Thomas Fuchs' Ecology of the Brain has taken up the challenge by pulling together under one cover a circular causality framework, an increasingly detailed description of what an embodied subjectivity implies, and in doing so, the possibility to apply these perspectives to different disciplinary fields and to inspire further research and conceptual scrutiny.
Ximena A. González-Grandón, Philosophia
Ecology of the Brain is a far-reaching book that touches on multiple topics and can be taken from many different directions ... a valuable contribution to the field of psychological medicine.
Susana Ramírez-Vizcaya, The Journal of Mind and Behavior
Thomas Fuchs ... presents a brilliant review of literature integrating phenomenological philosophy, biology, and complex systems theory to argue for an ecological view of the mind and brain as being embedded in the relation of the living organism and its environment. ... Dr. Fuchs' work is astute, incisive, integrative, and provocative.
Susan Gordon, The Humanistic Psychologist
Thomas Fuchs's work Ecology of the Brain is a unique, critically sharp contribution. It is marked with fascinating and paradigmatic interdisciplinary integration of philosophical reflexion and impressive range of neuroscientific knowledge, exceeding the often narrow, reductive and mono-perspective - "exact" - scientific thinking, to represent a phenomenological approach for the future interdisciplinary studies on brain and mind.
Luka Janes, Synthesis Philosophica
This volume will not only be relevant to researchers interested in the philosophy of mind and the role to be played by the human sciences in this domain, but it will also be a valuable addition to any psychiatric training program.
Anya Daly, Phenomenology and the Cognitive Sciences
[we] owe a debt of gratitude to Fuchs, and to Merleau-Ponty, for so compellingly restoring a solid foundation for continued phenomenological research, and compassionate care, in the face of increasing efforts to reconceptualize both the self and subjectivity as empty illusions.
Larry Davidson, Journal of Phenomenological Psychology
Ecology of the brain supports a clear shift from a naturalistic to a personalistic concept of the human being in neuroscience especially. This requires a "cultural biology", as Fuchs puts it, and opens up new opportunities for the study of how we enact life in a shared social world.
Alfonsina Scarinzi, Journal of the British Society for Phenomenology
Ecology of the brain is a recommended reading not only for everyone interested in psychology, neurosciences, psychopathology and so forth, but also for anyone interested in theoretical philosophy today.
Diego DAngelo, Universität Koblenz-Landau, Phenomenlogical Reviews