying attention: did you see the gorilla?
186(4)
The beholder's share
190(2)
Invisible destinations
192(4)
Conclusion: image and action
196(1)
`I cannot see you Charley, I am blind': clear-sighted blindness and blindsight
197(44)
Introduction
197(2)
The famished eye
199(9)
Molyneux's question
199(2)
The ripening of vision
201(5)
Novel sensations
206(2)
Mindblindness: the agnosias
208(13)
Apperceptive agnosia
209(4)
Associative agnosia
213(8)
Neglect
221(3)
Blindsight and residual vision
224(6)
The absence of all sensation
224(4)
The sound of distant gunfire
228(1)
Why is blindsight blind?
229(1)
Hallucination: 'There's a seagull on your shoulder'
230(3)
Exquisite correlations
233(3)
Conjuring the rainbow
236(2)
Conclusion: vision and consciousness
238(3)
Part IV: The origins of consciousness
241(36)
The history of everything
243(34)
Introduction
243(1)
First things
244(2)
The birth of life
246(3)
Begetting the brain
249(9)
Continuity
250(4)
Change
254(4)
The tree of man
258(4)
From biology to history
262(4)
The coming of consciousness
266(7)
The uses of awareness
266(4)
The souls of animals
270(3)
A Darwinian conclusion: evolving awareness
273(4)
Part V: Consciousness considered
277(66)
Scientific theories of consciousness
279(24)
Introduction
279(1)
The story so far: sight, memory and action
280(4)
A methodological wrinkle: the necessity for report
284(3)
The 'where' and 'how' of conscious vision
287(9)
Where?
288(5)
How?
293(3)
What consciousness does: the ghost in the virtual machine
296(2)
Getting to know you better: social theories of consciousness
298(2)
Conclusion
300(3)
The nature of consciousness
303(40)
Introduction
303(1)
Experience and the brain
303(22)
Two sketches on a sunny day
303(2)
A war of intuitions
305(2)
What is it like to be ...
307(5)
`-isms' enough for all
312(11)
Night at the end of the tunnel?
323(2)
Other minds
325(11)
Human minds
325(2)
Animal minds
327(1)
Manufactured minds
328(6)
Alien minds: a midsummer night's dream
334(2)
Human freedom
336(5)
The prospect of prediction
336(1)
Solving for three bodies
337(1)
Che sara sara? (what will be, will be?)
338(1)
Free fall
338(3)
Conclusion: the matter of the mind
341(2)
Epilogue 343(5)
Glossary 348(16)
Notes 364(24)
Suggestions for further reading 388(2)
List of figures and tables 390(6)
Index 396
Adam Zeman is Professor of cognitive and behavioural neurology, Peninsula Medical School, Exeter