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António Damásio, Descartes' Error - Wikipedia + Reviews

Descartes' Error - Wikipedia

Descartes' Error

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Descartes' Error: Emotion, Reason, and the Human Brain
Descartes' Error (Paperback Cover).jpg
The original paperback edition
AuthorAntónio Damásio
LanguageEnglish
Published1994
Pages312
ISBN978-0-399-13894-2

Descartes' Error: Emotion, Reason, and the Human Brain is a 1994 book by neuroscientist António Damásio describing the physiology of rational thought and decision, and how the faculties could have evolved through Darwinian natural selection.[1] 

Damásio refers to René Descartes' separation of the mind from the body (the mind/body dualism) as an error because reasoning requires the guidance of emotions and feelings conveyed from the body.[2][3] 

Written for the layperson, Damásio uses the dramatic 1868 railroad accident case of Phineas Gage as a reference for incorporating data from multiple modern clinical cases, enumerating damaging cognitive effects when feelings and reasoning become anatomically decoupled.[3] The book provides an analysis of diverse clinical data contrasting a wide range of emotional changes following frontal lobe damage[4] as well as lower (medulla) and anterior areas of the brain such as the anterior cingulate. Among his experimental evidence and testable hypotheses, Damásio presents the "somatic marker hypothesis", a proposed mechanism by which emotions guide (or bias) behavior and decision-making, and positing that rationality requires emotional input. He argues that René Descartes' "error" was the dualist separation of mind and body, rationality and emotion.

Publication data[edit]

See also[edit]

References[edit]


Bibliography[edit]

Further reading[edit]

J. Birtchnell, The Two of Me: The Rational Outer Me and The Emotional Inner Me (London 2003)

J. Panksepp, Affective Neuroscience (OUP 1998)


Categories:
Cognitive neuroscience
History of neuroscience






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Descartes' Error: Emotion, Reason and the Human Brain

by
António R. Damásio
3.97 · Rating details · 7,991 ratings · 377 reviews
Since Descartes famously proclaimed, "I think, therefore I am," science has often overlooked emotions as the source of a person’s true being. Even modern neuroscience has tended, until recently, to concentrate on the cognitive aspects of brain function, disregarding emotions. This attitude began to change with the publication of Descartes’ Error in 1995. Antonio Damasio—"one of the world’s leading neurologists" (The New York Times)—challenged traditional ideas about the connection between emotions and rationality. In this wondrously engaging book, Damasio takes the reader on a journey of scientific discovery through a series of case studies, demonstrating what many of us have long suspected: emotions are not a luxury, they are essential to rational thinking and to normal social behavior. (less)

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Paperback, 336 pages
Published September 27th 2005 by Penguin Books Ltd (first published 1994)
Original Title
Descartes' Error: Emotion, Reason and the Human Brain
ISBN
014303622X (ISBN13: 9780143036227)
Edition Language
English

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I'm a bit torn about this book. I love reading psychology, but too much research bogs me down. I'm not a psychologist or have professional training in it whatsoever, I just read for the pleasure of knowing how my mind works. Is this book very boring for a layperson to get through? And overflowing with long winding research?

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Justin Yes and no. I would suggest skipping whatever seems boring or overly technical without guilt, and focusing on the amazing case studies and anecdotes. …more
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Feb 27, 2013Morgan Blackledge rated it liked it
OMG Damasio is a hand full.

I think he's trying to kill me.

The book starts out very readable (which is uncharacteristic of Damasio), then (about half way through) the book becomes nearly unreadable (which is typical of Damasio).

I am an educated reader. I teach affective and developmental psychology. I am not a researcher or a specialist but I can say that none of the material in this book is unfamiliar to me. But I'm often lost as to the larger point Damasio is trying to make.

I attribute this to Damasio's prolix writing style. Much of the book feels like he's barfing data onto page after page with out connecting any of it back to the central metaphor of the book.

I find this to be the case with a lot of European intellectuals. They (big generalization, lots of exceptions e.g. Dawkins) don't seem to value economy, clarity or functionality in their writing. The older I get, the more I respect writers who do.

I'll finish this book, I'll read the rest of his books, but dear god what a chore.. (less)
flag108 likes · Like · 10 comments · see review

Paul Mertens Funny how different people can have different experiences with the same book! I think it was one of the most concise books I've ever read; especially ...more
Apr 21, 2015 04:04AM · flag


Jim Nubiola Totally agree with your comment. Nonetheless, is a magnificent book and worth the extra reading effort.
Jan 11, 2016 04:13PM · flag


Morgan Blackledge Hey guys. Thanks for the comments. I just want to clarify a few things.

When I wrote that the book was "challenging" I didn't mean it was hard to understand the concepts.

It's not challenging in that way.

It's challenging in the sense that it's unclearly written.

It unnecessarily challenges the readers patients when it takes 100 pages to make a point less clearly that other authors accomplish in 10.

Other writers make the same points as Demassio in much more direct, more concise ways.

What was the point he was making exactly?

That emotions guide (or bias) behavior and decision-making?

O.k. thanks for the 300 extra pages of poetry.

The point I was trying to make was that many European intellectuals from Dimasio's generation (particularly purveyors of critical theory like Leotard and Baoudrillard) often confused being obtuse for artfulness and depth.

That shit flew in the 90's but in the Information Age, editing is king and parsimony and economy are the new markers of brilliance.

You have to admit.

Sometimes Demassio gets a little wordy.

I love Demassio, and yes this is an important book for its time.

But I think other more recent authors such as Harris (the king of the 100 page razed sharp treatise on ridiculously difficult subjects such as consciousness and free will) have stood on his shoulders and said more with less.

The real point I would like to make is that today's reader may not want to start their exploration of affective neuroscience with this particular book.

It's wonderful but unnecessarily circuitous in its argument, and why (exactly) would one chose that over more contemporary, more clear options.

That is, unless they were trying to look smart on good reads.

I don't know what reading a text diagonally means exactly but I'm pretty sure I read it from left to right just like you.

And I agree that it's worth the extra effort, after all. I read it and finished it and read a bunch of his other shit.

Both of those comments (particularly Paul's) seem like passive aggressive slights engineered to imply that my read was one dimensional, uninformed or lazy. This is simply not the case.

I'm only trying to (a) take a humorous poke at a revered book, and (b) save a potential new reader 10.00, 13 or so hours of valued reading time and (c) normalize the confusion and frustration a lot of people have with this particular book and author.

Don't get me wrong though.

I love the man and his work. (less)
Jan 17, 2016 11:50AM · flag


Oolalaa > The real point I would like to make is that today's reader may not want to start their exploration of affective neuroscience with this particular bo ...more
Aug 21, 2016 04:19PM · flag


Morgan Blackledge Richie Davidson's The Emotional Life of Your Brain is a nice introduction for the regular guy/gal ...more
Mar 19, 2017 07:33PM · flag


Justin Thanks for the The Emotional Life of Your Brain suggestion!
Mar 21, 2017 07:45AM · flag


Sippy I like clear 'economic' and information dense writing too. However, this is not a European problem exclusively. I come across (mainly) American writer ...more
Jul 19, 2017 07:11AM · flag


Tryn I was going to ask for a recommendation- but Oohlala beat me to it! Thanks to you both!
Oct 28, 2017 01:12AM · flag


Black Spring Paul's comment did not seem like a passive aggressive sleight and you saying so made me question the soundness of the rest of your perspective. (less)
Apr 23, 2020 05:11PM · flag


Morgan Blackledge Black: sorry about it.

I just reread Paul and Jim’s comments.

I’m standing by my retort.

It was a little salty.

And it’s 4 years old.

But the point I was making stands.

Paul and Jim’s comments imply that my criticism of the book was due to lack of sophistication (Paul) and lack of effort (Jim).

I called it out.

And I stand by what I said.

I’m sorry you found it off putting.

I’ll try to be nicer and less dickish I the future. (less)
May 24, 2020 06:35PM · flag





Nov 27, 2012Sean rated it it was amazing
I read Descartes' Error as an undergraduate. In grad school, I learned that my advisor's wife (herself a neuroscientist of some renown) had a very poor opinion of Damasio's work. However, by that point, this book had already changed my life.

Damasio provides here a popular account of research in neuroscience that started with the famous case of Phinneas Gage, who, upon having a railroad spike shoved through his head by an explosion, changed from being an upstanding, reliable citizen into a scurrilous bastard with a gambling problem. From this, as well as experimental work with other victims of brain damage, Damasio draws the conclusion that "reason" as we typically think of it is not an abstract process, but a fundamentally embodied one: the brain and the body are in constant communication, and the brain uses feedback from the body to evaluate, prune, and select for further exploration the branches of a decision tree that, for even the most minor of problems ("when should we get together next?") would be otherwise unmanageably large.

My interest in cognitive science and neuroscience were the natural outgrowths of my interest in computers and science fiction. I grew up, as did most people of my generation, with the metaphor of the mind as a computer, executing logical programs in a way that would have made Aristotle - and Descartes - proud. I knew from studies of psychology how apparently irrational the human mind could be, but until I read this book, I always thought the mind was, fundamentally, a separate thing from the body. This book convinced me they are, at least as we implement them, inseparable. (less)
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Dec 22, 2018Manuel Antão rated it liked it
Shelves: 1994
If you're into stuff like this, you can read the full review.



