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The Believing Brain: From Ghosts and Gods to Politics and Conspiracies---How We Construct Beliefs and Reinforce Them as Truths Paperback – Illustrated, August 7, 2012

4.4 4.4 out of 5 stars 807 ratings

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The Believing Brain is bestselling author Michael Shermer's comprehensive and provocative theory on how beliefs are born, formed, reinforced, challenged, changed, and extinguished

Synthesizing thirty years of research, psychologist and science historian Michael Shermer upends the traditional thinking about how humans form beliefs about the world. Simply put, beliefs come first and explanations for beliefs follow. The brain, Shermer argues, is a belief engine. Using sensory data that flow in through the senses, the brain naturally begins to look for and find patterns, and then infuses those patterns with meaning, forming beliefs. Once beliefs are formed the brain begins to look for and find confirmatory evidence in support of those beliefs, accelerating the process of reinforcing them, and round and round the process goes in a positive-feedback loop.

In
The Believing Brain, Shermer provides countless real-world examples of how this process operates, from politics, economics, and religion to conspiracy theories, the supernatural, and the paranormal. And ultimately, he demonstrates why science is the best tool ever devised to determine whether or not our beliefs match reality.

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Editorial Reviews

Review

“Michael Shermer has long been one of our most committed champions of scientific thinking in the face of popular delusion. In The Believing Brain, he has written a wonderfully lucid, accessible, and wide-ranging account of the boundary between justified and unjustified belief. We have all fallen more deeply in his debt.” ―Sam Harris, author of the New York Times bestsellers The Moral Landscape, Letter to a Christian Nation, and The End of Faith.

“The physicist Richard Feynman once said that the easiest person to fool is yourself, and as a result he argued that as a scientist one has to be especially careful to try and find out not only what is right about one's theories, but what might also be wrong with them. If we all followed this maxim of skepticism in everyday life, the world would probably be a better place. But we don't. In this book Michael Shermer lucidly describes why and how we are hard wired to 'want to believe'. With a narrative that gently flows from the personal to the profound, Shermer shares what he has learned after spending a lifetime pondering the relationship between beliefs and reality, and how to be prepared to tell the difference between the two.” ―
Lawrence M. Krauss, Foundation Professor and Director of the Origins Project at Arizona State University and author of The Physics of Star Trek, Quantum Man and A Universe from Nothing

“Michael Shermer has long been one of the world's deepest thinkers when it comes to explaining where our beliefs come from, and he brings it all together in this important, engaging, and ambitious book. Shermer knows all the science, he tells great stories, he is funny, and he is
fearless, delving into hot-button topics like 9-11 Truthers, life after death, capitalism, Barack Obama, Sarah Palin, and the existence of God. This is an entertaining and thoughtful exploration of the beliefs that shape our lives.” ―Paul Bloom, author of How Pleasure Works

The Believing Brain is a tour de force integrating neuroscience and the social sciences to explain how irrational beliefs are formed and reinforced, while leaving us confident our ideas are valid. This is a must read for everyone who wonders why religious and political beliefs are so rigid and polarized--or why the other side is always wrong, but somehow doesn't see it.” ―Dr. Leonard Mlodinow, physicist and author of The Drunkard's Walk and The Grand Design (with Stephen Hawking)

“We might think that we learn how the world works, because we take the time to observe and understand it. Shermer says that's just not so. We just believe things, and then make our world fit our perceptions. Believe me; you don't have to take my word for it. Just try clearing some space in your own
Believing Brain.” ―Bill Nye, the Science Guy ©, Executive Director of The Planetary Society

The Believing Brain is a fascinating account of the origins of all manner of beliefs, replete with cutting edge evidence from the best scientific research, packed with nuggets of truths and then for good measure, studded with real world examples to deliver to the reader, a very personable, engaging and ultimately, convincing set of explanations for why we believe.” ―Professor Bruce Hood, Chair of Developmental Psychology, Bristol University and author of Supersense: Why We Believe in the Unbelievable

About the Author

MICHAEL SHERMER is the author of Why People Believe Weird Things, The Science of Good and Evil, and eight other books on the evolution of human beliefs and behavior. He is the founding publisher of Skeptic magazine, the editor of Skeptic.com, a monthly columnist for Scientific American, and an adjunct professor at Claremont Graduate University. He lives in Southern California.

