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Phantoms in the Brain: Probing the Mysteries of the Human Mind
V. S. Ramachandran, Sandra Blakeslee

Harper Perennial, 1999 - 352 pages

average customer review:based on 95 reviews
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   highly recommended  highly recommended




Terrific!

I couldn't put this book down - it is an enthralling read from start to finish. I would love to see more from these talented authors. The stories are fascinating; the writing is superb and (I was surprised to find) very funny. I love this book.


A must-have

I bought this when it was "on-hold" at our library. I was not disappointed. Besides the insights one gets from the case studies AND carefully designed experiments and easy to do demonstrations, the anecdotes and literary quality of the text make it very engaging. The text is not interrupted with needless references and the very susbtantial endnotes provide a treasure of knowledge and wisdom for the technically inclined. Its also a very nice case study on how interesting and impactful science can be done.


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Ramachandran's "Phantoms"

If you have read books by Oliver Sacks, M.D. (e.g., The Man Who Mistook His Wife for a Hat), this book is in the same genre and is equally interesting and worthwhile. If you haven't--both Sacks and this author are neurologists who do the rest of us a considerable and fascinating favor by telling us about their patients. (Also, maybe you saw the movie, Awakenings, that starred Robin Williams as Sacks, and Robert DeNiro as one of his patients)

Both Sacks and Ramachandran arrange their patient stories under topical headings intended to elucidate the way the brain and body (especially the senses) work together, and also the nature of human personality and even consciousness itself. Ramachandran writes with great clarity, kindness and humor, and his origins in India and Hinduism provide a gently-presented, less-western point of view.

His book also contains some simple but amazing mind-body experiments you can do on yourself and with friends (really). In one, you will become convinced that the top of the desk in front of you is part of your body, since you will feel it when another person touches the desk. Those of you interested in religion will find the chapter "God and Limbic System" especially fascinating. And no, the purpose of his chapter is not to denigrate or analyze away religious experience, but to better understand it, and what it means to be human.


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Closeness to Spirituality

Recent trends of neurology being close to spirituality as reflected in the works of Sir Charles Sherrington, Gray Walter and others finds a new perspective in this book. Ramachandran has hinted at this closeness at various places of his book and gives a clue that the day is not far when many spiritual problems of man can be found to have a deep relation with his neurological constitution.

Its refreshing to see a new light thrown on this subject. Ramachandran joins class with very few who endeavoured to join this quest. This book is a must for all who want to probe into the deeper truths of life.


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So *this* explains my weird friends!

Well, maybe it doesn't explain that much. But if you've ever wondered why your sister was an atheist and your brother claims to see visions, you'll find an explanation here. Dr. Ramachandran does go into great detail about the "oddities" we perceive in other peoples' characters, and how they may be explained by biology. I would have given the book four and a half stars if I had the option--the book would have lost half a star for redundancy. The author tends to repeat himself; however, it doesn't detract too much from readability (and enjoyability). This book is an easy read--I read it on a coast-to-coast airplane flight and it saved me from watching a mind-numbing (no pun intended) movie. I'd recommend skipping whatever fiction you were about to pick up, and exploring your brain a bit with this book. You'll never look at your brother, the prophet, the same again.


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reviews: 4, 5, 6, 7, 8, 9, 10, 11, 12, 13, page 14, 15, 16, 17, 18, 19



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