Bookbot

Gerald M. Edelman

    1 juillet 1929 – 17 mai 2014

    Gerald Edelman était un biologe américain dont les travaux ont couvert le système immunitaire, les neurosciences et la philosophie de l'esprit. Ses recherches, récompensées par un prix Nobel, ont révélé la structure des molécules d'anticorps. Edelman a établi une analogie entre le développement évolutif des composants du système immunitaire au cours de la vie d'un individu et l'évolution du développement des composants du cerveau. Cette perspective a créé une continuité entre ses études biologiques et neurologiques, influençant son travail ultérieur en neurosciences et en philosophie de l'esprit.

    Gerald M. Edelman
    Unser Gehirn
    Il presente ricordato
    Wider Than the Sky
    Bright Air, Brilliant Fire
    A Universe Of Consciousness
    • A Universe Of Consciousness

      • 288pages
      • 11 heures de lecture

      In A Universe of Consciousness, Gerald Edelman builds on the radical ideas he introduced in his monumental trilogy-Neural Darwinism, Topobiology, and The Remembered Present-to present for the first time an empirically supported full-scale theory of consciousness. He and the neurobiolgist Giulio Tononi show how they use ingenious technology to detect the most minute brain currents and to identify the specific brain waves that correlate with particular conscious experiences. The results of this pioneering work challenge the conventional wisdom about consciousness.

      A Universe Of Consciousness
      4,1
    • Bright Air, Brilliant Fire

      On The Matter Of The Mind

      • 304pages
      • 11 heures de lecture

      We are on the verge of a revolution in neuroscience as significant as the Galilean revolution in physics or the Darwinian revolution in biology. Nobel laureate Gerald M. Edelman takes issue with the many current cognitive and behavioral approaches to the brain that leave biology out of the picture, and argues that the workings of the brain more closely resemble the living ecology of a jungle than they do the activities of a computer. Some startling conclusions emerge from these ideas: individuality is necessarily at the very center of what it means to have a mind, no creature is born value-free, and no physical theory of the universe can claim to be a ”theory of everything” without including an account of how the brain gives rise to the mind. There is no greater scientific challenge than understanding the brain. Bright Air, Brilliant Fire is a book that provides a window on that understanding.

      Bright Air, Brilliant Fire
      4,0
    • Wider Than the Sky

      The Phenomenal Gift of Consciousness

      • 224pages
      • 8 heures de lecture

      How does the firing of neurons give rise to subjective sensations, thoughts, and emotions? How can the disparate domains of mind and body be reconciled? The quest for a scientifically based understanding of consciousness has attracted study and speculation across the ages. In this direct and non-technical discussion of consciousness, Dr. Gerald M. Edelman draws on a lifetime of scientific inquiry into the workings of the brain to formulate answers to the mind-body questions that intrigue every thinking person.Concise and understandable, the book explains pertinent findings of modern neuroscience and describes how consciousness arises in complex brains. Edelman explores the relation of consciousness to causation, to evolution, to the development of the self, and to the origins of feelings, learning, and memory. His analysis of the brain activities underlying consciousness is based on recent remarkable advances in biochemistry, immunology, medical imaging, neuroscience, and evolutionary biology, yet the implications of his book extend farther—beyond the worlds of science and medicine into virtually every area of human inquiry.

      Wider Than the Sky
      3,7