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Zusatztext This is a remarkable book! taking on the under-investigated overlap between twovery disparate worlds: on the one hand mathematics and rationality! contrasted withemotions and embodiment. Based on the discoveries of modern affective neuroscience!the book makes an impressive attempt at bridging the important conceptual dividebetween feelings and formal thinking! a divide almost as troubling as that betweenmind and brain itself. It made me think about some old ideas in quite new ways.'Professor Oliver Turnbull! Bangor University! UK?'Anna Sverdlik takes the reader on a fascinating journey to discover the nature ofabstract thinking from a neuroscience perspective. Using mathematics as an example!she illustrates how our thinking is deeply rooted in a non-algorithmic component thatrelies on our visceral system. The beauty and elegance of mathematics precisely liesin the fact that it unites logical thinking supported by our neocortex with intuitionssupported by our emotions and body that have evolved to solve problems overthousands of years.'Dr. Melissa Libertus! University of Pittsburgh! USA Informationen zum Autor Anna Sverdlik is a clinical psychiatrist at Tel Hashomer, a major Israeli hospital. She specializes in brain injury and neurocognitive disorders. Klappentext If mathematics is the purest form of knowledge, the perfect foundation of all the hard sciences, and a uniquely precise discipline, then how can the human brain, an imperfect and imprecise organ, process mathematical ideas? Is mathematics made up of eternal, universal truths? Or, as some have claimed, could mathematics simply be a human invention, a kind of tool or metaphor?These questions are among the greatest enigmas of science and epistemology, discussed at length by mathematicians, physicians, and philosophers. But, curiously enough, neuroscientists have been absent in the debate, even though it is precisely the field of neuroscience-which studies the brain's mechanisms for thinking and reasoning-that ought to be at the very center of these discussions. How our Emotions and Bodies are Vital for Abstract Thought explores the unique mechanisms of cooperation between the body, emotions, and the cortex, based on fundamental physical principles. It is these mechanisms that help us to overcome the limitations of our physiology and allow our imperfect, human brains to make transcendent mathematical discoveries.This book is written for anyone who is interested in the nature of abstract thought, including mathematicians, physicists, computer scientists, psychologists, and psychiatrists. Zusammenfassung The book describes the mechanisms that make formal logic possible, before discussing errors that occur in our cortical constructs, and the implications this has for abstract thought. The book then goes on to explore the roles of emotion and embodiment, and the unique relationship they have in minimising the shortcomings of our physiology to provide us with an understanding of mathematics. Inhaltsverzeichnis Table of Contents List of Figures Preface Chapter 1. The unreasonable effectiveness of mathematics Chapter 2. Why logic is never ideal Chapter 3. Working memory and logical limitations Chapter 4. Overpowered by emotion Chapter 5. From cognition to recognition and back again Chapter 6. Non-algorithmic thinking machine? Chapter 7. How mathematics can outwit physiology Afterword Index ...