How brains think: evolving intelligence, then and now

William H. Calvin
3.54
230 ratings 12 reviews
What constitutes consciousness or intelligence? This is a question that has proved to philosophers to be an intellectual dead-end. Now William Calvin, by looking closely at animal and human intelligence and a wide range of evolutionary evidence, has broken new ground that will help us understand mental illness and illuminate the whole notion of what it is to be a person.Calvin begins by asking what intelligence is. He moves to the Why of intelligence, where evidence from chimpanzees is important, before coming to the all-important How of intelligence, the cerebral codes and Darwinian processes that operate within seconds to produce intelligent thought and action.
Genres: ScienceNonfictionNeurosciencePsychologyBrainEvolutionPhilosophyMedicalStemPopular Science
224 Pages

Community Reviews:

5 star
37 (16%)
4 star
74 (32%)
3 star
98 (43%)
2 star
19 (8%)
1 star
2 (1%)

Readers also enjoyed

Other books by William H. Calvin

Lists with this book

The Other Side Of Me
The Magician's Nephew
The Tenant of Wildfell Hall
I_have
93 books6 voters