Life Is but a Dream: "Descartes' Error: Emotion, Reason and the Human Brain" by António R. Damásio




(Original Review, 1994-11-17)




Dave Chalmers did a great job of making consciousness popular but his own view was 400 years out of date. Descartes is the real rigorous physicist here - he was after all one of the people who devised physics. What he meant by the soul and God being 'spirit' is that they caused matter to move. Matter for Descartes was just the inert occupancy of a space (extension). So physics consisted of the interaction of spirit and matter. We now call spirit 'force' or 'energy' and Descartes was quite right because thinking is all about electromagnetic fluxes - which in themselves do not occupy space or have mass. His mistake was to think that there had to be one special spirit unit. Leibniz sorted that out in 1714. (less)
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Jan 27, 2009Dwight Cates rated it really liked it
Rene Descartes was a 17th French philosopher and scientist, often called the father of modern philosophy. Descartes argued that 'mind' is an essence that exists independent of 'brain' - this is known as 'Cartesian Dualism.' In 'Descartes' Error', Antonio Damasio argues persuasively that that mind is inextricably linked to brain - when you change the physical brain in specific, measurable ways, you induce specific and measurably changes in mind - personality and behavior.
Damasio illustrates this through numerous examples, drawn from patients who've exerienced brain damage due to trauma or disease, and emerged from the experience with a new personality and mental abilities.
Given the evidence, it's very difficult to argue that the 'mind' or 'soul' is a non-material essence that exists independent of the physical structure of the brain. (less)
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Jan 07, 2009Corey rated it really liked it
Shelves: psychology
I had an unusually ambivalent reaction to this book and alternated between being fascinated and being, well, slightly bored. I'd say that the book is good and the author has some excellent insights, but he gets a little long-winded at times and tends to meander. For the curious, Descarte's "error" was the separation of mind and body, and consequently, an artificial dichotomy between rationality and emotion. Damasio makes an excellent case on neurological grounds that rationality simply doesn't work without emotion. (less)
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Feb 03, 2011Ade Bailey rated it it was amazing
Having read and become involved with his later books, I have gone to the first in a series which explains the difference between emotion and feeling, which makes the mind and body one again, and which profoundly disturbs the comfortable idea of any but conventional separation of 'reason' and the passions.

Damasio is of the 'sufficient but not necessary' strand when it comes to looking at the relationship between brain and mind: you can't be human with the attributes of feelings, emotions, memory and so on without a brain, but all of the attributes relate to things beyond the brain (in particular, the body). I'm a little puzzled as to why he looks forward to a time when 'we' will understand such a thing as aesthetic response. I am not sure, for one, that we are much further than Plato in beginning to understand aesthetics so finding even neural correlates with 'aesthetic states' seems conceptually doomed; more importantly it feeds into the current neuromanic slop that assumes with the intellectual grasp of a five year old that a mood state, a feeling, something like an aesthetic adjective are simple labels to 'things' that exist with the solidity of a stone. As I say, Damasio is aware of the dangers but sometimes, apart from inserted disclaimers, his enthusiasm for his subject tends to imply that while he is very good on the brain he has less of a grasp on the psychology, and of the immense conceptual complexities of enculturation.

For all sorts of reasons though, I'll give this five stars - not least because it's enjoyable and a highly accessible primer to some of the basic anatomy and hypothesised functions of the brain, and, most importantly, its embodiment: we separate brain from body only for conventional convenience. I find that Damasio's work fits (for me) with Lakoff and Johnson (especially relating to the embodied mind), Mark Turner (The Literary Mind), and Chambers, Clark et al (the extended mind).

(less)
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Aug 05, 2008Laura Grabowski rated it it was amazing
Shelves: non-fiction-science
I was captivated and fascinated by this book, start to finish. The book addresses the importance of emotion in cognition, thus pointing out Descartes' error in separating mind from body. In many ways, this book simply affirms things that I have "known" for many years, having spent 20+ years as a dancer/choreographer, but Damasio's perspective as a neuroscientist provides additional and compelling insights. I recommend this book to anyone interested in cognition, psychology, philosophy, arts, or science -- basically, to just about anyone. (less)
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Jul 19, 2010Nathan rated it really liked it
Ignore my bias of working in a body-centered cognitive neuroscience laboratory (whose nascence was likely inspired by researchers such as Demasio), but Demasio's theory resonates as a particularly well-informed "big-level" brain theory. I've read a number of others who attempt to explain away a lot of the mysteries of the brain by big-level theories, but Demasio turns out to build one of the more compelling set of explanations based mostly on evidence from his years of research in dissociation s ...more
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Feb 28, 2020Tina rated it it was ok
Shelves: age-23, stem
Two words: Very Dry.

Book is not suited for layman readers. If you have not taken a university-levelled neurobiology course, you will be lost. You must be familiar with neuroanatomy before diving into this book, it makes for a smoother read (but still very taxing).

Damasio's research a nutshell: emotions are just as equally important as reason in decision making. Patients with neocortical damage in prefrontal cortex of brain are unique cases of "functional beings without any affects" -- they maintain their IQ and all relevant physiological control, except the use of emotions. This results in alienation in all social circumstances. They essentially become social deviants, unable to make any effective (or acceptable) decisions in any situations.

BTW: descartes' OWN philosophy has nothing to do with this book. Rather, Damasio critiqued the schools of Rationality (and ancient Stoics for that matter) -- how it undermined the importance of FEELINGS in all capacities. Reason and logic? Not enough. If Reason and Logic were the ONLY qualities required to make effective decisions, then Damasio's patients would've been the "Ideal Rational Being". But instead these patients were shunned by family and friends, lost their jobs, cannot maintain any effective interpersonal relationships.

So, kids, feel those feels. go nuts. (less)
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Dec 07, 2016Julian rated it did not like it
very bad. the title takes on a literal meaning as this book is good for:

1. a further explication but just largely a complete repetition of Descartes' philosophy under the guise of a 'correction'
2. never pointing out any errors Descartes actually made, and falling in to all of the same traps Descartes did, most of which were pointed out in the 17th century. (less)
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May 24, 2011Joshua Stein rated it really liked it
Shelves: mind, science
Damasio's book is terrific, and works both as an introduction and a good guide for those studying neuroscience and cognitive science. The scientific case studies are easily accessible and thorough (it features, by far, the most thorough assessment of the Phineas Gage case that I've come across) as are the discussions of circuitry. Damasio does use some unqualified terms, but he does a reasonable job at keeping the very technical discussions brief or relatively well qualified by the context of the case studies.

There are a lot of areas that Damasio glosses over, but that is largely because he is attempting to cover a fairly massive scope, in terms of science. The text really is about the science, and it is only towards the end that Damasio really begins to address the philosophical assessment, at all. There are some interesting methodological considerations for those who are approaching this book from the "philosophy of mind" bent, as I am. I strongly recommend paying attention to Damasio's relatively interchangeable use of functions usually seen as properties of mind, and the the circuitry of the brain. Damasio is a brilliant writer, and there is a lot of thought put into that particular assessment of causal relationships.

The assessments of evolutionary psychology are very interesting, though I do have some skepticism with regard to some of Damasio's claims about genetics and the development of the brain, as he is not entirely clear about the role of genetics in the emergence of structures in the brain. There's a sort of weird micro/macrostructure distinction that isn't entirely clear to me, and I wish that portion of the text had been more lucid.

That is really nit-picky, though. I think that, overall, this is one of the best books on the subject that I have come across. I really like Damasio's writing style, though the asides can be a little rough, and feel a bit disjointed. Overall, this is a terrific overview of the science and the repercussions on philosophical theories, both historical and contemporary. Damasio doesn't present this as a screed against Descartes (which would be gratuitous, as writers like Dan Dennett have already beaten that horse well to deal at this point) but instead allows his account of the brain to be taken in its proper philosophical context. Definitely a terrific text. (less)
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Oct 21, 2008Jon Stout rated it really liked it
Recommends it for: fatalists, masters of their destinies
Shelves: philosophy
Antonio Damasio has written a fascinating book, taking as his point of departure a nineteenth century case of a man named Gage who had an iron spike neatly blown through his brain in a mining accident. Gage seemed to retain all of his faculties, amazingly enough, but failed in his later life due to emotional problems. Damasio, a neurologist, uses the case to explore the relationship between emotions and the neurological structure of the brain.

A friend recommended this book to me because of our mutual interest in the philosophical problem of free will, especially as illuminated by the nature of the emotions. Damasio addresses these problems by showing how emotions are related to a particular portion of the brain (ventro-medial cortex), and how emotions function on a basic level as instinctual (non-voluntary) responses to environmental situations. As animals evolve or as human beings grow up, the brain develops these instinctual responses to have a conscious, cognitive component (free, rational thinking) while still using the mechanisms of the primitive instincts.

