Human Nature: Fact and Fiction: Literature, Science and Human Nature
Autor Robin Headlam Wells, Professor Johnjoe McFaddenen Limba Engleză Hardback – 29 mar 2006
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Specificații
ISBN-13: 9780826485458
ISBN-10: 0826485456
Pagini: 216
Dimensiuni: 129 x 198 x 22 mm
Greutate: 0.31 kg
Editura: Bloomsbury Publishing
Colecția Continuum
Locul publicării:London, United Kingdom
ISBN-10: 0826485456
Pagini: 216
Dimensiuni: 129 x 198 x 22 mm
Greutate: 0.31 kg
Editura: Bloomsbury Publishing
Colecția Continuum
Locul publicării:London, United Kingdom
Caracteristici
Contributors include award-winning novelists Ian McEwan and Philip Pullman, as well as Steven Pinker, author of The Language Instinct, and Kenan Malik and high-profile literature scholars Catherine Belsey and Ania Loomba.
Cuprins
ContributorsForeword, AC GraylingAcknowledgementsIntroduction, Robin Headlam-Wells and Johnjoe McFaddenPart I: Is human nature written in our genes or in our books?1. The biology of fiction, Steven Pinker2. Literature, science and human nature, Ian McEwanPart II: Can science and literature collaborate to define human nature?3. Literature and evolution, Joseph Carroll4. Human nature: one for all and all for one?, Gabriel DoverPart III: What has biology got to do with the imagination?5. The biology of the imagination: how the brain can both play with truth and survive a predator, Simon Baron Cohen6. Biology and imagination: The role of culture, Catherine Belsey7. The limits of imagination, Rita CarterPart IV: Do we need a theory of human nature to tell us how to act?8. Human nature or human difference?, Ania Loomba9. What science can and cannot tell us about human nature, Kenan Malik10. The cat, the chisel, and the grave, Philip Pullman
Recenzii
'The book is thought-provoking, cloying, rewarding, and irritating in turn, as scientists intersperse insight into, and ham-fisted respect for the significance of literature to human self-understanding, and as novelists and literary theorists exploit scientific ideas for literary adaptation. The editors juxtapose papers by scientific and literary experts so as to highlight both the contrasts and similarities in views between the two cultures.' Australian Review of Public Affairs, 'Scientific and Literary Musings on Who or What we Are', Susan Dodds, 28/08/2006
'Full of illuminating and stimulating insights ... it is precisely the purpose, and value, of this endlessly stimulating volume that it instigate a much-needed debate.' Institute of Ideas - Culture Wars website
To follow
"... the book contains many sensitive and sensible little essays."
A little book that packs a lot of punch. (T)his book provides some genuinely new thought, incorporating evloution, culture, imagination, literature and genes. A heady mix. However where the real interest lies is in determining where these multiple perpectives align...being more anaylsis than synthesis, Human Nature allows its readers to find this golden section for themselves - a point that makes this book really stand out from the crowd.
(A) fascinating collection of essays. The result of a 2004 smposium that tried ti bridge the putative chasm between the science and the arts, Human Nature offers some intriguing insights.
'Full of illuminating and stimulating insights ... it is precisely the purpose, and value, of this endlessly stimulating volume that it instigate a much-needed debate.' Institute of Ideas - Culture Wars website
To follow
"... the book contains many sensitive and sensible little essays."
A little book that packs a lot of punch. (T)his book provides some genuinely new thought, incorporating evloution, culture, imagination, literature and genes. A heady mix. However where the real interest lies is in determining where these multiple perpectives align...being more anaylsis than synthesis, Human Nature allows its readers to find this golden section for themselves - a point that makes this book really stand out from the crowd.
(A) fascinating collection of essays. The result of a 2004 smposium that tried ti bridge the putative chasm between the science and the arts, Human Nature offers some intriguing insights.