Product details

  • Publisher ‏ : ‎ St. Martin's Griffin (August 7, 2012)
  • Language ‏ : ‎ English
  • Paperback ‏ : ‎ 385 pages
  • ISBN-10 ‏ : ‎ 1250008808
  • ISBN-13 ‏ : ‎ 978-1250008800
  • Item Weight ‏ : ‎ 12 ounces
  • Dimensions ‏ : ‎ 5.55 x 1.05 x 8.25 inches
  • Customer Reviews:
    4.4 4.4 out of 5 stars 807 ratings

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Michael Shermer
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Dr. Michael Shermer is the Founding Publisher of Skeptic magazine, the host of the Science Salon Podcast, and a Presidential Fellow at Chapman University where he teaches Skepticism 101. For 18 years he was a monthly columnist for Scientific American. He is the author of New York Times bestsellers Why People Believe Weird Things and The Believing Brain, Why Darwin Matters, The Science of Good and Evil, The Moral Arc, and Heavens on Earth. His new book is Giving the Devil His Due: Reflections of a Scientific Humanist.

(Photo by Jordi Play)

Customer reviews

4.4 out of 5 stars
4.4 out of 5
807 global ratings

Customers say

Customers find the book very informative and engaging. They also say it's well-written for the layman and captivating. However, some readers find the writing repetitive and verbose.

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94 customers mention "Content"80 positive14 negative

Customers find the book very informative, scientific, and rich in detail. They also say it's a great introduction to skepticism for the younger crowd and a useful compliment to Richard Dawkins' works. Customers also say the book is well suited for agnostics and believers who want to know what they have when they feel.

"...There are plenty of gems along the way, and his calm and reasoned approach means we're spared the diatribes that so often accompany writing about..." Read more

"...his theory of belief and with great expertise and skill provides compelling arguments and practical examples in explaining how the process of belief..." Read more

"..."Brain" is rich in detail, and while it has many sections which I can only qualify as brilliant, some portions of the read, especially early on, can..." Read more

"...He's a brilliant psychologist, a lucid writer, and a master of science history...." Read more

7 customers mention "Story"7 positive0 negative

Customers find the story engaging and complete. They also say the author is a brilliant psychologist, lucid writer, and master of science history.

"...2. Well-written, well-researched, engaging and accessible book. Bravo!3. Great, logical format. Good use of illustrations.4...." Read more

"Schermer is one of the great thinkers of our time. He's a brilliant psychologist, a lucid writer, and a master of science history...." Read more

"...Plus, I find his style of writing both engaging and entertaining. That's why I think of a book as a "tune-up" for your brain...." Read more

"...evolutionary basis for the development belief systems in an engaging and complete way...." Read more

40 customers mention "Readability"26 positive14 negative

Customers are mixed about the readability. Some mention that the book is very well written for the layman, and easy to follow. However, some find the book repetitive, simplistic, and verbose. They also say the examples given are too verboscopic and don't get to the heart of the matter.

"...A fascinating topic in the hands of a master of his craft.2. Well-written, well-researched, engaging and accessible book. Bravo!3...." Read more

"...They are all impoverished products of banal minds, repetitive in the extreme and entirely predictable...." Read more

"...He's a brilliant psychologist, a lucid writer, and a master of science history...." Read more

"...Shermer's other books and columns, this is a very informative and engaging volume...." Read more