Damasio reacts to Descartes by criticizing his mind-body dualism, although this is old hat. Seemingly everybody since Descartes has knocked the dualism and still made use of the mind-body distinction.

My favorite part is Damasio's discussion of how one's emotional life plays an important part in rational thinking, by recalling bodily feelings which give a coloration to this line of reasoning or that. My analogy would be that emotions are like the sound box of a guitar, which gives timber and resonance to the vibration of the strings. John Dewey quotes George Santayana as talking about the "hushed reverberations" which give richness to life. These are the emotions, as Damasio describes them neurologically. (less)
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Sep 26, 2021Marcel Santos rated it really liked it · review of another edition
A vast, mysterious, and fascinating theme addressed by probably one of the masters of neuroscience. The book covers the interaction between human rationality and feelings, how they are processed in our brains, how our bodies influence the whole process, and the resulting behaviors. An issue until not so long ago relegated mainly to philosophers (hence the reference to Descartes — cogito ergo sum, I think therefore I am), it has been increasingly elucidated by neuroscience, as detailed by the author.

Damásio’s premise is clear: the cliché which separates reason and emotion is simply wrong. Even though this seems obvious, the fact is that areas of knowledge (such as Economics, with its model of “Rational Man”) or even common sense (“listen to you heart”) have been affirming such separation, either just for methodological purposes or simply ignorance.

The book starts captivating, with an exciting narrative of a famous case of personality shift after an accident in a specific part of a person’s brain, even though all rational and organic functions were kept unaltered.

It is an outstanding read until about a third of the way through as the author refers to similar clinical cases and draws the differences in behavior depending on the part of the brain affected. Then, the author practically abandons anecdotes, and starts using dry, technical language to focus on his abstract theses describing how human brains work in processing different stimuli, the chains of reactions inside the brain and body involved, and the types of behavior produced. There are references to interesting research in the field here and there, though the book turns out to be mainly theoretical.

The book reflects the extreme difficulty in speaking to the greater public about neuroscience without counting on them holding prior knowledge of brain anatomy and human biology. If it weren’t for the general broad theme and thesis of the book and the anecdotal examples, mainly in the beginning and in one or another part in the middle, the book would be solely a technical book.

The general ideas and theses defended are inspiring anyway, making the read worthwhile for those interested in neuroscience. (less)
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Apr 25, 2021Madalena Simões rated it really liked it · review of another edition
Damásio takes us on a journey that explores the reasoning behind what we do, think and feel as humans. He does so by presenting real and interesting case studies at the same time as dilemmas that characterize us as human beings. The way Damásio explains how the mind correlates to our actions and its importance on our physical well being is absolutely riveting and worth reading!
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Nov 02, 2009Jeremy Lent rated it it was amazing
I’ve been reading Damasio “backwards”. One of the first books I read three years ago to try to understand the neuroscientific view of consciousness was Damasio’s The Feeling of What Happens: Body and Emotion in the Making of Consciousness published in 1999. That gave me a solid grounding in Damasio’s view of embodied consciousness, which has become a foundation of my thinking. Later, I came across Damasio’s paper on the somatic marker hypothesis, which powerfully rejects the idea that abstract thinking can take place without a direct connection to the body’s bio-regulatory processes.

With this context, when I finally read Descartes’ Error, (probably Damasio’s most cited book), it had some of the characteristics of a quaint, historical document, making the case for embodied cognition as though it were a radical new idea: “Surprising as it may sound, the mind exists in and for an integrated organism.” I guess that shows the enormous impact Damasio himself (and others such as Edelman, LeDoux, etc.) have had in changing perceptions about consciousness in a mere fifteen years. Thanks to these ground-breaking neuroscientists, “we’ve come a long way, baby.”

I can only agree with the array of distinguished names that cite Descartes’ Error as a key book for understanding human consciousness. Through Damasio, Phineas Gage has become a household name (in certain households!) – the emblematic tragic figure whose prefrontal cortex was severely damaged in 1848, and whose consequent experiences paved the way for the neurological understanding of the prefrontal importance in regulation of emotion, complex decision-making and general executive functioning.

I think there are two fundamental take-aways from Damasio’s classic: (1) the mind is embodied and without this foundation, no approaches to higher cognitive functions or theories of consciousness have much validity, and (2) the prefrontal cortex (pfc) is the crucial mediator between our “innate regulatory circuits” and our self-aware consciousness, with its attributes of reason, willpower, symbolization, abstraction, etc.

Damasio’s work is a significant resource for my research project. However, an initial impression of my thesis of “the tyranny of the pfc” might be that it’s incompatible with Damasio. After all, if the pfc is the key bridge between bodily regulation and self-awareness, how can there be a “tyranny” of the pfc? And what sense does my distinction of conceptual and animate consciousness make if conceptual consciousness is fundamentally connected with animate consciousness? In fact, though, my approach is not only consistent with Damasio, it relies squarely on the work of Damasio and others for its evidence.

My argument is not that an individual’s prefrontal cortex is, by itself, a “tyrant” of our consciousness, but that our Western cultural milieu, imposed on an infant’s perceptions before s/he has even learned to speak, shapes the individual brain in such a way that our sense of identity and values give an inappropriate priority to pfc-mediated attributes (such as planning, reason, abstraction, logic, etc.) at the expense of a balanced self-identity emphasizing such attributes as integrated mind/body experience or full awareness of the present moment.

Here’s a key passage from the book which relates to my notion of a split between animate and conceptual consciousness:

From an evolutionary perspective, the oldest decision-making device pertains to basic biological regulation; the next, to the personal and social realm; and the most recent, to a collection of abstract-symbolic operations under which we can find artistic and scientific reasoning, utilitarian-engineering reasoning, and the developments of language and mathematics. But although ages of evolution and dedicated neural systems may confer some independence to each of these reasoning/decision-making ‘modules,’ I suspect they are all interdependent.

What Damasio describes as the “collection of abstract-symbolic operations” is essentially the same as my idea of “conceptual consciousness.” As he pointedly emphasizes, they are “interdependent.” But Plato, St. Augustine, Descartes and the whole momentum of Western civilization have idealized the conceptual consciousness as “the soul,” as the proof of our very existence, and as the foundation for science and civilization. It’s only when we begin to re-balance our values to give equal import to our bodily existence that we can begin to move towards a ‘democracy of consciousness.’

So thanks, Antonio Damasio, for your ground-breaking classic. Highly recommended for anyone with an interest in gaining a serious understanding of human consciousness. (less)
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Dec 06, 2009Tippy Jackson rated it really liked it
Shelves: science-history, disease, medicine, neurology
This review has been hidden because it contains spoilers. To view it, click here. I was just finishing up chapter 8, the somatic-marker hypothesis. I find this idea fascinating! What it made me think of, interestingly enough, was my old Social Science class. My teacher had said that we are born with only a few innate behaviors and everything else is learned. Because we are learning everything we know, it is so deeply ingrained in us, that even when we actively try to be objective and to sort of turn off our cultural bias, it is impossible. He pointed to the book Return to Laughter as an example. He was explaining that this is one of the biggest challenges of anthropology. But after reading this hypothesis, it makes me think of that again. Not only is much of what we know and do culturally learned, but what we learn is even marked in our brain to help us make quick decisions! (Or rather our brain connected specific classes of stimuli with specific classes of somatic state, and our automated somatic-marker device is based on the "education to the standards of rationality of that [our:] culture." It is in effect a marker based on our secondary emotions) This book has really done a compelling job of explaining this hypothesis, both biologically and circumstantially. I appreciate its thoroughness and originality. I picked this book up because I've seen it referenced over and over again in many animal intelligence or animal mind books and I wanted to see what the fuss was about. That being said, I'm coming at this book from a zoologist perspective, not a neurologist perspective, so I haven't really been keeping up with current ideas in the brain science world. So far, reading what I have has made me want to go and look up more current research on this idea. This book was published in '94, but it seems that many more current books are referencing it and now I'm really curious to find out if these ideas have been tested more or what other ideas there are out there.

Also, I love that he opened with Phineas Gage and his use of case studies is very helpful.

Having finished the book now, there are a few other things he brings up which I found interesting. He distinguishes between pain and suffering, which is referenced in animals in translation. Essentially, he explains that suffering has an emotional component. Pain can be simply the physical responses, i.e. neurons firing, hormones/neurotransmitters released. He uses examples from humans who have had a leucotomy. Also, he defines the difference between feelings and emotions. He specifies that acknowledging that there is a physical (and rational) component to feelings/emotions does not mean that prescription drugs should necessarily be used for treating emotions, or performing any treatment that ignores the mind-body relationship, which he also throughly details. He explains that what we refer to as the mind cannot exist without receiving feedback from the body as he ponders the "brain hooked up to electrodes" question. (less)
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Descartes' Error: Emotion, Reason, and the Human Brain Paperback – Illustrated, 1 September 2005

by Antonio R Damasio (Author)

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From the Back Cover

"Although I cannot tell for certain what sparked my interest in the neural underpinnings of reason, I do know when I became convinced that the traditional views on the nature of rationality could not be correct". Thus begins a book that takes the reader on a journey of discovery, from the story of Phineas Gage, the famous nineteenth-century case of behavioral change that followed brain damage, to the contemporary recreation of Gage's brain; and from the doubts of a young neurologist to a testable hypothesis concerning the emotions and their fundamental role in rational human behavior. Drawing on his experiences with neurological patients affected by brain damage (his laboratory is recognized worldwide as the foremost center for the study of such patients), Antonio Damasio shows how the absence of emotion and feeling can break down rationality. In the course of explaining how emotions and feelings contribute to reason and to adaptive social behavior, Damasio also offers a novel perspective on what emotions and feelings actually are: a direct sensing of our own body states, a link between the body and its survival-oriented regulations, on the one hand, and consciousness, on the other. Descartes' Error leads us to conclude that human organisms are endowed from the very beginning with a spirited passion for making choices, which the social mind can use to build rational behavior.

