Search Books

A User's Guide to the Brain: Perception, Attention and the Four Theaters of the Brain

Author John J. Ratey
Publisher Pantheon
📄 Viewing lite version Full site ›
🌎 Shop on Amazon — choose country
19.60 27.50 USD
🛒 Buy New on Amazon 🇺🇸 🏷 Buy Used — $0.49

✓ Usually ships in 24 hours

Share:
Book Details
Author(s)John J. Ratey
PublisherPantheon
ISBN / ASIN0679453091
ISBN-139780679453093
AvailabilityUsually ships in 24 hours
Sales Rank733,703
MarketplaceUnited States 🇺🇸

Description

Before consulting with customer service, it's always a good idea to read the manual. Psychiatrist John Ratey has condensed years of research on one of the most intimidating yet ubiquitous pieces of hardware in the world into the ever-handy User's Guide to the Brain. More intellectually stimulating than day-to-day practical, the Guide uses tales from Ratey's practice and other clinical venues, tidbits from neuroscientific research, and plain common sense to suggest how the brain develops and manifests personality and behavior. With section titles like "Free Will and the Anterior Cingulate Gyrus," many readers will feel intimidated, but Ratey is careful to direct his explanations to all--even those without a PhD in neuroanatomy. His interesting four-theater theory of mental function is the most directly practical section of the book, incorporating the author's years of experience with patients into a sensible framework that readers can use to better tune their own systems. Describing the changing of the guard from psychoanalysis to a more biological paradigm, Ratey writes:
Neuroscientists have, in a sense, simply taken over the elite, almost clerical office once held by analysts. The language used to describe the brain is, if anything, more opaque than any of the old psychoanalytic terminology, which was itself so obscure that only trained professionals could wade through the literature. Most people never even bother to learn such terminology, deeming that, like the language of the computer scientists of the early 1970s, it is better left to the nerds.
Determined to help us overcome our sense of helplessness in matters cranial, Ratey has shown that we can understand ourselves better and can learn quite a bit from the nerds. --Rob Lightner

Similar Products