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Altered Egos : How the Brain Creates the Self

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How does the brain, an organ composed of billions of individual cells, create the subjective sense of a unified self? And where is the self located in the brain? Here, the author describes his search, from medical school through his career as a psychiatrist and neurologist, for answers to these questions.

The result is a work that explores the fundamental relationship between the self and the brain.

Beginning with vignettes of patients who have neurological perturbations of the self, Feinberg gives an account of how the human brain functions - and malfunctions - in people with psychiatric and neurological disorders.

In doing so he presents a theory of the self that links the workings of the brain with unique features of the mind, such as meaning, purpose and being.

Feinberg argues that computers will never be conscious or have selves because the self and the mind are unique constituents of the life of the individual.

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Product Details
Oxford University Press Inc
019513625X / 9780195136258
Hardback
612.82
01/02/2001
United States
English
viii, 205p. : ill.
25 cm
postgraduate /research & professional Learn More