About the Author

Antonio Damasio, a neurologist and neuroscientist, is at the University of Southern California, where he directs a new brain research institute dedicated to the study of emotion and creativity. He is also an adjunct professor at the Salk Institute. The recipient of numerous awards (several shared with his wife Hanna Damasio, also a neurologist and neuroscientist), he is a member of the Institute of Medicine of the National Academy of Sciences and a fellow of the American Academy of Arts and Sciences. He is the author of two other widely acclaimed books, The Feeling of What Happens and Looking for Spinoza.

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Product details

Publisher ‏ : ‎ Penguin Books; Illustrated edition (1 September 2005)

Language ‏ : ‎ English

Paperback ‏ : ‎ 336 pages

ISBN-10 ‏ : ‎ 014303622X

ISBN-13 ‏ : ‎ 978-0143036227

Reading age ‏ : ‎ 18 years and up

Dimensions ‏ : ‎ 12.83 x 1.47 x 19.56 cm

Best Sellers Rank: 173,739 in Books (See Top 100 in Books)

165 in Mathematical Logic

659 in Neuroscience (Books)

724 in Philosophy of Consciousness & Thought

Customer Reviews: 4.5 out of 5 stars 323 ratings

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Top review from Australia

Adam Johnson

5.0 out of 5 stars An important foundational book for so much of contemporary thinking

Reviewed in Australia on 7 March 2019

Descartes Error opens with a story that has surely gained a life of its own by now. The story of the most unfortunate Phineas Gage who sustained a horrific injury from a steel tamping rod passing through his brain. The story is compelling because, not only did Gage survive, but he seemed to survive without harm. He could walk, talk, think and all of the things you’d expect.




Except he wasn’t without harm. To steal the punchline, he sustained an injury that left him unable to function properly in society. Damasio hypothesizes, based on similar cases with similar injuries, that Gage lost his ability to connect emotion into reasoning, and ultimately lost his ability to make judgements about preferred future states.




This book is now over 20 years old, and it remains a classic in neuroscience. Its central hypothesis is the “somatic marker” hypothesis, which essentially states that reason is connected to embodied emotion. That decision making isn’t just rational and disembodied, but it is also connected deeply into feelings across the body.




These feelings, or somatic markers, enable certain options to be prioritised over others. Somatic markers are informed by the continual, day to day senses, decisions and consequences. The are, in this sense, emergent. They can be conscious or unconscious, but what they do is facilitate “rational” decision making in the complex world that makes up human society. So much so that, without them (as demonstrated by Damasio’s case studies), people are paralysed in their decision making.




Emotions are vital for rational thought. And that fact that this statement is relatively uncontroversial is sign of how significant this book has become. Its subject matter has led to a vast array of writing around the neuroscience of decision making, the self, and how to potentially overcome these embodied emotions. It has led to the recognition that the body and how it processes emotion is critical for how to enhance the performance of the mind, and similarly how the mind is vitally important for how the body functions.




A fascinating book that provides the baseline for so much of what is out in the marketplace of ideas around decision making and emotion. A book that is at times heavy reading, but is for the most part a ripping yarn that rearranges a number of pieces of the human puzzle to derive a compelling hypothesis for how we think.

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nicholas hargreaves

4.0 out of 5 stars Organismic Feedback Loop Theory

Reviewed in the United Kingdom on 8 March 2012

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After having read "The Feeling of What Happens" I thought I'd give this earlier work by the same author a read,as I have recently come across numerous references to it that elevate it to somewhat of a classic in its field.

The first one hundred pages read like a dream and I mistakenly thought that the author had saved his verbose and prolix style for his later works,but then I found I had been lulled into a false sense of security,by which time I was in too deep.The rest of the book took a considerable effort to finish,as to understand a great deal of it requires one to read then re-read a sentence,then deliberate on it until its meaning becomes apparent in your own linguistic terms.This method is taxing to say the least and a vast amount of concentration was required for reading anymore than 10 pages at a time,but due to the interesting nature of the material one remains motivated to proceed further,and by the end of the book you are in no doubt as to the information that has been imparted.

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Marius Francu

5.0 out of 5 stars Glad that I read it

Reviewed in the United Kingdom on 7 January 2019

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I am working in IT business. Is time to cross the corridors of the other disciplines and see how these handled/discovered/managed stuff we are struggling with. Is a neuroscience book, don't expect to be an easy read. I decided to read all books written by Antonio Damasio because of risk related work. But soon I discovered that his books and the other of his books are a good trigger, at least for me, for other useful ideas regarding programming, testing, management.

