The I Index

The Idea of the Brain: The Past and Future of Neuroscience

Next in the queue

59

/100

I Index Overall Rating

Readers

64/100

Critics

17/100

Scholars

96/100

Author:

Matthew Cobb

Publisher:

Basic Books

Date:

April 21, 2020

An examination of what we think we know about the brain and why, despite technological advances, the workings of our most essential organ remain a mystery.

What The Reviewers Say

James McConnachie,
The Sunday Times (UK)
In this sweeping and electrifyingly sceptical book, [Cobb] tells the story of the scientific understanding of the brain, from early philosophers’ intuitions to the balked, frustrated present.
Stephen Casper,
Nature
This ambitious intellectual history follows the changing understanding of the brain from antiquity to the present, mainly in Western thought.

Los Angeles Review of Books
In the midst of a public health crisis that is rapidly revealing itself to be a mental health crisis as well, we may need a new idea of the brain — and its limits — as a tool for organizing both medicine and self-understanding. There are clues in Cobb’s books about how to reckon with neuroscience and its limits.
Carol Tavris,
The Wall Street Journal
Fuhgeddaboudit, Mr. Cobb says, albeit in his own elegant British prose. Despite unarguable progress in methods of studying the brain, we still haven’t the foggiest idea of how the billions of neurons interact and connect to produce the brain’s activity.