Two leading neuroscientists examine the current paradigm of the
“neural subject” and what we can learn from neurological trauma,
pathology, and adaption. With the rise of cognitive science and the
revolution in neuroscience, the study of human subjects—thinking,
feeling, acting individuals—ultimately focuses on the human brain.
In both Europe and the United States, massive state-funded research is
focused on mapping the brain in all its remarkable complexity. The
metaphors employed are largely technological, using a diagram of
synaptic connectivity as a path to understanding human behavior. But
alongside this technologized discourse, we find another perspective,
one that emphasizes the brain’s essential plasticity, both in
development and as a response to traumas such as strokes, tumors, or
gunshot wounds. This collection of essays brings together a diverse
range of scholars to investigate how the “neural subject” of the
twenty-first century came to be. Taking approaches both historical and
theoretical, they probe the possibilities and limits of
neuroscientific understandings of human experience. Topics include
landmark studies in the history of neuroscience, the relationship
between neural and technological “pathologies,” and analyses of
contemporary concepts of plasticity and pathology in cognitive
neuroscience. Central to the volume is a critical examination of
the relationship between pathology and plasticity. Because pathology
is often the occasion for neural reorganization and adaptation, it
exists not in opposition to the brain’s “normal” operation but
instead as something intimately connected to our ways of being and
understanding.
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On the Formation of the Neural Subject
Produktdetaljer
ISBN
9780823266159
Publisert
2017
Utgiver
Open Road Integrated Media, Inc.
Språk
Product language
Engelsk
Format
Product format
Digital bok
Forfatter