2 people found this helpful

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‘도산철학과 씨알철학’ 책소개

 ‘도산철학과 씨알철학’ 소개

책소개
이성적 관념의 철학에서 주체적 생명의 철학으로
인간에게 ‘나’는 무엇인가? 그것이 주도적이어야 하는가 아니면 그것을 억제해야 하는가? 유교는 극기와 수기를 말함으로써 나를 누르고 닦으려 했고, 도교는 무위자연을 내세우며 나를 자연의 법도와 질서에 순응하게 하려고 했으며, 불교는 무아와 멸아를 말하여 나를 부정하고 초월하려 하였다. 그러나 저자는 이러한 동양 종교 일반에서 가지는 태도에 반하는 면모를 함석헌과 유영모 연구에서 가지게 되었다. 어떻게 그들은 ‘나’를 중심과 전면에 내세우게 되었는가 하는 의문이 그것이었다. 그리고 이런 의문은 안창호 연구에서 깨끗이 풀렸다고 술회한다. 저자에 따르면, 안창호는 시종일관 나를 중심에 놓고 전면에 내세웠다. “안창호는 나라를 잃고 종살이하는 한민족 한 사람 한 사람의 ‘나’를 나라의 주인과 주체로 깨워 일으켜 나라의 독립과 통일 운동에 앞장서게 했다. 국민 한 사람 한 사람의 ‘나’를 중심에 놓고 생각하고 행동한 안창호는 ‘나’의 철학자였다. 유영모와 함석헌의 씨알철학을 깊이 이해하고 씨알철학을 완성하기 위해서 반드시 안창호의 사상을 연구해야 한다고 생각했다.” 저자는 도산철학과 씨알철학이 동 · 서 정신문화의 만남과 민중의 주체적 자각으로 전개된 한국 근 · 현대가 낳은 생명철학이라고 규정한다. 국가권력과 지배이념에서 자유로웠던 안창호, 유영모, 함석헌은 동 · 서 정신문화를 깊이 받아들이고 인생과 역사, 사회와 국가에 대하여 자유롭게 생각하여 민주적인 생명철학을 닦아냈다고 보는 것이다. 이러한 철학 사상은 20세기에 한정되지 않는 미래의 새로운 패러다임을 제시한 철학이며, ‘나’의 삶을 저마다 저답게 살려는 다음 세대의 젊은이들이 담지하는 철학이라는 것이다.
목차
머리말
들어가는 말
1. 나는 이 책을 어떤 동기에서 썼는가?
2. 어떤 관점에서 썼는가?
3. 어떤 내용을 썼는가?
4. 21세기와 도산 사상
제1부_ 도산 안창호의 철학
1장 이성의 철학에서 생명철학으로
1. 이성의 철학
2. 생명의 철학
3. 안창호는 철학자인가?
2장 도산철학의 배경
1. 역사의 깊은 어둠 속에서 진리의 빛을 밝힌 안창호의 생애
2. 시대 문화적 배경과 전환
3장 도산철학의 탄생과 형성
1. 낡은 철학에서 새로운 철학으로
2. 철학의 탄생
3. 철학의 형성과정
4장 도산철학의 위치와 특징
1. 인식론적 특권과 철학의 위치: 관념적 인식론과 물질적 존재론에서 생명철학으로
2. 철학의 성격과 특징
5장 나의 확립과 민주정신의 철학: 나는 어떻게 민주시민이 되는가?
1. 나의 발견과 확립: 나는 어떻게 나가 되는가?
2. 민주의 길: 어떻게 나는 민주시민이 되는가?
3. 민주정신과 철학
4. 민주시민의 자기 수양과 교육
6장 과학적 합리성과 무실역행의 철학: 나는 어떻게 진실한 삶을 살 수 있는가?
1. 과학적 사고와 주체적 실천의 철학
2. 인과율의 확장과 주체적 힘의 철학
3. 무실역행의 철학
4. 비신화화, 비종교화, 탈케리그마화: 개조와 진보의 철학
7장 민족통일과 세계평화의 길: 안창호는 어떻게 민족통일과 세계평화의 길로 갔는가?
1. 민주·통일·평화의 생명철학
2. 안창호는 어떻게 민족통일과 세계평화의 길로 갔는가?
제2부_ 한국 근현대철학의 계보: 안창호, 이승훈, 유영모, 함석헌
8장 도산철학의 역사적 실천적 계보
1. 안창호·이승훈이 일으킨 교육독립운동
2. 안창호, 이승훈, 유영모, 함석헌의 역사철학적 계보
9장 도산철학과 씨알철학의 연속성
1. 삶과 정신의 연속성: 한국 근현대 정신과 철학을 형성한 도산·남강·다석·씨알
2. 도산철학과 씨알철학의 생명철학적 연속성
3. 도산철학과 씨알철학의 상황적 연속성: 나라를 잃고 빈들에서 헤매며 독립의 철학을 형성하다
4. 도산철학과 씨알철학의 세계 보편적 연속성: 동서 정신문화를 아우르는 세계철학
10장 주체의 깊이에서 전체의 하나 됨에 이르는 ‘나’의 철학
1. 안창호의 ‘나’ 철학: 자아혁신, 애기애타, 세계대공
2. ‘나’의 속에서 전체의 ‘하나’로 솟아올라 나아간 유영모의 ‘나’ 철학
3. 나의 속 생명의 바다에서 생각으로 나를 낚은 함석헌의 씨알철학
11장 동서양을 아우르는 철학의 실마리: 생명을 살리는 생각의 철학
1. 생명철학과 이성 철학
2. 생명철학적 생각 이해
3. 서양철학의 생각 이해에 대한 생명철학적 비판
4. 함석헌의 ‘나와 세상을 살리는 생각’
12장 도산철학과 씨알철학의 역사적 가치와 의미
1. 도산철학과 씨알철학의 역사적 가치와 의미
2. 서구 철학의 비판과 극복
참고문헌
저자 소개 박재순
서울대학교 철학과를 졸업하고 한신대학교에서 신학 박사학위를 받고, 한신대 연구 교수를 지냈다. 한국씨알사상연구소 소장으로서 2008년 세계철학자 대회에서 ‘유영모, 함석헌 철학 발표회’를, 2009년 한일철학대회 ‘씨알학과 공공철학의 대화’를 주관하였다. 저서로는 다석 유영모의 철학과 사상』, 함석헌의 철학과 사상』, 삼일운동의 정신과 철학』, 애기애타: 안창호의 삶과 사상』이 있으며, 논문으로 ‘도산 안창호의 마을공화국 철학’이 있다.
책 속으로
물질론과 관념론은 물질, 생명, 정신으로 이루어진 인간과 우주의 세계를 이해하고 설명하는 데 적합하지 않다. 마르크스의 물질론적 변증법에 따르면 사회의 하부구조인 물질적 생산력이 발달하면 생산관계가 변화하고 생산관계가 변화하면 상부구조인 인간의 의식과 정신, 관계와 제도도 변화하고 발전해간다. 물질적 생산력의 발달은 기존의 생산관계 및 상부구조와 모순 대립하게 되고 결국 생산관계와 상부구조의 변화와 발달을 가져온다.
그러나 아무리 복잡하고 교묘하게 설명을 해도 물질론적 변증법에 의한 변화와 발전은 물질론적 한계를 넘어서지 못한다. 물질적 생산력과 생산관계가 아무리 변화하고 발전해도 물질의 변화와 발전은 생명과 정신의 질적 초월적 변화를 위한 조건과 환경, 계기와 발판은 될 수 있어도 물질의 변화와 발전 자체가 생명과 정신의 질적 초월적 변화를 가져오지는 못한다. 헤겔의 관념론적 변증법도 관념론의 테두리를 벗어나지 못한다. 비물질적인 관념과 정신의 변증법적 변화는 물질적 현실과 몸을 가진 생명의 구체적인 삶에 영향을 미치는 데는 한계가 있다.
모든 관념론은 구체적이고 특별하고 다양한 생명의 주체를 제대로 파악하지도 드러내지도 못한다. 관념론은 물질에 이르지 못하고 물질론은 관념에 이르지 못한다. 물질론과 관념론은 인식주체인 이성과 인식대상인 물질의 대립적 관계 속에서 세상을 이해하고 설명하는 편향적이고 일방적인 설명체계일 뿐이다.
생명은 물질 안에서 물질을 초월하여 의식과 정신에 이른 것이고, 인간의 생명은 의식과 정신을 넘어서 얼과 뜻, 영혼과 신을 향해 나아가는 것이다. 물질 안에서 물질을 초월한 생명은 시공간적 제약과 구체성을 가지면서도 시공간적 제약과 속박을 초월하여 자신을 형성하고 심화 발전시켜가는 존재다. 생의 주체성, 전체성, 창조성은 물질 안에서 물질을 초월하는 것이며, 시공간적 현실성과 구체성 속에서 시공간적 제약과 속박을 넘어서 스스로 자기를 실현하고 완성해간다. 생명체는 몸과 의식이 통일된 구체적이고 현실적인 존재다. 인간은 몸, 맘, 얼이 통일된 구체적이고 현실적이며 주체적인 존재다. 인간과 우주의 세계는 물질과 생명과 영(정신, 얼)의 세 겹과 층으로 이루어져 있다.
물질과 생명, 인간과 우주의 세계를 이해하려면 인식주체와 인식대상의 관계에서만 보아서는 안 된다. 물질과 생명과 인간과 우주의 존재를 그 자체로부터 그리고 그것들의 상호주체적 관계와 변화발전의 역사적 과정에 비추어 이해하고 설명해야 한다. 물질론과 관념론은 물질과 생명, 인간과 우주의 통합적 존재와 관계, 주체적 변화과정과 지향을 이해하고 설명하는 데 전혀 적합하지 않다. 물질 안에서 물질을 초월하여 물질이 아닌 의식과 정신에 이른 생명은 물질과 의식을 통합한 것이다. 생명은 스스로 하는 주체이며 물질과 의식을 통합한 통일적 전체다. 생명은 주체와 전체의 통일 속에서 끊임없이 진화 발전해가는 것이다. 물질론과 관념론은 생명의 주체와 전체를 이해할 수도 설명할 수도 없다. 그것들은 물질과 생명과 정신과 신의 관계와 변화, 의미와 가치, 목적과 방향에 대해서 말할 수 없다.
---「1장_ 이성의 철학에서 생명철학으로」중에서
을사늑약으로 일본에게 나라의 주권을 잃자 도산은 1906년 말에 미국에서 ‘대한신민회취지서’(大韓新民會趣旨書)를 쓰고 한국에 돌아와서 신민회를 조직하고 민을 깨워 일으키는 교육독립운동을 벌이고 새로운 나라를 이루기 위한 혁신운동을 시작했다. ‘대한신민회취지서’를 보면 도산의 기본적인 사상과 철학이 이미 확립되어 있을 뿐 아니라 민족의 독립과 민주국가 건설을 위한 실천적인 구상과 방안이 마련되어 있음을 알 수 있다. 도산은 신민회의 목적과 방법을 제시하였다. 신민회의 목적은 “대한의 부패한 사상과 관습을 혁신하여 국민을 유신케 하며 쇠퇴한 교육과 산업을 개량하여 사업을 유신케 하며 유신한 국민이 통일 연합하여 유신한 자유문명국을 성립케 함”이다.
