Medicine, Mind, and the Double Brain: A Study in Nineteenth-Century Thought
By (Author) Anne Harrington
Princeton University Press
Princeton University Press
31st March 1989
United States
Professional and Scholarly
Non Fiction
612.8209034
Paperback
354
Width 152mm, Height 229mm
510g
The study concentrates on, without being strictly limited to, the years 1860-1900 and encompasses explorations into the concepts of symmetry and asymmetry in early nineteenth-century neurology.
"Surely the rising star of body parts in the 1980 ... Be right brain. Bookstores are well-stocked with guides to using the right brain in activities ranging from drawing business Techniques for brain training include talking with the telephone at the left ear, putting the right arm in a sting for a week, banning the use of the word 'no' and drawing the 'negative space' around the object instead of the object itself. Such exercises allegedly help us regain what some call 'wbole-brain thinking,' especially those creative capacities ('R-modes') of the right hemisphere of the brain that have been neglected in favor of left-brain logic... Anyone tempted to invest in R-modes will profit from Anne Harrington's enlightening history of the concept of the double brain... Her book serves as a timely warning that the functions of the brain's hemispheres, like other kinds of division of labor, are likely to be far more complicated than the simple, seductive division into left and right can explain."--Elaine Showalter, New York Times Book Review "Anne Harrington ... An account of the emergence of our understanding of our own inner dissymmetry. It sets the striving towards comprehension amid the social prejudices and pressures of the nineteenth century and shows how the expectations of the time moulded scientific opinion."--P. W. Atkins, London Review of Books