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The Altruistic Brain: How We Are Naturally Good 1st Edition
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Unlike any other study in its field, The Altruistic Brain synthesizes all the most important research into how and why - at a purely physical level - humans empathize with one another and respond altruistically. It demonstrates that human beings are "wired" to behave altruistically in the first instance, such that unprompted, spontaneous kindness is our default behavior; such behavior comes naturally, irrespective of religious or cultural determinants. Based on his own research and that of some of the world's most eminent scientists, Dr. Pfaff puts together well-established brain mechanisms into a theory that is at once novel but also easily demonstrable. He further explains how, using psycho-social approaches that are now well understood, we can clear away obstacles to the brain's natural, altruistic inclinations. This is the first book not only to explain why we are naturally good, but to suggest means of making us behave as well as we can.
The Altruistic Brain is required reading for anyone who wants to understand the behavioral revolution in science and the promise that it holds for reorienting society towards greater cooperation.
- ISBN-100199377464
- ISBN-13978-0199377466
- Edition1st
- PublisherOxford University Press
- Publication dateJanuary 5, 2015
- LanguageEnglish
- Dimensions8.3 x 5.7 x 1.2 inches
- Print length306 pages
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Editorial Reviews
Review
Recommended as a summer read by the Ames Tribune."The book is most useful as a scientific refutation of the idea that human beings are innately selfish or innately cruel. Pfaff musters a great deal of evidence to show that the Christian notion of original sin -- and the capitalist notion of human self-interest as a sole motivating force -- are both unsustainable, at least in their more simplistic forms." --Pacific Standard"In combination with the accessibility to the general reader, Pfaff has done a magnificent job in compiling, reinterpreting, and presenting the neuroscientific evidence available as of today. ... Due to the breadth and range of consequences that the idea of humans having a predisposition for altruistic behavior implicates, the book should be obligatory reading not just for (cognitive) scientists and (moral) philosophers interested in the subject matter but everyone who is involved in decision-making processes in regard to social and legal policy." --Frontiers in Psychology"In sections worth reading twice, Pfaff posits the neural and hormonal mechanisms that promote prosocial behavior while in another, he takes a hard look at ways in which the altruistic brain deals with individuals' bad behavior. In the process he sets aside the traditional Christian idea of original sin as well as the capitalist notion that greed is good." --Spirituality and Practice"On solid scientific ground, [Pfaff] builds a five-step theory of how altruism occurs..." --New Scientist"This is the first book not only to explain why we are naturally good, but to suggest means of making us behave as well as we can. The Altruistic Brain is required reading for anyone who wants to understand the behavioral revolution in science and the promise that it holds for reorienting society towards greater cooperation." --BookRiotFeatured in the Financial Times."[A]n impressive compendium of research from evolutionary biology, neuroscience, developmental and social psychology, the biochemistry of hormones, and comparative religion as the basis for the argument that altruism is innate in humans and the Golden Rule is an ethical universal principle. Intended for readers without a science background, The Altruistic Brain is written in a style similar to Malcolm Gladwell's books (e.g., David and Goliath, 2013). Pfaff presents a wealth of interesting information that would appeal to a wide readership including undergraduate and graduate students." --PsycCRITIQUES"Accessible to a lay audience, this is the only title to treat this topic. It will interest students in neuroscience and psychology in addition to educators and policy makers. Highly recommended." --CHOICE"A splendid read and a real tour de force of brain science, this book proves that altruistic behaviour has the power to shape our brains and, consequently, our destiny -- a revolutionary insight that continues to provide debate among those who care about the future of man's role in the human society. Anyone seeking to learn about the amazing altruistic mechanisms of the human brain should read this book, which excels at spreading enthusiasm for altruistic behaviour by forging scintillating concepts out of difficult ideas." --The Tribune IndiaFeatured in -Perspectives on Science and Christian Faith
Book Description
About the Author
The Rockefeller University
New York, New York
Product details
- Publisher : Oxford University Press; 1st edition (January 5, 2015)
- Language : English
- Hardcover : 306 pages
- ISBN-10 : 0199377464
- ISBN-13 : 978-0199377466
- Item Weight : 1.3 pounds
- Dimensions : 8.3 x 5.7 x 1.2 inches
- Best Sellers Rank: #1,916,070 in Books (See Top 100 in Books)
- #352 in Neuroscience (Books)
- #76,618 in Unknown
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unable to express all our goodness to our relatives and equals. Thus, it extends our goodness to our society so
involved on selfishness and individualisms.. . Hurrahs to Don!
While I am in complete agreement with he authors neurological explanation for how empathy (what he calls altruism) works in terms of the relevant areas involved in the parallel processing of an empathic act, I was also very annoyed at the authors apparent ignorance of how important and relevant DEVELOPMENTAL history i.e. social context, is to whether or not the innate 'empathetic capacity of the brain' becomes expressed or not. Like epigenetic forces which regulate gene activity, the presence or absence of a loving other determines whether or not the brain is able to express its basic capacity for altruistic behavior.
In this sense, I felt the authors breadth of knowledge in psychology and psychoanalytic theory (particularly object relations, interpersonal and relational theory) to lead to a somewhat repetitive and boring elucidation of what our 'kind acts' amount to. It was the same thing; discharge towards actions; the meaning of the action; the completed action. But in all he writes he doesn't bother to consider the relational history of the actor; and how some things, by virtue of his own history as an individual, enable him to act with little or great alacrity.
In describing those who act virtuously, the author also spends little time talking about the vast majority of us who don't act. Why don't they act? What is preventing them from enacting what the author considers to be a fundamental condition of the brain? Obviously, the only answer to such a question would be the persons relational history. Some people are better able to express their empathy because some people experience less of a 'restraint' when the moment to act arises. What is this restraint? It's our intrapsychic dynamics, formed, as all intrapsychic processes are, by the individuals interpersonal history.
So, just as the brain represents the 'self' in a situation where the possibility for an altruistic act arises, the brain also retains a history of it's past behaviors and it's propensity towards certain actions, with particular sensitivity to context. Suffice to say that a person raised by compassionate and affectively attuned parents will more readily experience altruism and empathic attunement with others than someone with a history of abuse, a developmental recourse towards narcissism, or the disability of anxiety and shame.
In short, while I do think this book provides an interesting perspective of how to think about human altruism in light of how they're processed in the brain; I think it is still incomplete insofar as personal life history regulates how these brain responses do or do not become expressed in real-life situations.

