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The Empathic Brain
 
 

The Empathic Brain [Kindle Edition]

Christian Keysers

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Produktbeschreibungen

Kurzbeschreibung

The discovery of mirror neurons has caused an unparalleled wave of excitement amongst scientists. The Empathic Brain makes you share this excitement. Its vivid and personal descriptions of key experiments make it a captivating and refreshing read. Through intellectually rigorous but powerfully accessible prose, Prof. Christian Keysers makes us realize just how deeply this discovery changes our understanding of human nature. You will start looking at yourselves differently - no longer as mere individual but as a deeply interconnected, social mind.

About the Content
------------------------
Your heart beats faster as you watch a tarantula crawl on James Bond’s chest in the movie Dr No, your hands sweat and your skin tingles under the spider’s legs. You feel scared, tense, and finally relieved when Bond manages to escape the danger. We are essentially empathic. But what is empathy? How does your brain enable you to feel so much of what 007 is feeling? How do you connect with people in real life, people you love or even strangers? In this book, you will visit leading labs to find your own answers. The journey starts where ‘mirror neurons’ were discovered. The door of a lab in Parma, Italy, opens to reveal that your motor system not only controls your own body - it becomes automatically activated each time you see others move. A little later, you lie down on a bed and slowly move into the bore of a brain scanner in Marseille, becoming a subject in an experiment that will show how your own sensations and emotions are automatically triggered while you witness those of others. These experiments unravel the mirror in our brain that lets our own actions, sensations and emotions resonate with those of Bond and the people around us. By sharing their inner lives, we connect with them. We are hard-wired for empathy. By looking at autistic individuals and psychopathic criminals, by comparing men and women, by exploring empathy for robots and enemies, this book explores the multifaceted nature of empathy and evidences both its power and limits. Science begins to reveal the wisdom of why so many of the world’s religions command “do unto others as you would have them do unto you.”

About the Author
-----------------------
Christian Keysers’ work has been seminal for the scientific study of empathy. Born in 1973, his work has led to publications in the most prominent scientific journals and has made him one of the youngest people to attain the rank of Full Professor. His capacity to explain his science to the wider audience earned him the Marie Curie Excellence Award. He now leads a lab together with his wife at the prestigious Netherlands Institute for Neuroscience of the Royal Dutch Academy of Arts and Sciences in Amsterdam. He is a Full Professor at the UMCG and a frequent Visiting Professor at the California Institute of Technology. Outside of the laboratory, his wife Valeria and his daughter Julia are teaching him why empathy is such a gift.

Praise
If anyone can write about the brain mechanisms of empathy, Keysers is the man. A page turning read. A grand perspective on many aspects of the empathic brain. He explains why we should re-think morality, education and ethics in light of the way we have evolved to resonate with each other. A book ahead of the game. A great authoritative read.
Prof. Bruce Hood, Bristol University for The Psychologist.

Christian Keysers has the combined skills of a hard-core animal neuroscientists, the talents of a human brain imager, and the sophistication of a theoretician. This book takes us on a critical journey of the discovery of mirror neurons (he was part of this journey), our understanding of empathy, imitation, and language. Though many have written about mirror neurons, this book outshines them all. If you want an honest account of mirror neurons, how they work, and what we can learn from them, read Keysers’ book.
Prof. Mark Hauser, Harvard Universit

Produktinformation

  • Format: Kindle Edition
  • Dateigröße: 541 KB
  • Seitenzahl der Print-Ausgabe: 248 Seiten
  • ISBN-Quelle für Seitenzahl: 1463769067
  • Verkauf durch: Amazon Media EU S.à r.l.
  • Sprache: Englisch
  • ASIN: B0054S7DOO
  • Text-to-Speech (Vorlesemodus): Aktiviert
  • Amazon Bestseller-Rang: #60.080 Bezahlt in Kindle-Shop (Siehe Top 100 Bezahlt in Kindle-Shop)

  •  Ist der Verkauf dieses Produkts für Sie nicht akzeptabel?

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An "Exquisitely Social Species" 23. Februar 2012
Von phantomself - Veröffentlicht auf Amazon.com
Format:Kindle Edition|Von Amazon bestätigter Kauf
The discovery of mirror neurons is perhaps the most exciting recent development in the altogether-lively field of neuroscience. Christian Keysers, who was part of it almost from the beginning, has written a lively, accessible account of both the science and the human story of discovery.

First discovered in macaque monkeys, mirror neurons are so-called because they fire when an individual performs or observes an action, and when she experiences an emotion herself or observes that emotion in someone else. When you see somebody doing something, you unconsciously run a sort of internal simulation of their behaviour, using some (not all) of the neurons in your pre-motor cortex you would use if you were performing that action yourself. And when you witness another person's emotional state, some of the same neurons in your emotional centres are activated, as would be if the emotion originated within yourself.

A variety of experiments furnish evidence for mirror neuron activity in humans. Keysers and his colleagues think the results explain much about human powers of intuitively understanding the minds of others, and our ability to engage in the complex social interactions which have made us the dominant species on this planet. Through simulation, we internalize, and hence understand, other people. Mirror neurons promise to explain much about how we learn from others, why demonstration has a greater pedagogical value than narration, how we come to be so proficient with language, and why we are engaged by stories and theatre, finally answering Hamlet's question, "What's Hecubah to him, or he to Hecubah, that he should weep for her?" Keyers also explores the question whether autism and related disorders may be caused by a failure of the mirror neuron system.

Although the tide of evidence keeps rising, the mirror neuron theory is far from universally accepted. Interpretations of the evidence go far beyond the established facts, and in the case of mirror neurons, the devil lies not in the details but in the generalizations. The famous neuroscientist VS Ramachandran was so taken with mirror neurons that he called them "Ghandhi neurons--because they dissolve the boundaries between self and other." Keysers is not so incautious, and takes pains to point out that mirror neurons are not "magic"; despite them, people often misunderstand one another. But Keysers is most definitely a champion of mirror neurons, and if his book has a shortcoming, it may lie in failing to give serious consideration to critics. Neuroscientist Gregory Hickok and philosopher Patricia Churchland are two who have charged that the bolder claims about mirror neurons made by Keysers, Ramachandran and others are overblown. Keysers makes no serious attempt to answer such criticisms. Nonetheless, The Empathic Brain is perhaps the best introduction available to the positive claims of the mirror neuron theory, and should hold the interest of anyone who is seriously interested in what we are.

Beliebte Markierungen

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&quote;
the premotor cells are not just detailed predictors of the behavior to come, but also convey a feeling for their goal, or intention, and thereby get a bit closer to what we would call understanding the intentions of others. &quote;
Markiert von 14 Kindle-Nutzern
&quote;
meaning is added to what the visual system detects by linking it to our own actions. &quote;
Markiert von 12 Kindle-Nutzern
&quote;
The preconscious embodied simulation that mirror neurons perform may be fundamental for our social intuition. &quote;
Markiert von 11 Kindle-Nutzern

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