The human brain evolved to find patterns and then infuse them with meaning
4 Stars
The human brain evolved to find patterns and then infuse them with meaning
The human brain evolved to find patterns. We find them everywhere, from nature to nurture, from math to languages, from individual human behavior to group social dynamics. It is the reason why we say that history repeats itself and why we enjoy music so much. If you look for patterns, you will undoubtedly find them; the human brain has evolved to do so.Our species developed this pattern-detection software as a means of survival: recognizing patterns in the jungle alerted early humans to things like predators, prey, and weather changes. Recognizing the herding patterns of buffalo or the seasonal patterns of rain were paramount to surviving in a dangerous world. “Because we must make associations in order to survive and reproduce, natural selection favored all association-making strategies,” Shermer writes, “even those that resulted in false positives.” This is important, because while not recognizing a rustle in the leaves as a poisonous snake can lead us to be bitten and killed, recognizing a rustle in the leaves as a potential danger when there is no actual danger proves no harm. Our pattern recognition software is always running, regardless of whether the patterns detected are helpful or erroneous.In his book, Shermer defines two news vocabulary words. The first is patternicity, which he defines as “the tendency to find meaningful patterns in both meaningful and meaningless data.” Our rational brains have become exceedingly good at finding patterns everywhere, even when no real pattern actually exists Our modern world gives ample opportunity for this pattern detection system to operate. The second word that Shermer brings to his readers is agenticity, which he defines as “the tendency to infuse patterns with meaning, intention, and agency.” Again, this comes from our long evolution as a species. It is important when the sky changes color—incoming storm clouds means something. The problem we have today is when we place too much importance on our false-positive beliefs. When the leaves are rustling, and we believe there is a snake, we might take the longer path home, when in reality there is no snake and we are only making our own lives more difficult. “With this evolutionary perspective we can now understand that people believe weird things because of our evolved need to believe non weird things.”Sadly, our human brains have only one neural network that is in charge of our beliefs, as opposed to two separate areas for belief and disbelief. This is importantly true, because if you believe that ‘torture is wrong’ and also that ‘2 plus 2 makes 4,’ these occur in the same place in the brain. This can cross our wires between ethics and science, because as far as the brain is concerned, both of these beliefs are similar. Couple this phenomenon with the philosopher Baruch Spinoza’s conjecture—that beliefs come quickly and naturally while skepticism is slow and unnatural—and we have a recipe for trouble. Our strongest held beliefs are oftentimes jumps to conclusions. “The scientific principle that a claim is untrue unless proven otherwise runs counter to our natural tendency to accept as true that which we comprehend quickly.” Science is the best tool we have devised for determining the validity of claims of belief, but it is one that we do not use ubiquitously enough. The only way we know to approach real truth is the scientific method: the experimentation of a hypothesis and the examination of the results. It doesn’t matter how strongly your belief is: if it disagrees with experiment and replicable outcomes, then it is lacking. Still, if you can come to a complete scientific agreement about a phenomenon, the sun being the center of the solar system, for example, the same part of your brain that believes this to be true also might believe that we should jail people for wearing open toed shoes in public. One human can believe both of these ideas, because they are reinforced by the same neural network.This bring us to the ultimate thesis of this book: human beings form beliefs first, and then rationally back them up second. We are the opposite of Spock from Star Trek, a character infamous for his cold hard logical thinking. We react to situations emotionally. We use our pattern-detection software to understand the world and to subsequently make guesses about how the future will play out, and then we rationalize these thoughts post-hoc. Obviously, this is not a great system for optimizing our potential. It also explains why so many people believe such wildly different (and often completely ridiculous) things.This further complicates society and our social interactions with one another because “our perceptions about reality are dependent on the beliefs that we hold about it.” Reality exists independent of human minds, but our understanding of it depends upon the beliefs we hold at any given time. If the wind is rustling the leaves a lot, we might believe the area is full of snakes, which could cause us to move our camp to another territory. The reality may be that our first spot was safer than our new one. If we believe that gun ownership is the reason why so many mass shootings occur, that will lead us to take different actions to curb the violence than if we believe that mental illness is the culprit. Each individual’s subjective (emotional and psychological) reasons for believing what causes mass shootings are influenced by their family, friends, and culture, and our pattern finding brains reinforce these beliefs and give them meaning. This is helpful when our patternicity and agenticity align with empirical reality (when there really is a snake in the grass), and harmful when it does not. It is also what makes democracy so difficult—everybody has their own solution to the problems we face, and we all believe ourselves to be accurate and everyone else to be wrong. Coming to a collective agreement can be exceedingly difficult.So, how do we change our beliefs? The first step is understanding how we come to them and that they are often faulty from the start. We have to recognize the role that our rationality plays in sustaining them, especially in the face of contradictory evidence. Oftentimes this is not enough, with true change only coming from deeper social and cultural shifts in the underlying zeitgeist. These changes are a product of “larger and harder-to-define political, economic, religious, and societal changes.” Nonetheless, a little more skepticism is a healthy thing—especially skepticism of ourselves and our own beliefs. It is important to occasionally hold your beliefs up in the mirror and ask yourself: are these actually, empirically, true?
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Top reviews from the United States

