The happiness of pursuit : what neuroscience can teach us about the good life /

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Bibliographic Details
Author / Creator:Edelman, Shimon.
Imprint:New York : Basic Books, c2012.
Description:x, 237 p. ; 22 cm.
Language:English
Subject:
Format: Print Book
URL for this record:http://pi.lib.uchicago.edu/1001/cat/bib/8682615
Hidden Bibliographic Details
ISBN:9780465022243 (hardcover : alk. paper)
0465022243 (hardcover : alk. paper)
Notes:Includes bibliographical references and index.
Review by Choice Review

What? Yet another book on happiness? Yes, but this one is different, even distinct. Edelman (Cornell Univ.) provides a wry, gentle, sometimes frolicking overview of neuroscience by describing the amazing feats of humans' computational brains without flow charts, fMRIs, equations, or drawings of the synapse. He then links the computational brain and its by-products to big questions: Can increasing quantitative understanding of the brain improve the qualitative aspect of life? In effect, can psychologists ever hope to compute happiness? Edelman says yes, but one of the devils in the details is the search for self-knowledge. How is this book distinct from other recent efforts to explain what brings joy? The greatest empirical hits of contemporary happiness studies are not the focus of this by turns literary adventure (think Homer's Odyssey with a touch of sci-fi), philosophical treatise, and psychological account of what we know and hope to know. Edelman's seven quirky chapters explore why human happiness occurs by speculating how the brain creates the mind. Fans of Douglas Hofstadter's writings will enjoy this book. Summing Up: Recommended. All readers. D. S. Dunn Moravian College

Copyright American Library Association, used with permission.
Review by Kirkus Book Review

Computing the Mind: How the Mind Really Works, 2008, etc.) asks readers to discard the "familiar computer metaphor' that halfheartedly likens the brain to a computer," and accept his argument that "the mind is computational in the literal sense." Before dealing with the question of happiness, the author elaborates on his contention that human minds could evolve "to support foresight" because of the brain's ability to "compute by learning and using the statistics of the world in which we live." He explains this with examples such as the ability of a baseball pitcher's brain to specify the location of his body and control its action by directing his shoulder according to horizontal and vertical planes and rotation, while anticipating a ball's trajectory; or the more mundane ability of a shopper to estimate which is the fastest check-out lane. Our brains are continually deluged with data that must be evaluated for cognition to occur. Survival of the organism depends on its ability to foresee the future and act accordingly. Edelman writes that this is the basis for the pursuit of happiness in humans, and by extension all living beings. On a more sophisticated level, humans retain memories and develop foresight, which the author felicitously describes as "remembering the future." We build up expectations while savoring the past and imagining possible futures, with episodic memory acting as "the mind's personal space-time machine--a perfect vehicle for scouting and harvesting happiness." Edelman describes learning language as a similar process that depends on the brain's use of statistics as a basis for inferences about meaning, and concludes that we derive our most sustained happiness from our predisposition to "enjoy every day learning." An elegant tour de force that combines neuropsychology with liberal references to Shakespeare and Homer.]] Copyright Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.

Copyright (c) Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.
Review by Choice Review


Review by Kirkus Book Review