Fr. 36.50

The Blind Spot - Why Science Cannot Ignore Human Experience

Inglese · Tascabile

Spedizione di solito entro 4 a 7 giorni lavorativi

Descrizione

Ulteriori informazioni

A compelling argument for including the human perspective within science, and for how human experience makes science possible.


“This is by far the best book I''ve read this year.”
—Michael Pollan, Professor of the Practice of Non-fiction, Harvard University; #1 New York Times bestselling author

It’s tempting to think that science gives us a God’s-eye view of reality. But we neglect the place of human experience at our peril. In
Since the dawn of the Enlightenment, humanity has looked to science to tell us who we are, where we come from, and where we’re going, but we’ve gotten stuck thinking we can know the universe from outside our position in it. When we try to understand reality only through external physical things imagined from this outside position, we lose sight of the necessity of experience. This is the Blind Spot, which the authors show lies behind our scientific conundrums about time and the origin of the universe, quantum physics, life, AI and the mind, consciousness, and Earth as a planetary system. The authors propose an alternative vision: scientific knowledge is a self-correcting narrative made from the world and our experience of it evolving together. To finally “see” the Blind Spot is to awaken from a delusion of absolute knowledge and to see how reality and experience intertwine.

Sommario

An Introduction to the Blind Spot
I. HOW DID WE GET HERE? A GUIDE FOR THE PERPLEXED
1. The Surreptitious Substitution: Philosophical Origins of the Blind Spot
2. The Ascending Spiral of Abstraction: Scientific Origins of the Blind Spot
II. COSMOS
3. Time
4. Matter
5. Cosmology
III. LIFE AND MIND
6. Life
7. Cognition
8. Consciousness
IV. THE PLANET
9. Earth
Afterword
Notes

Info autore










Evan Thompson is Professor of Philosophy at the University of British Columbia, where he is also Associate Member of the Department of Asian Studies and the Department of Psychology. He is a coauthor of The Embodied Mind and The Blind Spot (both MIT Press), and an elected fellow of the Royal Society of Canada and a past president of the Pacific Division of the American Philosophical Association.
Adam Frank is the Helen F. and Fred H. Gowen Professor in the Department of Physics and Astronomy at the University of Rochester and a winner of the Carl Sagan Medal. He is the author of Light of the Stars.
Marcelo Gleiser is the Appleton Professor of Natural Philosophy at Dartmouth, the 2019 Templeton Prize laureate, and author of seven widely translated books, most recently The Dawn of a Mindful Universe.

Riassunto

A compelling argument for including the human perspective within science, and for how human experience makes science possible.

Dettagli sul prodotto

Autori Adam Frank, Marcelo Gleiser, Gleiser Marcelo, Evan Thompson
Editore The MIT Press
 
Lingue Inglese
Formato Tascabile
Pubblicazione 01.04.2025
 
EAN 9780262553032
ISBN 978-0-262-55303-2
Pagine 328
Dimensioni 153 mm x 230 mm x 23 mm
Categorie Scienze naturali, medicina, informatica, tecnica > Scienze naturali, tematiche generali

Science: general issues, SCIENCE / History, PHILOSOPHY / Movements / Phenomenology, SCIENCE / Philosophy & Social Aspects, Philosophy of Science

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