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The Feeling of What Happens: Body and Emotion in the Making of Consciousness

The Feeling of What Happens: Body and Emotion in the Making of Consciousness
Author: Antonio Damasio
Publisher: Harvest Books
Category: Book

List Price: $16.00
Buy Used: $5.94
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New (17) Used (40) Collectible (1) from $5.94

Avg. Customer Rating: 3.5 out of 5 stars 52 reviews
Sales Rank: 38193

Media: Paperback
Edition: 1
Number Of Items: 1
Pages: 400
Shipping Weight (lbs): 1.1
Dimensions (in): 9 x 6 x 1.1

ISBN: 0156010755
Dewey Decimal Number: 153
EAN: 9780156010757
ASIN: 0156010755

Publication Date: October 10, 2000
Availability: Usually ships in 1-2 business days
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Condition: 2000; Paperback; No notes/hiliting; Clean pages; Lightly edgeworn cover; No dog-ears; Strong binding; cover is curved due to use; bottom corner of front cover is frayed; **Daily shipping Mon-Sat. Striving for perfect service! Our feedback is hard to beat!; sku75476:

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  • Hardcover - The Feeling of What Happens: Body and Emotion in the Making of Consciousness

Similar Items:

  • Descartes' Error: Emotion, Reason, and the Human Brain
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  • The Emotional Brain: The Mysterious Underpinnings of Emotional Life
  • Synaptic Self: How Our Brains Become Who We Are
  • Phantoms in the Brain: Probing the Mysteries of the Human Mind

Editorial Reviews:

Amazon.com
As you read this, at some level you're aware that you're reading, thanks to a standard human feature commonly referred to as consciousness. What is it--a spiritual phenomenon, an evolutionary tool, a neurological side effect? The best scientists love to tackle big, meaningful questions like this, and neuroscientist Antonio Damasio jumps right in with The Feeling of What Happens, a poetic examination of interior life through lenses of research, medical cases, philosophical analysis, and unashamed introspection. Damasio's perspective is, fortunately, becoming increasingly common in the scientific community; despite all the protestations of old-guard behaviorists, subjective consciousness is a plain fact to most of us and the demand for new methods of inquiry is finally being met.

These new methods are not without rigor, though. Damasio and his colleagues examine patients with disruptions and interruptions in consciousness and take deep insights from these tragic lives while offering greater comfort and meaning to the sufferers. His thesis, that our sense of self arises from our need to map relations between self and others, is firmly rooted in medical and evolutionary research but stands up well to self-examination. His examples from the weird world of neurology are unsettling yet deeply humanizing--real people with serious problems spring to life in the pages, but they are never reduced to their deficits. The Feeling of What Happens captures the spirit of discovery as it plunges deeper than ever into the darkest waters yet. --Rob Lightner

Product Description

Widely praised for his innovative scientific thinking and elegant writing, Antonio Damasio achieves a new understanding of consciousness by asking-and answering-profound questions: How is it that we know what we know? How is it that our conscious and private minds have a sense of self? A gifted medical clinician with decades of caring for patients with brain damage, a great scientific thinker, and an extraordinary writer, Damasio offers a new understanding of the biological roots of consciousness and its role in survival. Damasio's work on feeling and emotion forever joins our minds and bodies, offering an arrestingly original way of understanding what it is to be human. After reading Damasio's landmark, Descartes' Error, Jonas Salk wrote, "You will never again look at yourself or another without wondering what goes on behind the eyes that so meet." As to The Feeling of What Happens, the New York Times wrote, "Unlike any other book here, it will change your experience of yourself."



Customer Reviews:   Read 47 more reviews...