Reviewed in the United States on January 31, 2013
Living in the USA one can become quite dispirited with the overall low standard of discourse regarding things that matter - this is a culture of sound-bites and name-calling. After completing my own tiny contribution to one aspect of evolutionary psychology I embarked on the next work which was to be a book examining the root causes of belief, superstition, and other self-centric notions of the world around us. I'd reached page 73 of my first draft when I happened to encounter a reference to Shermer's book in an online scientific journal. I'm delighted to say that this book basically saves me the trouble of writing my own. Moving from the basics (the nature of belief, the way the mind creates illusions of a continuous reality, the evolutionary cause of our prediliction for false-positives) he then illustrates various positions and points with anecdotes and stories. There are plenty of gems along the way, and his calm and reasoned approach means we're spared the diatribes that so often accompany writing about emotive subjects. He also avoids the infinitely-recursive dead-ends so prevalent in theology and epistemological philosophy, though he might have taken the time to explain the concept of category error - a useful notion that enables us to by-pass pointless excursions into meaningless questions. (For those who might care, a category error in this context is a type of question that while gramatically possible lacks formal meaning. For example, "why is green?" violates no major rule of grammar but is entirely content-free. Equally, "why are we here?" is a category-error question that has led far too many people down the garden path.)

Shermer spends quite a bit of time talking about the underlying mechanisms of the brain, which is very helpful for people who haven't kept up with neurophysiology, but I can't help feeling that unless the reader accepts the central premise, these sections don't add to the persuasiveness of his argument. Far more revealing - yet somewhat hastily covered - was the discovery that believing requires very little neural effort while critically evaluating information requires significantly more. In this tiny nugget lies perhaps the critical reason why so many people believe in gods and goblins and gouls and ghosts and all the rest of the magic-mind realm: it's much easier to believe than to think something through. That's why people who grow up in India believe in Shiva and Kali and Krishna and Ram, why people who grow up in Tennessee believe in Jesus, and why people who grow up in Arabia believe in Muhammed: it's simply the easiest mental option given the environment.

Also, Shermer doesn't really spend time showing how our brains are wired up for certain types of thought but not others. This lack of 360 thinking (because there were no environmental pressures to cause such thinking to be positively selected for over the eons) means we perpetually make simple logical blunders. For example, the statement "All birds have wings; crows have wings; therefore crows are birds" is generally accepted at first glance by most people. Yet it's a complete mistake (to see why, just substitute the word "bees" or "bats" in place of "crows" in the sentence). We make this type of mistake continually when we interact with the world around us. Coupled to what Shermer calls "agenticity" (the inference of some active agent behind a phenomenon, which results from the fact we're social animals and need to be attuned to what the other members of the group are feeling and thinking) we then make elimentary mistakes such as thinking that thunder is the outward sign of a deity's displeasure, or that rain is somehow signalling sadness. The powerful nature of such errors is still with us: just think of a horror movie in which thunder signals danger, or a romance movie in which rain invariably accompanies the post-breakup solitary walk.

