The Brain: The Story of You

The Brain: The Story of You

2015 • 224 pages

Ratings9

Average rating4.6

15

This must be the only non-fiction book till now, that I finished in a day.

The book is about as it says everything about the brain. A combination of simple physiology, experiments, theories, hypotheses and philosophy. It never gets boring and the language is simple. Very often I felt that this book isn't telling me anything new, atleast in the beginning, but that changes as the book progresses. He only lays a foundation describing the magnificence of “This hunk of tissue in our cranium” in the first half of it's book, and I'm sure, for someone completely new to brain physiology this will be mind blowing. Even if you have put some thought and effort in to know about this stuff earlier, this book is comprehensive. It neatly scoops out everything (basic) we can know about the brain and arranges it beautifully in 6 chapters.The earlier chapters are about the intricacies in the development of our brains, how a child picks up new information, forms new memories, the fallibility of our memory. The questionable ‘realness' of reality. The huge underground don of our existence - the unconscious which rules everything, though we dont realize it. The later chapters focuses on how the brain decides, the constant battle between our basal instincts and our wiser decisions, and the social component of our neural system. It also touches upon the property of the brain that could assist the visually impaired or hearing impaired to actually see and hear, if our brain can be replaced by a computer?, How prosthetic limbs can listen to our thoughts, and so on. It is not an academic text. It's a fun as well as informative quick read.

“No one is having an experience of the objective reality that really exists; each creature perceives only what it has evolved to perceive. But presumably every creature assumes its slice of reality to be the entire objective world. Why would we ever stop to imagine there is something beyond what we can perceive”

April 14, 2023Report this review