그 방법은 “… 신문 잡지 및 서적을 간행하여 인민의 지식을 계발케 할 일, 정미(精美)한 학교를 건설하여 인재를 양성할 일, … 합자로 실업장을 설립하여 실업계의 모범을 만들 일…”이다. 한국의 부패한 사상과 관습을 혁신하여 국민을 새롭게 하고 새롭게 한 국민이 통일 연합하여 새로운 자유문명국을 이루는 것이 도산의 사상과 실천을 관통하는 기본 내용이었다.
이 글에서 도산은 먼저 나라를 잃고 망하게 된 한국 사회를 분석하고 진단하였다. 한국 사회가 낡은 습관에 매어 있으며 거짓말과 허위로 가득 차 있고 공론공담과 당파싸움에서 벗어나지 못하고 있다고 도산은 한국 사회를 통렬하게 비판하였다. 또한 한국 사회는 약자를 압제하고 강자에게 의뢰하는 이중적이고 위선적인 사회라고 보았다. 한국 사회는 약자에게는 거만하고 강자에게는 굽실거리는 노예성질과 사대주의로 오염된 사회다. 나라의 주권을 되찾고 자유 문명국이 되려면 정치사회문화 교육도덕의 모든 분야를 쇄신해야 한다. 민의 새 정신을 일깨워 새 단체를 만들고 나아가 새 나라를 건설하는 것이 유신(維新)이다. 유신은 “심장을 토하고 피를 말려서 실행할 일”이다. 하늘의 도가 새로워지고 인간의 일을 새롭게 하는 유신의 시작과 끝은 민을 새롭게 하는 것이다. 도산은 ‘나-민’(我 民)이라는 말을 거듭 되풀이하면서 ‘나 민’이 새로워져야 한다고 역설하였다.
“나 민이 새롭지 않으면 누가 나의 대한을 사랑하고 나 민이 새롭지 않으면 누가 나의 대한을 보호하겠는가.” 도산이 ‘나-민’(我 民)이라는 말을 쓴 것은 민을 중립적이고 객관적으로만 보지 않고 국민 한 사람 한 사람을 주체적인 ‘나’의 관점과 자리에서 본 것을 의미한다. 그는 국민, 민중을 ‘나’(我)로 보았다. 그는 ‘나-민’을 새롭게 하고 민족사회의 온갖 낡은 습관과 버릇을 고치고 정신문화와 제도, 사상과 의식을 새롭게 하기 위해서 심장을 토하고 피를 말려가면서 헌신할 것을 다짐하고 “가시밭길 험한 길에도 나아갈 뿐 물러섬은 없을 것”이라고 약속하였다. 그에게 민의 ‘나’는 나의 심장을 토하고 피를 말려서 새롭게 해야 할 나 자신이다.
---「3장_ 도산철학의 탄생과 형성」중에서
안창호가 말한 인격개조는 추상적이고 관념적인 것이 아니라 구체적으로 나의 덕력과 체력과 지력을 기르는 것이다. 그는 하늘로부터 타고난 고정불변의 본성을 논하지 않았으며, 관념적 이성과 이념을 가지고 인간의 본성을 말하지도 않았다. 안창호에게 중요한 것은 능력 없는 인간이 능력 있는 인간으로 되는 것이었다. 능력 있는 인간이 되어 역사와 사회의 주인과 주체로서 할 일을 할 수 있는 존재가 되는 것이 중요했던 것이다. 안창호는 힘의 성격과 종류를 말했다. 기본적으로 힘은 인간 개인의 구체적이고 주체적 능력이다. 그래서 그는 개인의 인격이 덕과 체와 지로 이루어진다고 보고 덕력과 체력과 지력을 길러야 한다고 보았다. 개인의 인격적 힘에서 시작했지만 고립된 개인의 힘은 약하므로 더 큰 힘에 이르기 위해서 조직되고 단결된 집단과 민족의 통일된 힘을 강조했다. 따라서 그는 건전한 인격과 신성한 단결에서 힘이 나온다고 하였다. 그는 개인의 건전한 인격을 기르기 위해서 삼대육(덕력, 체력,지력의 양성)과 사대정신(務實,力行,忠義,勇敢)을 강조했다. 그리고 개인의 건전한 인격을 넘어서 조직과 단체의 공고한 단결을 강조하기 위해서 ‘신성단결’을 말했다. 건전한 인격과 공고한 단결은 개인적이건 집단적이건 아직 주관적이고 주체적이다. 이 힘이 사회와 역사에서 큰일을 이루려면 객관적이고 현실적인 힘으로 형성되어야 한다.
---「6장_ 과학적 합리성과 무실역행의 철학」중에서
생의 주체인 ‘나’가 곧 존재 이유와 목적이고 가치와 의미다. 생의 이유와 목적, 의미와 보람을 밖에서 찾을 필요가 없다. 다만 물질과 관념에 사로잡힌 ‘나’에서 참된 생명의 ‘나’로 새롭게 나아가야 한다. 물질과 관념에 사로잡힌 나는 타성에 젖은 거짓 나, 게으른 나이며 물질과 관념을 초월한 참된 생의 나는 자유롭고 기쁘고 창조적인 나다. 존재와 활동의 원인과 결과를 밖에 가진 물질세계는 타자에 대하여 닫혀져 있다. 그러나 물질세계를 초월하여 자기 안에 기쁨과 자유, 사랑과 희망을 가진 생의 주체는 타자에 대하여 무한히 열려 있으며 타자를 또 다른 나(주체)로서 그리워한다. 생의 주체는 타자와 서로 주체로서 기쁨과 사랑 속에서 새로워지고, 더 나아지려는 바람과 희망 속에서 사귐을 가지고 협동하려고 한다.
이런 생명의 본질과 특징에 비추어볼 때 통일과 평화의 첫째 철학원리는 ‘나’(주체)의 원리다. 생명의 중심과 주체는 ‘나’다. 생명이 생겨났다는 것은 ‘나’ 주체가 생겨났다는 것이다. 물질세계에서는 원인과 결과가 밖의 타자에게서 오므로 물질적 존재와 활동의 조건은 외부의 타자에 의해서 결정된다. 그러나 생명의 세계에서는 생명의 주체인 ‘나’ 안에 존재와 활동의 이유와 목적, 힘과 가치가 있다. 근본적으로 생명은 나에서 시작하여 나에게 돌아간다. 타자에 의존하거나 타자와의 만남과 관계에서 나를 찾거나 발견하고 확립하려는 것은 생명을 물질적 법칙과 환경적 조건에 가두고 그 법칙과 조건 속에서만 생의 주체를 보려는 것이다.
---「7장_ 민족통일과 세계평화의 길」중에서
안창호는 민족의 독립과 통일과 평화에 이르는 길을 열고 그 길로 나아간 사람이었다. 그가 개척하고 걸어갔던 민족의 평화와 통일의 길을 안창호가 체계적이고 종합적으로 제시하지는 않았다. 그의 사상과 실천의 원칙들에 비추어 보면 그가 걸어갔던 평화와 통일의 길이 보다 뚜렷이 드러날 것이다. 안창호가 제시한 사상과 실천의 원칙들은 앞에서 논의하는 과정에서 드러난 대로 공사병립, 활사개공, 대공정신, 애기애타, 무실역행, 충의용감이다.
앞의 공사병립, 활사개공, 대공정신은 국가의 양면을 이루는 공과 사의 구분과 통합과 실현에 대한 원칙과 방법이다. 이것은 생명의 주체와 전체를 통합 일치시키며 창조적 진화와 초월적 고양을 이루어가는 생명철학적 원칙들이다. 뒤의 애기애타, 무실역행, 충의용감은 공과 사를 통합하고 실현해가는 마음가짐과 지침을 나타낸 것이다. 다시 말해 애기애타, 무실역행, 충의용감은 공사병립, 활사개공, 대공정신을 실천하는 주체적인 원리다. 이 여섯 가지 원칙이 민족의 독립과 통일과 평화를 지향하는 도산의 사상과 실천을 체계적이고 종합적으로 설명할 수 있는 틀이다.
---「7장_ 민족통일과 세계평화의 길」중에서
출판사 리뷰
이 책은 도산철학과 씨알철학, 두 큰 주제에 따라서 2부로 구성되었다. 저자는 본 주제를 다루기에 앞서 서론에 대당하는 “들어가는 말”에서 이 책의 집필 동기와 관점 그리고 담는 내용을 제시한다. 기독교 서구는 죄인된 인간을 강조하고 그와 더불어 무력한 자아를 구원할 타자로서 신을 강조했기 때문에 ‘나’를 내세울 수 없었고, 인간의 자아를 이성으로 본 서양의 이성 철학에서는 자아와 타자가 모두 이성의 지배와 독점의 대상이 되었으므로, 탈현대주의는 이성 철학이 유지해온 관념적 자아의 해체를 강조하기에 이르렀다. 그러나 나라 잃은 한민족 구성원 하나 하나를 ‘나’라는 주인과 주체로 일깨워 독립과 통일 운동에 나서게 한 데서 그것을 극복할 실마리가 제시된다.
“제1부 도산 안창호의 철학”에서는 이렇게 ‘나’를 일깨운 도산철학을 7개 장으로 나누어 서술한다. 저자는 도산철학을 생명철학으로 규정하고, 생명철학이 형성되는 배경이 되는 과정을 안창호 개인, 역사와 당대의 문화 그리고 철학 사상적 배경까지 상세하게 풀어나간다. 1부의 나머지 부분에서 저자는 도산철학의 핵심 주제들을 다루어간다. 나는 어떻게 민주시민이 되는가? 나는 어떻게 진실한 삶을 살 수 있는가? 안창호는 어떻게 민족통일과 세계평화의 길로 갔는가? 저자는 이 질문들을 통해서 도산의 생각과 삶이 담지하고 있었던 생명철학을 정리해간다.
저자는 도산철학이 씨알철학으로 계승 발전되었다고 보았다. 함석헌은 늘 자신의 스승들로 도산 안창호, 남강 이승훈, 고당 조만식을 내세우며 존경을 표시하였다. 그것은 함석헌 사상이 도산 그리고 남강과 긴밀한 관련이 있음을 알려주는 증거임이 분명하고, 일련의 사승관계를 엿보게 하는 대목이기도 하다. 이승훈은 안창호의 교육이념과 정신을 따라서 오산학교를 세웠다. 이승훈은 3.1운동에 앞장섰을 때 오산학교에서 유영모와 함석헌을 만나면서 스승과 제자가 되었고 그로 인해 씨사상을 형성하게 되었다.
유영모와 함석헌의 씨알사상은 도산과 남강의 교육독립운동과 3.1운동의 역사적 배경에서 생겨났다는 것이다. “제2부 한국 근현대철학의 계보: 안창호, 이승훈, 유영모, 함석헌”에서는 5개 장에 걸쳐서 이 주제를 다룬다. 도산철학의 역사적 실천적 계보, 도산철학과 씨철학의 연속성, 또 전체의 하나 됨에 이르는 ‘나’ 철학의 문제 그리고 도산철학과 씨철학의 역사적 가치와 의미가 제2부에서 다루어진다.

