Consciousness lost and found : a neuropsychological exploration

Bibliographic Information

Consciousness lost and found : a neuropsychological exploration

Lawrence Weiskrantz

Oxford University Press, 1997

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Note

Includes bibliographical references (p. [265]-283) and indexes

Description and Table of Contents

Description

The phenomenon of "consciousness" is intrinsically related to one's awareness of one's self, of time, and of the physical world. What, then, can be learned about consciousness from people who have suffered brain damage such as amnesia which affects their awareness? This is the question explored by Lawrence Weiskrantz, a neuropsychologist who has worked with such patients over 30 years. It has been discovered that many of these patients retain intact capacities of which they are unaware, in what is known as "covert" processing. Weiskrantz maps his own research onto a philosophical argument which, combined with the latest brain imaging studies, points the way to specific brain structures which may be involved in conscious awareness. The book also analyses new approaches to the question of animal consciousness and its evolutionary value.

Table of Contents

  • 1. Introduction
  • 2. The unseen and the unknown
  • 3. Deficits, degradation, and dissociations
  • 4. The "What?" of consciousness
  • 5. Animal consciousness - the problem of "whether?"
  • 6. The memory commentary is NOW
  • 7. Attributes and possible pathways of residual visual capacity
  • 8. The evolutionary "why"?
  • 9. The question of "how?"
  • 10. And so..
  • Appendix - Terminology

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