Bibliographic Information

Behind the eye

Donald MacCrimmon MacKay ; edited by Valerie MacKay

(Gifford lectures, 1986)

B. Blackwell, c1991

Available at  / 17 libraries

Search this Book/Journal

Note

"The Gifford Lectures delivered in the University of Glasgow, 27 October-12 November 1986 under the title, Under our own microscope : what brain science has to say about human nature."

Bibliographical references: p. [275]-283

Includes index

Description and Table of Contents

Description

Few subjects in modern science have generated more controversy or inspired more research than the study of the brain. For forty years Donald Mackay was at the forefront of this debate, recognized not only as an experimenter on the visual system, but also for the clarity of his thinking about the theoretical framework and presuppositions behind the brain science. This book is based on the author's 1986 Gifford lectures and gives an accessible overview of the brain and its workings. It also does much more than this as each technical discussion becomes a jumping-off point for reflections in the surrounding areas, ranging from machine intelligence to linguistics, from theories of perception to the question of life after death. Though this book is written in a style suited to the non-specialist, professionals will recognize that much of what is here constitutes fresh contributions to current debates in a variety of areas.

Table of Contents

  • Under our own microscope
  • within the living brain
  • what are brains for?
  • perception
  • seeing is not believing
  • reading the mind
  • the divided brain
  • brains and machines
  • my fault or my brain's?
  • where do ideas come from?
  • knowing more than we can tell
  • and in the end?

by "Nielsen BookData"

Related Books: 1-1 of 1

Details

Page Top