
Do Newborns Think? Do They Know That Three Is Greater Than Two? Do They Prefer Right To Wrong? What About Emotions--can Newborns Recognize Happiness Or Anger? If The Answer To These Questions Is Yes, Then How Are Our Inborn Thoughts And Feelings Encoded In Our Bodies? Could They Persist After We Die? Going All The Way Back To Ancient Greece, Human Nature And The Mind-body Problem Have Been The Topics Of Fierce Scholarly Debates. But Laypeople Also Have Strong Opinions About Such Matters. Most People Believe, For Example, That Newborn Babies Don't Know The Difference Between Right And Wrong--such Knowledge, They Insist, Can Only Be Learned. For Emotions, They Presume The Opposite--that Our Capacity To Feel Fear, For Example, Is Both Inborn And Embodied. These Beliefs Are Stories We Tell Ourselves About What We Know And Who We Are. They Reflect And Influence Our Understanding Of Ourselves And Others And They Guide Every Aspect Of Our Lives. In The Blind Storyteller, The Cognitive Psychologist Iris Berent Exposes A Chasm Between Our Intuitive Understanding Of Human Nature And The Conclusions Emerging From Science. Her Conclusions Show That Many Of Our Stories Are Misguided. Just Like Homer, We, The Storyteller, Are Blind. How Could We Get It So Wrong? In A Twist That Could Have Come Out Of A Greek Tragedy, Berent Proposes That Our Errors Are Our Fate. These Mistakes Emanate From The Very Principles That Make Our Minds Tick: Our Blindness To Human Nature Is Rooted In Human Nature Itself. An Intellectual Journey That Draws On Philosophy, Anthropology, Linguistics, Cognitive Science, And Berent's Own Cutting-edge Research, The Blind Storyteller Grapples With A Host Of Provocative Questions, From Why We Are So Afraid Of Zombies, To Whether Dyslexia Is Just In Our Heads, From What Happens To Us When We Die, To Why We Are So Infatuated With Our Brains. The End Result Is A Startling New Perspective On The Age-old Nature/nurture Debate--and On What It Means To Be Human.
The book investigates the fundamental disconnect between our intuitive, everyday beliefs about human nature and the empirical findings of modern cognitive science. Iris Berent, a cognitive psychologist, utilizes a multidisciplinary approach to examine why humans consistently hold misconceptions about their own mental processes. She argues that these errors are not merely random, but are instead systematic byproducts of the very cognitive architecture that defines human thought.
What You Will Find
Scope Limits
Experts recognize this work as a significant contribution to the public understanding of cognitive science and the limitations of human intuition. Readers frequently note the accessible yet rigorous nature of the prose, which effectively bridges the gap between academic research and layperson inquiry.
Page Count:
288
Publication Date:
2020-01-01
Publisher:
Oxford University Press
ISBN-10:
0190061936
ISBN-13:
9780190061937
No comments yet. Be the first to share your thoughts!