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Tall Tales about the Mind and Brain: Separating fact from fiction [Kõva köide]

Edited by (Professor of Human Cognitive Neuroscience, University of Edinburgh, UK)
  • Formaat: Hardback, 552 pages, kõrgus x laius x paksus: 245x172x30 mm, kaal: 1094 g, numerous tables, halftones, line drawings, black and white illustrations and 2 colour plates
  • Ilmumisaeg: 11-Jan-2007
  • Kirjastus: Oxford University Press
  • ISBN-10: 0198568762
  • ISBN-13: 9780198568766
Teised raamatud teemal:
  • Formaat: Hardback, 552 pages, kõrgus x laius x paksus: 245x172x30 mm, kaal: 1094 g, numerous tables, halftones, line drawings, black and white illustrations and 2 colour plates
  • Ilmumisaeg: 11-Jan-2007
  • Kirjastus: Oxford University Press
  • ISBN-10: 0198568762
  • ISBN-13: 9780198568766
Teised raamatud teemal:
Does listening to Mozart make us more intelligent? Is there such a thing as a gay gene? Does the size of the brain matter? Does the moon influence our behaviour? Can we communicate with the dead? Can graphology tell us anything about a person's character? Is the human brain clonable? What role do dreams have in cognition? Can mind conquer matter and diseases? Are out-of-body experiences possible? Can we trust our intuitions?

To some, the answer to all these questions might well be a resounding 'no', but to many people these represent serious beliefs about the mind and brain - beliefs that drive their everyday behaviour, beliefs that cost them huge amounts of money. Whole industries have developed founded on these dubious claims about the mind and brain. Even major corporations have dabbled with assessment methods such as those advocated by graphology, accepting and rejecting candidates on the basic of their handwriting. Expectant parents buy books and tapes by the dozen showing them how to improve the intelligence of their child by playing them classical music. People subscribe to expensive therapies founded on beliefs rather than science, or risk their health buying books that tell them how they can conquer illness through positive thinking, perhaps at the expense of more scientifically proven treatments.

Tall Tales about the Mind and Brain presents a sweeping survey of common myths about the mind and brain. In a lighthearted and accessible style, it exposes the truth behind these beliefs, how they are perpetuated, why people believe them, and why they might even exist in the first place.

Arvustused

...this book is so well written and balanced that it will make for enriching and entertaining reading for readers at any level. It manages to have a scientific foundation, yet presents clinically intriguing and practical, relevant cases. It is refreshing to see a group of authors put together a critical analysis of the rampant misinformation that thrives in popular culture. * Doody's Notes * ...a fabulous resource and often a compelling read... * The Psychologist * ...this book is a lot of fun and hugely informative. * Journal of Consciousness Studies *

Contributors xi
Preface xv
Introduction: The myth of 10% and other Tall Tales about the mind and the brain xvii
Sergio Della Sala
Barry Beyerstein
Where do tall tales about the mind and the brain come from?
Cognitive factors underlying paranormal beliefs and experiences
3(20)
Christopher C. French
Krissy Wilson
Critically thinking about paranormal belief
23(13)
Peter Lamont
The magic in the brain: how conjuring works to deceive our minds
36(9)
Massimo Polidoro
Tall tales on memory and learning
The legend of the magical number seven
45(15)
Nelson Cowan
Candice C. Morey
Zhijian Chen
Setting the record (or video camera) straight on memory: the video camera model of memory and other memory myths
60(16)
Seema L. Clifasefi
Maryanne Garry
Elizabeth Loftus
The myth of the incredible eyewitness
76(15)
Amina Memon
Don Thomson
We have got the whole child witness thing figured out, or have we?
91(14)
Rachel Sutherland
Deryn Strange
Maryanne Garry
Tall tales on intelligence
Is bigger really better? The search for brain size and intelligence in the twenty-first century
105(18)
David P. Carey
Biology and intelligence---the race/IQ controversy
123(25)
Mike Anderson
The Mozart effect: it's time to face the music!
148(10)
Colin Gray
Sergio Della Sala
The powers and perils of intuition
158(14)
David G. Myers
Creative thinking: the mystery myth
172(21)
Ken Gilhooly
Tall tales on language and communication
The more, the merrier: facts and beliefs about the bilingual mind
193(11)
Antonella Sorace
The merry vibes of Wintzer: the tale of foreign accent syndrome
204(14)
Nick Miller
Talking with the dead, communicating with the future and other myths created by cold reading
218(15)
Ray Hyman
Graphology---a total write-off
233(38)
Barry L. Beyerstein
The truth about deception
271(20)
Aldert Vrij
Samantha Mann
Tall tales on the brain
The dual-brain myth
291(23)
Michael C. Corballis
The neurology of the weird: brain states and anomalous experience
314(22)
Barry L. Beyerstein
The myth of the clonable human brain
336(12)
Giovanni Berlucchi
Out on a limb: neglect and confabulation in the study of aplasic phantoms
348(21)
Peter Brugger
Marion Funk
Imagery and blindness
369(11)
Cesare Cornoldi
Rossana DeBeni
Something wicked this way comes: causes and interpretations of sleep paralysis
380(21)
Christopher C. French
Julia Santomauro
Tall tales on the mind
The power of the full moon. Running on empty?
401(10)
Eric H. Chudler
Ouija, dowsing and other seductions of ideomotor action
411(14)
Ray Hyman
Inducing out-of-body experiences
425(15)
Olaf Blanke
Gregor Thut
Can mind conquer cancer?
440(21)
Barry L. Beyerstein
Wallace I. Sampson
Zarka Stojanovic
James Handel
The elusive search for a `gay gene'
461(17)
Fernando Saravi
To sleep, perchance to REM? The rediscovered role of emotion and meaning in dreams
478(23)
Mark Solms
Oliver Turnbull
Index 501
Editor of Cortex, Fellow Royal Society (Edinburgh) - FRSE, Fellow British Psychological Society - FBPsS