Like many well-meaning people, Shermer tries to accommmodate religion, arguing that it's benign if it's something that helps people make it through life. Unfortunately religion (which is, formally, the organization of superstitions into a codex) may help some people "make it through life" but it's generally at the expense of others. Shermer signally fails to understand that religions are necessarily regressive because their core premise is that their holy book/rock scratchings/oral tales are supposedly "from the mouth of god(s)" and therefore infallible. Consequently the notions of discovery and progress are antithetical to religion. This is why, for example, the Catholic church systematically destroyed scientific advances by burning Giordano Bruno and threatening Galileo with instruments of torture. It's why contemporary Islam has more in common with stone-age societies than with any modern civilization. Oil-rich kingdoms may buy the products of advanced civilizations but they are incapable of creating anything for themselves because they are trapped in a pre-scientific mentality that is utterly unconducive to any kind of real-world accomplishments. Seen more clearly, religion is not merely a harmless psychological crutch: it's a profoundly divisive, restrictive, and discouragingly infantile cognitive error. It is an impediment to true civilization and to civilized behavior. Dawkins is far more accurate in his summation of religion than Shermer, who perhaps has insufficient exposure to the real impact of religious impulse across history and around the globe today. Shermer also makes the mistake of thinking that perhaps religion has adaptive benefits in terms of group cohesion, but there are two major flaws with this notion. The first is that group selection is impossible; the second is that for every "happy congregation" there's a Jonestown, a Waco, and of course the ever-popular Taliban.

The other things missing from Shermer's informative and entertaining book are (i) a discussion of how the human brain isn't wired up to perform consistency checking (e.g. if I believe A and I believe B, are they mutually consistent or mutually contradictory?) and (ii) how all superstitions and religions fail utterly to tell us anything meaningful about the real world. To elaborate: while all religions have their creation myths and their mummy gods and daddy gods, not a single one has ever revealed any underlying truth about the universe. No religion ever imparted knowledge of DNA or cosmology or chemistry or physics or anything else. They are all impoverished products of banal minds, repetitive in the extreme and entirely predictable. Once you've seen a representative sample of a few, you've seen them all. Only the clothes, rituals, and degree of violence may be slightly different. If there really was some kind of magical creature imparting wisdom to our species (which is quite funny to think about - imagine a person trying to teach a worm morality or quantum physics) then why, over all the millenia and over all the many different kinds of religion, has there never been a single example of a valid revelation? Oh, I forgot: "god moves in mysterious ways."

One final small criticism is that Shermer is very USA-centric. His examples of political and moral "positions" only make sense in a very limited American context. He automatically assumes what exists in the USA is generally found elsewhere, which is wildly untrue. His next book might benefit from time spent in equitorial Africa, the Scandinavian countries, the Amazon and somewhere like VietNam or Laos. And his penultimate chapter (on the origins of the universe) misses the key point which is simply this: religious people say "how did the universe get here if it wasn't made by god?" and then sit back as if this was some sort of actual logical argument. In reality, of course, it's totally empty because if you say, "OK, god made the universe" then the very next question is "so where did god come from?" To which religious people say something like "god always existed." Although this position demonstrates an infantile inability to reason at even the most basic level, the conclusion is evident: invoking "god" solves no problem whatsoever. It's merely a pointless regression, like the question of what was underneath the turtle that Atlas stood on while supporting the Earth on his shoulder. In his desire not to offend religious people, Shermer simply omits the conclusion altogether, preferring to meander off into multiverse theory which doesn't actually accomplish much more than another regression anyway.

Anyhow, aside from these minor criticisms, for anyone looking to understand why the vast majority of people believe in things for which there never has been the slightest shred of evidence, Shermer's book is an excellent primer and a useful compliment to the works of Richard Dawkins, who takes it as a priori that only an idiot would be a believer. Shermer shows, valuably, why intelligence and belief are two different things (back to the inability to do consistency checking) and therefore how American scientists, for example, can believe in magical creatures for which there is zero evidence yet at the same time continue to make contributions towards genuine real-world problems.
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Reviewed in the United States on May 25, 2011
The Believing Brain: From Ghosts and Gods to Politics and Conspiracies by Michael Shermer

"The Believing Brain" is a fantastic and ambitious book that explains the nature of beliefs. Mr. Shermer provides his theory of belief and with great expertise and skill provides compelling arguments and practical examples in explaining how the process of belief works. He applies his theory to a wide range of types of beliefs and does so with mastery. This excellent 400 page-book is composed of the following four parts: Part I. Journeys of Belief, Part II. The Biology of Belief, Part III. Belief in Things Unseen, and Part IV. Belief in Things Seen.

