Mental Darwinism, a new approach to the study of mental phenomena,applies selectionist ideas to problems of mind and behavior. McNamara challenges the instructivist view that memories occur when information from the environment is transferred into the mind. Current experimental evidence confirms the insights of two turn-of-the-century philosophers, William James and Henri Bergson, who originally proposed applying Darwinian principles to mental processes. The view of the mind that emerges from this approach helps us understand why memory evolves as it does and is not always accurate or…mehr
Mental Darwinism, a new approach to the study of mental phenomena,applies selectionist ideas to problems of mind and behavior. McNamara challenges the instructivist view that memories occur when information from the environment is transferred into the mind. Current experimental evidence confirms the insights of two turn-of-the-century philosophers, William James and Henri Bergson, who originally proposed applying Darwinian principles to mental processes. The view of the mind that emerges from this approach helps us understand why memory evolves as it does and is not always accurate or veridical, how memory is related to personal identity, and how a large number of neuropsychological disorders develop.
Patrick McNamara is Director of the Evolutionary Neurobehavior Laboratory in the Department of Neurology at Boston University School of Medicine, and the VA New England Healthcare System. He is also Assistant Professor of Neurology at the same sites. He is currently developing an evolutionary approach to problems of brain and behavior, and studying the evolution of the frontal lobes, the two mammalian sleep states (REM and NREM) and the evolution of religion in cultures. He is trained in behavioral neuorscience, neurolinguistics and brain-cognitive correlation techniques. He pioneered investigation of the role of the frontal lobes in mediation of religious experience.
Inhaltsangabe
Preface Introduction Selection and Memory Limitations of the Instructivist Account of Memory Bergson's Memory Theory Evidence for Selectionist Processing Frontal Lobes Memory and Inhibition William James on Memory Variability and Consciousness The Theater of Simultaneous Possibilities The Stream of Thought and Self-Regulation Recollection and Self Dreaming Selection Self and Culture References Index
Preface Introduction Selection and Memory Limitations of the Instructivist Account of Memory Bergson's Memory Theory Evidence for Selectionist Processing Frontal Lobes Memory and Inhibition William James on Memory Variability and Consciousness The Theater of Simultaneous Possibilities The Stream of Thought and Self-Regulation Recollection and Self Dreaming Selection Self and Culture References Index
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