
The Hidden Spring
A Journey to the Source of Consciousness
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Narrado por:
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Roger Davis
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De:
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Mark Solms
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Why does it feel like something to be alive? For one of the boldest thinkers in neuroscience, solving this puzzle has been a lifetime's quest. Now at last, Mark Solms, who discovered the brain mechanism for dreaming, has arrived at his answer. More than just a philosophical argument, the Free Energy theory will profoundly change how you understand your own existence.
The very idea that a breakthrough is possible may seem outrageous. Isn't consciousness intangible, beyond the reach of empirical methods? Yet Solms shows in forensic detail how misguided assumptions have concealed its nature. Only by sticking closely to the medical facts does a way past our obstacles appear. Join him on an extraordinary voyage into the strange realms beyond and learn what we really are.
©2021 Mark Solms (P)2021 Hachette Audio UKand with wide reaching implications. That said, it is not a pop-psych book or light read per se, and will most likely challenge and stretch many peoples’ thinking without any cliche or cringy moments. Highly recommended.
Deeply thoughtful and original.
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The hard problem of consciousness is left hanging because Solms nowhere explains why all this wrangling of preferences couldn't happen "in the dark". Calling them feelings simply begs the question. It's a shame because the book would be better if Solms had stuck with the easy problem of consciousness - a problem which is not easy and is, in any case, much more important than the hard problem. Indeed, the hard problem of consciousness is a philosophical mess and requires a philosophical clean-up: either by way of an extravagant metaphysical theory such as David Chalmers' - discussed at length in Solms' book - or by disarming the problem, showing that it is based on a confusion. (See the classic paper "Quining Qualia" by Daniel Dennett.) Trying to resolve the hard problem of consciousness with the resources of neuroscience and psychology isn't going to work.
Solms' writing is sometimes lucid and engaging and at other times it reads like a brutal attempt to batter the reader into submission. It has some of the worst passages of science writing I have ever encountered, but also some of the best. Roger Davis reads the book intelligently, but I found his voice a little grating. It's a voice better suited to less insistent and demanding works.
Flawed but Important
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