1 out of 5 stars Neither a clear writer nor a clear thinker   May 26, 2008
 1 out of 1 found this review helpful

I have just finished reading this book with a great sense of relief. I wish I could agree with all the complimentary things that other reviewers have written about it, but I find I can't. I am convinced that Damasio is an insightful neurologist, and his personal observations and extensive knowledge of patients with neurological conditions is valuable. However, he is neither a clear thinker nor a clear writer. He goes in for the poetic and artistic, and while his language may sound great, more than half the time I didn't know what the Hell he was actually trying to say. Here's an example: I literally opened the book at random and chose the first sentence I came on: "Knowing springs to life in the story, it inheres in the newly constructed neural pattern that constitutes the nonverbal account." If you think the meaning of that sentence would be clearer after you had read all the book that preceded it, you're wrong. I have read the entire book, and I still have only a vague idea what Damasio is trying to say here. When he is not being poetic, Damasio is technical. A card-carrying neuroscientist myself, I nevertheless struggled to understand some of Damasio's jargon.

More disturbing than the lack of clear expression was the lack of clear thinking. Damasio is often illogical and often contradicts himself. For instance, late in the book, he states, "The idea that the nature of subjective experience can be grasped effectively by the study of their behavioral correlates is wrong." In most of the chapters that precede this statement, however, he does exactly that. He describes what he supposes to be the subjective experience of neurological patients based on his observations of their behavior. He confidently states over and over again that this patient is conscious and that one is not, without ever clearly saying how he knows -- without defining the criteria on which he bases that judgment.

Perhaps I was spoiled, because just before reading this book I read Daniel Dennett's _Consciousness Explained_. The ideas in that book were intrinsically much more difficult to grasp, but they were stimulating, insightful, and expressed in a way that was both engaging and clear. I was sorry to reach the end of it. Reading Damasio, in contrast, was a punishment I forced myself to endure, and whose cessation is a relief.



1 out of 5 stars Poorly Written   May 3, 2008
 0 out of 1 found this review helpful

I read Descartes Error and found the author's writing style to be poor. Nevertheless, I figured I would give the author another chance by reading another one of his books. Unfortunately, I found this second book to be poorly written as well. The author is obviously passionate and knowledgeable about his subject of study - and I find no fault in his knowledge of the subject matter. But he is simply a very poor communicator!! His train of thought is meandering and rambling. So many of his points could have been expressed more succinctly - it was frustrating to read passages that were not "tight" and focused. At times I got the impression that the author "wrote" this book simply by dictating his idle thoughts into a dictaphone, and then having someone transcribe them. Also, his rambling writing style made the subject matter much more confusing and difficult to understand. To readers of this review, I would recommend a book titled The Emotional Brain by Joseph LeDoux - this book covers similar topic areas as Antonio Damasio's books but the writing is so much better.


5 out of 5 stars A seminal work   March 16, 2008
 1 out of 1 found this review helpful

I very seldom come across a book that is so groundbreaking in its content as to make me determined to fully understand what the author is trying to convey (even if it means rereading it three times!) Damasio's The Feeling of What Happens is an astonishing achievement and I believe that the science of consciousness has been vastly enriched with this contribution.

It may help you to know, however, that this is by no means light reading. Even with my medical background, I struggled to keep up, especially the first time round. It probably helps reading Descartes' Error first, but you also need oodles of persistence. But then no thoughtful person ever expected a serious text on the neural underpinnings of consciousness to read like pop psychology. That said, I do think that Damasio's style has eased the burden of understanding considerably. His text is rich with metaphors and examples and I don't believe that anything is beyond the grasp of the enthusiastic lay reader.

In a nutshell, if you put in the effort with this book, you will be richly rewarded. And, as the Journal of the Royal Society of Medicine said: '... you will be ahead of the ruck by at least a decade.'



4 out of 5 stars An engaging discussion of consciousness   October 18, 2007
I found this book to be an engaging exploration of consciousness and the different parameters that define consciousness. The author spends a lot of time explaining how consciousness is defined in relationship to the relationship the person has to the world, but also in regard to biological systems, linguistics, etc. He also does an excellent job of distinguishing where emotions fit into consciousness.

On the other hand, his writing style is dense and sometimes hard to get through. I had to carefully reread some of his writing to really get the ideas he was trying to explain...so be prepared to do some slogging.



5 out of 5 stars The Feeling of What Happens: Body and Emotion in the Making of Consciousness   September 12, 2007
This book is a must read for serious counseling professionals.The orchestra of feeling , emotion and thought that are part of our biological music is exciting to read and think about.

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