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Most Helpful Customer Reviews
13 of 13 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
Why the brain is nothing like a computer by a Nobel laureate,
By A Customer
This review is from: Neural Darwinism: The Theory Of Neuronal Group Selection (Hardcover)
The distinguished Nobel Laureate proposes a global brain theory that demonstrates that the brain does not work like a computer but rather operates under principles of selection that assure individuality, autonomy, imagination, etc. Since this book was published in 1986, the essentials of its proposals have been confirmed and absorbed at almost all levels of neurobiological and psychological inquiry. More accessible are two subsequent books, "The Remembered Present" and "Bright Air, Brilliant Fire"
28 of 32 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars
Not an easy read, but worth the effort,
By John Schmidt schmidt@wsuhub.uc.twsu.edu (Wichita, Kansas) - See all my reviews
This review is from: Neural Darwinism: The Theory Of Neuronal Group Selection (Hardcover)
Mike Vanier's experience with Edelman's prose gave the typical bioassay result: its hard to read Edelman's books. I often try to imagine the state of mind of people in 1875 who tried to wade through Darwin's "Origin of Species" or someone who came across the work of Gregor Mendel in the 1890's. Unfortunately for the Science of Mind, Mike is just the kind of person Edelman might have hoped to be able to reach. Well, Mike, did you read right through the Bible (or substitute "Your First Calculus Textbook" for "Bible") the first time you picked it up? There really is a forest in "Neural Darwinism" once you get past the trees.The claim "his ideas are neither new, nor original, nor correct" is one of the standard put-downs of the academic world. Anyone who works on non-trivial scientific issues and is intelectually honest will admit that his work in based on ideas taken from others and that his work is incomplete and contains errors. Edelman makes these admissions. Edelman's ideas about how brains can learn and function to produce what we experience as minds are positive contributions to science and worth getting to know.
12 of 16 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
Grounding Psychology in Neuroscience,
By
This review is from: Neural Darwinism: The Theory Of Neuronal Group Selection (Hardcover)
Nobelist Gerald Edelman "theory of neuronal group selection" can be taken to provide a neurological understanding for psychoanalytic theory and experience. Because of the dense overlapping of dendrites and axons in gray matter, a given area of cortex is capable of a varying array of responses to a given input. Of the many possible responses, one inevitably leads to the strongest, most adaptive, or rewarding output. Suppose that this "fittest" response were "selected" for synaptic changes enhancing the likelihood of future firing of just We can thus anticipate a direct neurophysiologic account for how Reentrant signalling over anatomically complete loops probably allows A mapping of many such selected groups could thus provide the neurophysiologic correlate to and substrate for unconscious object representations, which could potentially, if later reactivated, be expressed as affect-full object-related fantasies, impulses, and behaviors, potentially conscious, yet, perhaps exerting a neurologic influence that could remain unconscious. A potentially responsive neural network representing past experience This perhaps provides some neurophysiologic correlate to Charles Spezzano's recent observation that, "the immediate idiosyncratic way, maybe one we trace historically..." How does the daily free-associative process work? The superolateral prefrontal cortex, "connected to a multitude of (remote) sensory association areas and limbic and paralimbic cortex," apparently may address and retrieve representations of memories from many fields distributed in the brain. It has been shown in pet scan studies consistently to be activated in tasks which are not run by external stimuli, ie, it is activated in tasks (eg, "visualize walking down your street and turning left at the corner") requiring organization by the brain itself of itself. (ROland, 1993) "We do not simply store images or bits but become more richly endowed with the capacity to categorize in connected ways." (Rosenfeld, 1986) Increasing the number of neural arrangements by which one experience is compared to, contrasted with, and categorized according to prior experience or fantasy allows greater richness and flexibility in functioning, one result of a successful psychoanalysis. Samuel T. Goldberg, M.D.
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