The Astonishing Hypothesis: The Scientific Search for the Soul
The Surprising Hypothesis: The Scientific Search for the Soul Books
Product Description
The Nobel Prize-winning physicist who exposed the molecular structure of DNA examines what makes humans sentient beings, offering an analysis and description of how the brain sees.
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The evidence that his arguments are littered with fallacious arguments is overwhelming, just in the first few pages – which is admittedly all I read. If you are an atheist, Darwinian, naturalist, guess what!? We don’t have any souls! Presume that! The only thing surprising is that this was published, but I forget, he won a Nobel prize, so he may possibly write “poop” on a piece of toilet paper and get it published. At least that would be less harmful to the broadcast’s attitude of the interaction of science and God.
Rating: 1 / 5
Tossed in vertigo salads, even as qualia and brain teasers, teasing, mix soft cables with resplendent fugitive eggnog capers, the mind-body problem remains unsolved, but clearly lost the hari-kari socialism of recent neurophysiological drama. What to make of this? Writing scripts as if writing scripture, Crick explores Garcia’s noodling pathways across synaptic-bound echoplex redundancies, hoping to scrape something from the bottom of the barrel of the Philosophy of Mind. But as Nagel (Jim, not Thomas) once said: “A T4 will take away the nociceptor chatter and, even as welcomed, inspire soaring.” Not terrible. And this book is highly not compulsory to those interested in now neurobiological reductionism and dental visits on the run: a must buy!
Rating: 4 / 5
This book is vital for people who wants to know more about current progresses in neuroscience. I especially like chapter 12 where Crick provides a lot of examples on how patients with brain injuries would behave differently from normal. I reckon these evidences make his “hypothesis” much more convincing. But, his treatment on nonlinear dynamics, neural network and learning means is too brief and insufficient. Perhaps he does not want his book becomes too technical, but I reckon these topics are vital for readers to know the richness of in rank patterns in human brains.
Rating: 4 / 5
For those who don’t use their mind to learn their souls, don’t read it. But those who do
Rating: 5 / 5
If you have high-school level biology background. This book will be a fantastic book to know about the way people are trying to know the brain.
Rating: 5 / 5