Positives:
1. A fascinating topic in the hands of a master of his craft.
2. Well-written, well-researched, engaging and accessible book. Bravo!
3. Great, logical format. Good use of illustrations.
4. Great use of popular culture to convey sophisticated concepts in an accessible manner.
5. Establishes his theory early on and then proceeds like a great architect building his masterpiece.
6. Great quotes from many great minds, including some of his own, "What I want to believe based on emotions and what I should believe based on evidence do not always coincide. I'm a skeptic not because I do not want to believe but because I want to know".
7. Answers the question of "Why we believe" to complete satisfaction.
8. A thorough explanation on what the brain is.
9. The first of four parts of this book starts off with three distinctly different routes to belief, including his own revealing journey to beliefs.
10. The concept of patternicity defined. A great take at why our brains evolved to assume that all patterns are real.
11. Insightful and thought-provoking, consider the following "The problem we face is that superstition and belief in magic are millions of years old, whereas science, with its methods of controlling for intervening variables to circumvent false positives, is only a few hundred years old".
12. Where would we be without evolution? Great use of science from the best scientific minds.
13. The concept of agenticity defined and how patternicity and agenticity form the cognitive basis for various "spiritualisms".
14. The evidence that brain and mind are one is now overwhelming. Great examples in support of the aforementioned assertion.
15. Great tidbits of knowledge throughout, "what people remember happening rarely corresponds to what actually happened".
16. Provides four great explanations for the sensed-presence effect found in the brain. With plenty of fascinating examples.
17. The mind in its proper context.
18. In order to understand beliefs you must understand neurons.
19. Dopamine...the belief drug. A lot of interesting facts.
20. Great explanation on why dualism is intuitive and monism counterintuitive.
21. The theory of mind and agenticity.
22. Enlightening look at why belief comes quickly and naturally while skepticism is slow and unnatural.
23. The afterlife chapter is one of my favorite chapters of this book...worth the price of admission.
24. Six solid reasons why people believe there is life after death.
25. The case for the existence of the afterlife around four lines of evidence and the thorough debunking that follows.
26. Compelling explanations for Near-Death Experiences (NDEs).
27. Ditto for Out-of-Body Experiences (OBEs).
28. A compelling explanation of, why do so many people believe in God?
29. Three lines of evidence that supernatural beliefs are hardwired into our brains. Great stuff.
30. The compelling evidence that humans created gods and not vice versa.
31. Great explanation on the difference between agnosticism versus atheism.
32. Mr. Shermer's last law, an interesting take. I will not spoil it here.
33. Interesting tidbits on Einstein who is always fascinating.
34. The supernatural in proper context.
35. Science as the best tool ever in devising how the world works.
36. Interesting chapter on aliens.
37. Conspiracy theories and what characteristics indicate they are likely untrue.
38. Fascinating look at the 9/11 "conspiracy".
39. How conspiracies actually work.
40. Mr. Shermer even delves in the world of politics. Liberals versus conservatives.
41. A realistic visions of human nature and why it would help understand one another.
42. A dozen essentials to liberty and freedom. Democracy a different perspective.
43. Interesting look at how our brains convince us that we are always right.
44. Explanation of a series of biases: confirmation bias, hindsight bias, self-justification bias, attribution bias, sunk-coast bias, status-quo bias, anchoring bias, representative bias, inattentional blindness bias, and more...
45. Why science is the ultimate bias-detection machine.
46. Awesome belief history on exploration: Columbus, Galileo, Bacon...
47. Astronomy...beliefs and historical debates.
48. Good use of previous knowledge of biases to help understand data.
49. Red shifts and other astronomical hypotheses explained, and the photograph that changed the universe.
50. The greatest unsolved mystery.
51. Links worked great!
52. An intellectual treat from cover to cover!

