Permalink

0

New Books Network Podcast: „The Blind Storyteller: How We Reason about Human Nature“

Das Buch „The Blind Sto­ry­teller: How We Rea­son about Human Nature“ von Iris Berent wurde am 11.8.224 im New Books Net­work Pod­cast vorgestellt:

Do new­borns think-do they know that ‚three‘ is greater than ‚two‘? Do they pre­fer ‚right‘ to ‚wrong‘? What about emo­tions – do new­borns rec­og­nize hap­pi­ness or anger? If they do, then how are our inborn thoughts and feel­ings encod­ed in our bod­ies? Could they per­sist after we die? Going all the way back to ancient Greece, human nature and the mind-body link are the top­ics of age-old schol­ar­ly debates. But laypeo­ple also have strong opin­ions about such mat­ters. Most peo­ple believe, for exam­ple, that new­born babies don’t know the dif­fer­ence between right and wrong-such knowl­edge, they insist, can only be learned. For emo­tions, they pre­sume the oppo­site-that our capac­i­ty to feel fear, for exam­ple, is both inborn and embod­ied. These beliefs are sto­ries we tell our­selves about what we know and who we are. They reflect and influ­ence our under­stand­ing of our­selves and oth­ers and they guide every aspect of our lives. In a twist that could have come out of a Greek tragedy, Berent pro­pos­es that our errors are our fate. These mis­takes emanate from the very prin­ci­ples that make our minds tick: our blind­ness to human nature is root­ed in human nature itself. 

An intel­lec­tu­al jour­ney that draws on phi­los­o­phy, anthro­pol­o­gy, lin­guis­tics, cog­ni­tive sci­ence, and Berent’s own cut­ting-edge research, The Blind Sto­ry­teller: How We Rea­son about Human Nature (Oxford UP, 2020) grap­ples with a host of provoca­tive ques­tions, from why we are so infat­u­at­ed with our brains to what hap­pens when we die. The end result is a star­tling new per­spec­tive on our human­i­ty.

You can find Dr. Berent on Twit­ter at @berent_iris

Das Buch ist bei uns als eBook ver­füg­bar.

Schreibe einen Kommentar

Pflichtfelder sind mit * markiert.