![]() ![]() A significant segment of the population-about 15 percent of women-sees colors the rest of us can’t. ![]() Nor are those of us with “whole” brains and a complete set of senses necessarily experiencing the world “as it really is.” For example, other animals experience a different part of the visual spectrum, or can detect sounds and odors we have no awareness of. The book is full of startling examples split-brain research, for example, shows how the two halves of a mind can be completely at odds, with neither being aware of what the other experiences. Instinct, unconscious impulses, automatic systems, emotion and a dozen other forces, most of which we aren’t even aware of, affect every thought and action. of Medicine Sum: Forty Tales from the Afterlives, 2009) makes the point that our sense of ourselves as coherent, free-standing personalities is at odds with the most basic findings about the workings of the human brain, an organ so complex that an objective description of it sounds hyperbolic. An up-to-date examination of what used to be called the mind-body problem.Įagleman (Neuroscience/Baylor Coll. ![]()
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