Negatives:
1. Having to buy extra copies to share with close friends.
2. Having to wait for Mr. Shermer's next book.

In summary, this may be Michael Shermer's greatest book. This book feels like a labor of love in which Mr. Shermer is able to match his accumulation of prodigious knowledge and his lucid thoughts in total harmony. This book not only met my high expectations it exceeded it, I couldn't put it down. Thought-provoking, enlightening and a joy to read. I can't recommend this book enough, kudos to Mr. Shermer for a great accomplishment.

Further suggestions: "
Physics of the Future: How Science Will Shape Human Destiny and Our Daily Lives by the Year 2100 " by Michio Kaku, " SuperSense: Why We Believe in the Unbelievable " by Bruce M. Hood, " Human: The Science Behind What Makes Us Unique " by Michael S. Gazzaniga, " Hardwired Behavior: What Neuroscience Reveals about Morality " by Laurence Tancredi, " Braintrust: What Neuroscience Tells Us about Morality " by Patricia S. Churchland, " The Blank Slate: The Modern Denial of Human Nature " by Steven Pinker and " The Brain and the Meaning of Life " by Paul Thagard.
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Reid Findlay
5.0 out of 5 stars A must read for our polarized times
Reviewed in Canada on October 13, 2021
I was first introduced to Michael Shermer at a lecture series hosted by the University of Calgary while completing my M.Ed, and I have never been disappointed by anything he publishes. This book helps the reader to better understand the polarization we see in our complex world around so many hot issues. A must read for our anyone who wants to move away from complaining about our polarized world to finding a possible path forward.
Stefano Hagen
5.0 out of 5 stars Biologia das crença
Reviewed in Brazil on September 22, 2017
A abordagem compreensiva e técnica, trabalhando conceitos de neurociência e de evolução de uma maneira simples e correta tornam a leitura atraente e esclarecedora. O livro proporcionando uma visão essencialmente biológica de como se formam e se mantém as crenças e reforça uma análise mais neutra das crenças estimulando a autocrítica e um ceticismo saudável.
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Enki
5.0 out of 5 stars Ein lehrreicher Überblick
Reviewed in Germany on April 13, 2019
Wieso glauben Menschen an Götter, Aliens, Verschwörungen? Eine Frage, die unsere Gesellschaft im Innersten berührt – und sich doch, zumindest näherungsweise, wissenschaftlich beantworten lässt. Michael Shermer – Neurologe und einstmals selbst fundamentalistischer Christ – ist seit langem ein Vorreiter der amerikanischen Skeptikerbewegung. Mit seinem Buch „The Believing Brain“, leider nie auf Deutsch erschienen, widmet er sich jenem riesigen Komplex des (Aber)Glaubens von der psychologisch-neurologischen Seite.
Shermers allzu plausible Thesen sind ernüchternd: Glaube ist nicht nur so alt wie die Menschheit selbst, sondern aufs Elementarste in unserer Natur verwurzelt, wie immer er sich im Alltag auch äußern mag. Nicht Fakten und Argumente prägen wirklich unsere Weltanschauung, sondern dienen letztlich nur der Rechtfertigung von Überzeugungen, die schon längst da sind. Und schließlich ist durchaus etwas daran, dass Genie und Wahnsinn manchmal nah beieinander liegen, wo doch beides oft in selben Grundlagen wurzelt und bisweilen Charaktere hervorbringt, die brillant-innovativ und abergläubisch zugleich sind.