現役引退の白鵬「相撲が大好き。幸せ者だなと思う」歴代最多の幕内1093勝&45回の優勝 (日本テレビ系(NNN)) - Yahoo!ニュース

現役引退の白鵬「相撲が大好き。幸せ者だなと思う」歴代最多の幕内1093勝&45回の優勝 (日本テレビ系(NNN)) - Yahoo!ニュース

2021/10/01

: Body and Emotion in the Making of Consciousness : Damasio, Antonio

Feeling of What Happens: Body and Emotion in the Making of Consciousness : Damasio, Antonio: Amazon.com.au: Books




The publication of this book is an event in the making. All over the world scientists, psychologists, and philosophers are waiting to read Antonio Damasio's new theory of the nature of consciousness and the construction of the self. 

A renowned and revered scientist and clinician, Damasio has spent decades following amnesiacs down hospital corridors, waiting for comatose patients to awaken, and devising ingenious research using PET scans to piece together the great puzzle of consciousness. 

In his bestselling Descartes' Error, Damasio revealed the critical importance of emotion in the making of reason. 

Building on this foundation, he now shows how consciousness is created. Consciousness is the feeling of what happens-our mind noticing the body's reaction to the world and responding to that experience. Without our bodies there can be no consciousness, which is at heart a mechanism for survival that engages body, emotion, and mind in the glorious spiral of human life. 

A hymn to the possibilities of human existence, a magnificent work of ingenious science, a gorgeously written book, The Feeling of What Happens is already being hailed as a classic.


Product description

Review

Antonio Damasio has done it again! Writing for the layman as well as the scientist, he constructs a compelling solution to the problem of consciousness.--Victoria Fromkin, UCLA

This is an extraordinary book. I know of nothing like it.--Jerome Kagan, Harvard University
There is no simpler way to say this: read the book to learn who you are.--Jorie Graham, Poet and Pulitzer Prize Winner

Everyone will be talking about it; everyone will have to read it.--Patricia and Paul Churchland, UCSD

About the Author
ANTONIO DAMASIO is the David Dornsife Professor of Neuroscience and Director of the Brain and Creativity Institute at the University of Southern California. He is also an adjunct professor at the Salk Institute for Biological Studies in La Jolla. He is a member of both the Institute of Medicine of the National Academy of Sciences and the American Academy of Arts and Sciences. 
Descartes' Error was an international bestseller. 
The Feeling of What Happens is being translated into seventeen languages.

Product details
Publisher ‏ : ‎ Mariner Books; First edition (10 October 2000)
Paperback ‏ : ‎ 400 pages
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Top reviews from other countries
neville clay
5.0 out of 5 stars Paradigm-changing classic
Reviewed in the United Kingdom on 25 June 2019
Verified Purchase
Hardly an accessible read, though more so than Descartes' Error, yet worth persevering with - for me, a densely detailed yet revelatory model of the arising and maintenance of the felt sense of self, and the most persuasive such model yet, which has (unspoken) parallels with much early Buddhist thought. That being the case, it's surprising that Damasio was so resistant to considering the effect of meditation on self-states.
3 people found this helpful
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Tasha
5.0 out of 5 stars Great book
Reviewed in the United Kingdom on 13 November 2019
Verified Purchase
Amazing book, no further explanation needed. If you're interested in the science and theories of consciousness you're going to enjoy Damasio's theory.
One person found this helpful
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Euphemia
5.0 out of 5 stars Five Stars
Reviewed in the United Kingdom on 15 April 2018
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Well worth reading and thinking about!
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Andrew E Johnson
4.0 out of 5 stars Fascinating
Reviewed in the United Kingdom on 11 February 2013
Verified Purchase
A very interesting hypothesis about how the conscious mind arises out of the brain. At times it felt too much like reading something from one of the old-school philosophers. Indeed Damasio even references some of them as if their non-scientific musings provide additional weight to his arguments, this a shame, but he does bring his work back to provide solid evidence for his hypothesis and suggests questions that other researchers could test in the future.
3 people found this helpful
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Batmon
5.0 out of 5 stars would def recommend
Reviewed in the United Kingdom on 5 October 2017
Verified Purchase
This is master piece written in simple language. so interesting!would def recommend it
One person found this helpful

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The Feeling of What Happens: Body and Emotion in the Making of Consciousness
by António R. Damásio

really liked it 4.00  ·   Rating details ·  3,645 ratings  ·  93 reviews

Ahmad Sharabiani
Dec 09, 2019Ahmad Sharabiani rated it really liked it
Shelves: 20th-century, science, biology, philosophy, literature, non-fiction, portuguese, psychology
The Feeling of What Happens: Body and Emotion in the Making of Consciousness, António R. Damásio

There have been many ambitious and important books on the problem of consciousness in the past few years. None has quite the philosophical sophistication and neurophysical knowledge of this one. One of the world's leading experts on the neurophysiology of emotion, professor Damasio shows how our consciousness developed out of the development of emotion brilliantly wide ranging, with fascinating case-studies, the book presents a humane and subtle view of the facility that makes us most profoundly human.

تاریخ نخستین خوانش: روز نهم ماه اکتبر سال 2015 میلادی
عنوان: احساس یک اتفاق؛ نویسنده: آنتونیو داماسیو؛ مترجم: محمدتقی کیمیایی؛ تهران : نگاه معاصر، ‏‫1393؛ در 400 ص؛ شابک: 9789649940205؛ فروست: نگرش فلسفی؛ موضوع: آگاهی - هیجان ها - جسم و جان - از نویسندگان پرتقالی - سده 20 م

ا. شربیانی (less)
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Manuel Antão
Dec 21, 2018Manuel Antão rated it really liked it
Shelves: 2000
If you're into stuff like this, you can read the full review.


Universal Machine: "The Feeling of What Happens: Body and Emotion in the Making of Consciousness" by António R. Damásio


(Original Review, 2000-10-15)


I don't agree that it is as big mystery as pointed out elsewhere in another review I’ve read...I think we do know a great deal about consciousness. The problem lays also in our willingness to explore altered states of consciousness. This must be included in any theory...Some examples of books dedicated to this subject of consciousness. I have been reading lately: “Complete works of Freud and Carl Jung”, “The Tibet Book Of The Dead”, “Tao Te Ching”, R. D. Laing’s “The Politics Of experience (Birds Of Paradise)”, “The Tao Of Physics” by Fritjof Capra, Works Of Richard Feynman, Works of Spinoza, “Altered States Of Consciousness” by Charles T. Tart, “The Conscious Mind” by David J. Chalmers, and Anthropological Studies on Shamanism and so on, indicate that the human animal has not progressed much physiologically over the past two or three thousand years. However we have progressed massively technologically...Plenty of food for thought in this area. (less)
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Joshua Stein
Jun 11, 2011Joshua Stein rated it really liked it
Shelves: mind, philosophy, science
Damasio is a terrific writer, and this is a fantastic assessment of the neurophysiology of consciousness. I strongly recommend it for those who are interested in neuroscience.

There are some concerns I have about the philosophical underpinnings, but Damasio isn't a philosopher. He doesn't grasp the philosophical literature quite as well as, say, Pinker, but he's still a terrific mind and he has a great understanding of neurophysiological involvement in cognitive functions. It's not really that Damasio is presenting a theory of consciousness. Really, Damasio is just presenting some data and some considerations for a potential theory of consciousness, and then referring to several philosophical theories in order to try to see which best reflects his data. That is a totally reasonable approach, and actually much less audacious than what many of his colleagues are attempting to do.

Damasio is very good at equivocating, but being clear about what his views are. He is willing to acknowledge the limits of the data that he has access to, while at the same time asserting that his conclusions are definitive when he means them to be. In that sense, Damasio is a very lucid writer, and is an excellent resource for those who aren't that confident that they can tell real neurophysiological data from bullcrap.

I strongly recommend the book for laymen. I am not sure how much someone with a professional knowledge of the material would get out of this. Some of the more technical details are really interesting, but I am sure that they can be found in other places in the professional literature, where there is far more depth. (less)
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Rory
Jul 07, 2011Rory rated it really liked it
This book is heavier on the neuroanatomy than other books on consciousness, so won't be to everyone's taste.

