From one of the most significant neuroscientists at work
today, a pathbreaking investigation of a question that has
confounded philosophers, psychologists, and neuroscientists for
centuries: how is consciousness created?
Antonio Damasio has spent the past thirty years studying and
writing about how the brain operates, and his work has garnered
acclaim for its singular melding of the scientific and the
humanistic. In Self Comes to Mind, he goes against the
long-standing idea that consciousness is somehow separate from the
body, presenting compelling new scientific evidence that
consciousness—what we think of as a mind with a self—is to begin
with a biological process created by a living organism. Besides the
three traditional perspectives used to study the mind (the
introspective, the behavioral, and the neurological), Damasio
introduces an evolutionary perspective that entails a radical
change in the way the history of conscious minds is viewed and
told. He also advances a radical hypothesis regarding the origins
and varieties of feelings, which is central to his framework for
the biological construction of consciousness: feelings are grounded
in a near fusion of body and brain networks, and first emerge from
the historically old and humble brain stem rather than from the
modern cerebral cortex.
Damasio suggests that the brain’s development of a human
self becomes a challenge to nature’s indifference and opens the way
for the appearance of culture, a radical break in the course of
evolution and the source of a new level of life
regulation—sociocultural homeostasis. He leaves no doubt that the
blueprint for the work-in-progress he calls sociocultural
homeostasis is the genetically well-established basic homeostasis,
the curator of value that has been present in simple life-forms for
billions of years. Self Comes to Mind is a groundbreaking journey
into the neurobiological foundations of mind and self.
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