Im ersten Abschnitt identifiziert Shermer ganz klar verschiedene neurologische Phänomene, die die Grundlage fast jeden (Aber)Glaubens stellen, zuallererst unser genetisches Programm, Muster und Akteure in unserer Umwelt zu erkennen. Evolutionsbiologisch verständlich, bedeutet beides doch im Zweifel eher das Überleben in einer Gefahrensituation, wenn die Bedrohung rechtzeitig erkannt wird. Ebendiese Mustererkennung wird schließlich zur Wurzel irrationalen Aberglaubens, wenn zufällige Korrelationen im Geiste zu Kausalitäten mutieren – von schwarzen Katzen und persönlichen Glücksbringern bis hin zur „alternativen Medizin“ -, während gleichsam der Schluss auf unsichtbare Akteure Götter, Geister und Dämonen hervorbringt. Ebenso ist der Essentialismus, das ist der Glaube an unsichtbare und potentiell übertragbare Eigenschaften von Objekten („Würden Sie die Jacke eines Serienmörders anziehen?“), tief in uns verwurzelt und wahrscheinlich evolutionär zum Schutze vor ansteckenden Keimen entstanden. Nicht zuletzt der Dualismus, der Glaube an einen vom Körper getrennten Geist, ist intuitiv in uns angelegt. So machen zwar letztlich die individuellen Ausprägungen manch einen Unterschied, doch ist letztlich kein Mensch ein rein vernünftiger, sondern jeder grundsätzlich zum Irrationalen prädestiniert. Bei aller Theorie vernachlässigt Shermer auch nicht die exemplarischen Veranschaulichungen – von seinen eigenen Erlebnissen in seiner religiösen Zeit über Halluzinationen beim Extremport bis hin zu spirituellen Erlebnissen persönlicher Bekannter und deren Rezeption.
In einem weiteren Abschnitt wendet Shermer diese Erkenntnisse auf spezifische, weit verbreitete Glaubenssätze an: Gott, Aliens, ein Leben nach dem Tod, politische Überzeugungen. So erfahren wir ganz nebensächlich nicht zuletzt etwas über das mittlerweile gut erforschte Phänomen der Schlafparalyse, dem einst die Vorstellung von Nachtmahren, heute dagegen scheinbare Entführungen durch Außerirdische entspringen, sowie die Frage, was denn eigentlich der neurologische Unterschied zwischen liberalen und konservativen Menschen ist (ein allzu interessantes Lehrstück unterschiedlicher Arten intuitiver Ethik, ohne eine Gruppe von beiden damit kategorisch disqualifizieren zu wollen). Auch klassische Formen von Wahrnehmungstäuschungen kommen zur Sprache.
All dem lässt sich nach Shermer nur mit einem Mittel begegnen: der empirischen Wissenschaft. Wie wissenschaftlicher Fortschritt funktioniert, illustriert er anhand des historischen Wandels unserer Weltbilder – von Galileo Galileis schicksalsgebeutelten Forschungen zum heliozentrischen Weltbild bis zu den Diskussionen der späteren Astronomie über die lange Zeit noch fragliche Existenz anderer Galaxien. Es ist ein interessanter wissenschaftshistorischer Abriss – für meinen Geschmack jedoch einerseits zu ausführlich und andererseits nicht pointiert genug zum ursprünglichen Zweck, der Verdeutlichung wissenschaftlichen Erkenntnisgewinns.
Ohne Zweifel ist das Themenfeld, dem das Buch sich widmet, bei weitem zu groß für eine einzige Publikation, gleichsam an Theorien und Forschungen wie nennenswerten Beispielen, sodass ein Buch wie Shermers zwangsläufig unvollständig sein muss. Indes gelingt es durchaus, die zentralen Erkenntnisse moderner Wissenschaft zur Natur des (Aber)Glaubens auf den Punkt zu bringen, nicht ohne dabei Ausblicke auf zahlreiche interessante Beispiele und Nebenphänomene zu geben. In dem Maße, wie jene die Grundfesten von Religion, Politik und vor allem Menschenbild erschüttern, scheint es geradezu unvermeidlich, dieses oder ein vergleichbares Buch zu konsumieren, will man zu wirklichem Verständnis unserer Natur, Geschichte und Gegenwart gelangen.
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Alonso Cano
5.0 out of 5 stars Enlightening
Reviewed in Spain on March 27, 2018
Da claves de la evolución para entender los fenómenos de la vida diaria. Estudia las creencias de forma que ilustra para comprender a nuestros semejantes y respetarlos con razones científicas
Mark T.
5.0 out of 5 stars Fascinating
Reviewed in Australia on January 9, 2021
Very interesting coverage of why we believe crazy things. Great read.