However, Damasio is an excellent writer and it is very interesting to get a neurologists take on consciousness, particularly as his focus has been on human emotion (finally emerging from the taboo that it has suffered for too long) and he has a long history with clinical patients that he can refer to when discussing the different parts of his anatomy.

Damasio's model of consciousness is intriguing and well worth exploring. He builds it up in three stages; (i) our proto-consciousness, that us based on the basic regulatory functions for governing the body, (ii) our core-consciousness, aware of stimuli as they arrive and finally (iii) the extended-consciousness that involves the auto-biography, the self generated by referring to memory and future plans.

Damasio backs this up with positive and negative examples, referring to clinical patients who have suffered different insults to their CNS.

Recommended - but remember that you will need to be able to tell your hypothalamus from your pre-frontal cortex, if you wish to get the most out of it. (less)
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Kent
Jun 20, 2009Kent rated it liked it
Damasio takes a very difficult subject and makes it a little less difficult.

Something I (re)learned: "The net result is that as you think about an object, reconstructing part of the accommodations required to perceive it in the past as well as the emotive responses to it in the past is enough to change the proto-self in much the same manner that I have described for when an external object confronts you directly....In all likelihood, even the plans for future perceptuo-motor accommodations are effective modifiers of the proto-self and thus originators of second-order accounts."

In laymen's terms (as I understand it): Just as recalling an object or event (the memory of, say, an illicit love affair) produces neural patterns in the brain not unlike those produced when the object or event was originally perceived (engaging in an illicit love affair), it's likely that the neural patterns produced by an intention (plans to dip your pen in another man's inkwell, so to speak) are also similar.

In Catholic nuns' terms: Just thinking about the sin is tantamount to committing the sin. (less)
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Samir Rawas Sarayji
Jun 04, 2018Samir Rawas Sarayji rated it liked it
Shelves: non-fiction, psychology
There are interesting aspects to this book that I, as a non-scientist, enjoyed. The focus on the neurological to explain consciousness is the paramount focus, and it’s a new way of looking at the subject of consciousness for me. The material requires concentrated reading particularly because of the new jargon (proto-self, extended consciousness, and other scientific jargon), but mostly because Damasio uses an academic register to argue much of his ideas. This is where I became a bit confused, is the book written for the masses or for the scientific community, because I thought for the former, and if I'm right, then Damasio is one of those writers (at least till that point) who can't simplify and communicate his ideas with analogies and diagrams. When reading a field I've not studied or intend to study, I prefer the layman's approach because I want to get the gist of it and an over-arching view, and not get bogged down rereading a paragraph 3 times to finally say 'ah'. I felt much of the sentences were dense and run-on, there were many instances where a comma or a new sentence would have clarified his thoughts better. There were too few diagrams to illustrate his ideas and explanations. There were also instances where bullet points or lists would have made me absorb the facts much faster and more clearly, rather than convoluted paragraphs. I'm left with a feeling that this is someone who knows much about his field but sucks at bringing it across (unless you're studying his stuff).

My other main concern is the lack of large samples on which he bases his hypotheses. Some of his arguments in this book are presented through case studies (which are always super-interesting) but are not followed up with larger data samples, so the analysis comes across as based on a small sample. I don't know if this is the case in his research or not, but that is how it reads here, and that too left me with an odd feeling. Anyone who has read Freud knows that that is one of his fallacies.

Having said all that, for those who enjoy scientific arguments, and those interested in neurology and consciousness, I'm sure there is much to find here that is of interest. Bear in mind, the book was published in 1999, so things may have changed or even be outdated. (less)
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Nicholas
Nov 15, 2011Nicholas rated it really liked it  ·  review of another edition
Shelves: neuroscience
For me this was not an easy read all the way through. I had to keep putting it down every several pages, sometimes to avoid automatically reading it and not understanding it fully....having said that I was rubbish at Biology in school. Surprisingly for the most part, it is not that hard going, and at the end of it you get a good idea where your sense of self comes from and the constituent parts of the Brain and Brain stem that are involved in the processes of consciousness. There are helpful diagrams and a good appendix which make the going a bit easier for the layman, and the author has the impressive ability to impart knowledge without baffling, or presupposing excessive medical training. I'd recommend it to anyone with a curiosity in perception and how emotions are generated and perceived. (less)
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John Turlockton
Apr 05, 2019John Turlockton rated it it was ok
Definitely not for a general audience, he regularly talks about things like parabrachial network or thalamic nuclei without explaining it. At the end there's an appendix where he goes through all the terms he was using throughout the book. I didn't see that part so completely missed it and had to just try figure it out based on what I already knew about the brain structure. Who would explain all the technical terms at the end of a book?

Despite not explaining those things properly, he manages to sometimes over-explain things, like when he spend almost a chapter explaining what an organism is, repeating really obvious things that everyone will know about what makes an object distinct from its surroundings. Even on other parts he talks around in circles sometimes never just saying directly what he's talking about. Generally, throughout the book, the issue is that things aren't explained clearly, it's not like the guys argument is so difficult to understand, it's just never laid out simply like 'this is what I think, 1, 2, 3 and here is my evidence for it.' He also never clearly goes through what I thought what his key point. that consciousness can't exist without emotion, he seems to hint at this throughout the book but never actually goes into it. Maybe this was explained in a previous book? If so, it's certainly not an advertisement for this book.

On evidence, he spends big chunks of the book laying out his argument without giving any evidence, it's only at the start when he's explaining what consciousness is not, and then later in the book at like chapters 8 and 9 that he starts going through evidence for things. Even then he never explains the evidence in an easy-to-read manner (this is part of why I say it's not for a general audience), he basically just says 'yes we have evidence for this' and leaves a footnote number, though in my version there were no footnotes, maybe I have to go online to get them.

Overall I don't know if this is a good argument or not for what consciousness is, because his argument is not clearly laid out nor is his evidence for that argument. If I had the footnotes it might be a good compilation of the studies that support his argument if I was going to read all of them, which I'm not. I'll look for another book on the subject, maybe Edelman or Koch. Stay away from this version unless you just want to read every possible theory of consciousness, even then, I'd advise looking for someone else writing about this theory if you can find it. (less)
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Broodingferret
Apr 18, 2012Broodingferret rated it really liked it
Shelves: biology, psychology, neuroscience
Provocative and well-writen, The Feeling of What Happens: Body and Emotion in the Making of Consciousness is, in many ways, the logical continuation of Descartes' Error: Emotion, Reason and the Human Brain. Moving beyond "simple" decision making, Damásio posits in this work that the whole of consciousness is first initiated by basic regulatory processes, augmented by sensory input, and finally made fully manifest in the moment-by-moment reference of said data to the memories that are represented in the brain as patterns of synaptic connectivity and neuronal activity. Calling on years of experience working with brain trauma patients, Damásio puts both positive and negative evidence to good use in backing up his hypothesis. Though fascinating, this work is highly detailed and dense, and likely to be a challenging read if one doesn't have at least a basic (though more than passing) familiarity with neuoanatomy; in fact, Damásio (and many other scientists) could benefit from a writing class focusing on making science writing more accessible to the layman. Nevertheless, The Feeling of What Happens: Body and Emotion in the Making of Consciousness is enjoyable, thought-provoking, and well worth reading, especially to those with a strong interest in neuroscience and psychology. (less)
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Greg Collver
Apr 02, 2011Greg Collver rated it it was amazing
Very interesting book! I plan to read this book again when I can study it more thoroughly and learn some basic neuroanatomy.

"Perhaps the most startling idea in this book is that, in the end, consciousness begins as a feeling, a special kind of feeling, to be sure, but a feeling nonetheless. I still remember why I began thinking of consciousness as feeling and it seems like a sensible reason: consciousness feels like a feeling, and if it feels like a feeling, it may well be a feeling.

"The seventeenth century French philosopher Malebranche wrote:
It is through light and through a clear idea that the mind sees the essence of things, numbers, and extensions. It is through a vague idea or through feeling that the mind judges the existence of creatures and that it knows its own existence."

(less)
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Michael Vagnetti
May 02, 2012Michael Vagnetti rated it it was amazing
A description of how we feel consciousness, written with authority but also lyricism. For me, this was a remarkable account because it gives the underpinning of why human experience is so transient and elusive. Second, it uses the concept of a wordless brain "narrative" to describe consciousness, undermining language, and thus demonstrates why "subverbal" concepts have such massive weight. For me, language has always been in the shadow of the specter of what Damasio calls the "proto-self." Put another way, in simile, this account exposes consciousness like a giant glacier underneath the ocean, while we sit on a tip above water and think it a profound continent. The most profound passages for me can be found via findings: http://goo.gl/XWY32. (less)
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Carol
Sep 21, 2008Carol rated it it was amazing
This was the first book that gave me the insight into what psycho-physical-whole means.Damasio taught me how our neuro pathways deliver the information we are constantly receiving, to our brain, that then sorts the information and --well--- that is when we know what we know. This understanding has completely transformed my life. I love Damasio, have fantasized for years about inviting him to dinner with a small group of people to talk, laugh, trade stories. I know it would be fun because he quotes playrights, poets etc. in explaining his concepts. (less)
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