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Ian Glynn, An anatomy of thought: The origin and machinery of the mind. New York: Oxford University Press, 1999. Pp. vi, 456. Hb $35.

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  22 October 2002

Ronald Gray
Affiliation:
English, Beijing Language and Culture University, Beijing, China 100083, [email protected]

Abstract

In this highly ambitious book, Glynn attempts to provide a description of both how the brain works and how it has developed. Taking an interdisciplinary approach (he is a physiologist by training), he relies on insights from a wide number of disciplines, including psychology, neurology, anthropology, linguistics, artificial intelligence, psychiatry, physiology, and even philosophy. He is interested in providing answers to some perennial and interconnected questions that relate to the mind: “What kind of thing is mind? What is the relation between our minds and our bodies and, more specifically, what is the relation between what goes on in our minds, and what goes on in our brains? How did brains and minds originate? Can our brains be regarded as nothing more than exceedingly complicated machines? Can minds exist without brains” (p. 4). Although his arguments are rather technical, the book is intended for a nonscientist audience.

Type
REVIEWS
Copyright
2002 Cambridge University Press

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