The deep history of ourselves The four-billion-year story of how we got conscious brains

Joseph E. LeDoux

Book - 2019

"Renowned neuroscientist Joseph LeDoux digs into the natural history of life on earth to provide a new perspective on the similarities between us and our ancestors in deep time. This page-turning survey of the whole of terrestrial evolution sheds new light on how nervous systems evolved in animals, how the brain developed, and what it means to be human." --Amazon.

Saved in:

2nd Floor Show me where

612.823/LeDoux
1 / 1 copies available
Location Call Number   Status
2nd Floor 612.823/LeDoux Checked In
Subjects
Published
[New York] : Viking, an imprint of Penguin Random House LLC [2019]
Language
English
Main Author
Joseph E. LeDoux (author)
Other Authors
Caio Da Silva Sorrentino (illustrator)
Physical Description
xviii, 412 pages : illustrations ; 24 cm
Bibliography
Includes bibliographical references (pages [383]-400) and index.
ISBN
9780735223837
  • Preface
  • Prologue: Why on Earth ...?
  • Part 1. Our Place in Nature
  • Chapter 1. Deep Roots
  • Chapter 2. The Tree of Life
  • Chapter 3. Kingdoms Come
  • Chapter 4. Common Ancestry
  • Chapter 5. It's a Livin' Thing
  • Part 2. Survival and Behavior
  • Chapter 6. The Behavior of Organisms
  • Chapter 7. Beyond Animal Behavior
  • Chapter 8. The Earliest Survivors
  • Chapter 9. Survival Strategies and Tactics
  • Chapter 10. Rethinking Behavior
  • Part 3. Microbial Life
  • Chapter 11. In the Beginning
  • Chapter 12. Life Itself
  • Chapter 13. Survival Machines
  • Chapter 14. The Arrival of Organelles
  • Chapter 15. The Marriage of LUCA's Children
  • Chapter 16. Breathing New Life into Old
  • Part 4. The Transition to Complexity
  • Chapter 17. Size Matters
  • Chapter 18. The Sexual Revolution
  • Chapter 19. Mitochondrial Eve, Jesse James, and the Origin of Sex
  • Chapter 20. Colonial Times
  • Chapter 21. The Selection Two-Step
  • Chapter 22. Flagellating Through the Bottleneck
  • Part 5. ... And Then Animals Invented Neurons
  • Chapter 23. What Is an Animal?
  • Chapter 24. A Humble Beginning
  • Chapter 25. Animals Take Shape
  • Chapter 26. The Magic of Neurons
  • Chapter 27. How Neurons and Nervous Systems Happened
  • Part 6. Metazoan Bread Crumbs in the Oceans
  • Chapter 28. Facing Forward
  • Chapter 29. Tissue Issues
  • Chapter 30. Oral or Anal?
  • Chapter 31. Deep-Sea Deuterostomes Link Us to Our Past
  • Chapter 32. A Tale of Two Chords
  • Part 7. The Vertebrates Atrive
  • Chapter 33. Bauplan Vertebrata
  • Chapter 34. The Life Aquatic
  • Chapter 35. On the Surface
  • Chapter 36. The Milk Trail
  • Part 8. Ladders and Trees in the Vertebrate Brain
  • Chapter 37. Neuro-Bauplan Vertebrata
  • Chapter 38. Ludwig's Ladder
  • Chapter 39. The Triune Temptress
  • Chapter 40. Darwin's Muddled Emotional Psychology
  • Chapter 41. How Basic Are Basic Emotions?
  • Part 9. The Beginning of Cognition
  • Chapter 42. Cogitation
  • Chapter 43. Finding Cognition in the Behaviorist Bailiwick
  • Chapter 44. The Evolution of Behavioral Flexibility
  • Part 10. Surviving (and Thriving) by Thinking
  • Chapter 45. Deliberation
  • Chapter 46. The Engine of Deliberative Cognition
  • Chapter 47. Schmoozing
  • Part 11. Cognitive Hardware
  • Chapter 48. Perception and Memory Share Circuitry
  • Chapter 49. The Cognitive Coalition
  • Chapter 50. Rewired and Running Hot
  • Part 12. Subjectivity
  • Chapter 51. Being There
  • Chapter 52. What Is It Like to Be Conscious?
  • Chapter 53. I Want to Take You Higher
  • Chapter 54. Higher Awareness in the Brain
  • Part 13. Consciousness Through the Looking Glass of Memory
  • Chapter 55. The Invention of Experience
  • Chapter 56. Ah, Memory
  • Chapter 57. Putting Memories in Their Places
  • Chapter 58. Higher-Order Awareness Through the Lens of Memory
  • Part 14. The Shallows
  • Chapter 59. The Tricky Problem of Other Minds
  • Chapter 60. Creeping Up on Consciousness
  • Chapter 61. Kinds of Minds
  • Part 15. Emotional Subjectivity
  • Chapter 62. The Slippery Slopes of Emotional Semantics
  • Chapter 63. Can Survival Circuits Save the Day?
  • Chapter 64. Thoughtful Feelings
  • Chapter 65. Emotional Brains Run HOT
  • Chapter 66. Survival Is Deep, but Our Emotions Are Shallow
  • Epilogue: Can We Survive Our Self-Conscious Selves?
  • Appendix
  • Bibliographic Key
  • Illustration Credits
  • Index
Review by Booklist Review

Roger Penrose much-acclaimed theoretical physicist predicts that scientists will pierce the mystery of human consciousness by applying as-yet-undiscovered concepts in quantum mechanics. While Penrose hopes for future breakthroughs, LeDoux delves into already-completed evolutionary research to explain the neurobiological origins and dynamics of human consciousness. For LeDoux, the character of human consciousness actually grows clearer if we simply set it aside as irrelevant to the impulses manifest in most of the behaviors necessary for survival. To explain how humans face danger, seek food, eliminate bodily waste, and engage in sex, LeDoux examines biological scripts traceable all the way back to the first one-celled creatures. In this narrative, humans' reflective awareness accompanies but does not govern such fundamental behaviors. Still, LeDoux recognizes that only reflective consciousness (which he discerns in no nonhuman species) could have created the human race's most inspiring ethical and moral principles. Indeed, LeDoux sees humankind in a crisis that the slow process of biological evolution will not resolve. He believes only self-conscious minds willing to resist selfish impulses can avert a species calamity. Though they may wonder how natural selection alone could have forged a consciousness capable of such selflessness, readers have good reason to ponder LeDoux's concluding challenge. Refreshingly lucid treatment of profound questions.--Bryce Christensen Copyright 2019 Booklist

From Booklist, Copyright (c) American Library Association. Used with permission.
Review by Publisher's Weekly Review

The eons-long development of the mechanics of thought--and other aspects of life--are covered in this sprawling, sometimes indigestible treatise from NYU neuroscientist Le Doux (The Emotional Brain). Surveying the rise and evolution of life-forms out of the primordial soup, he highlights such milestones as the acquisition of neurons by jellyfish and the arrival of mammals with their structured brains. Le Doux then focuses on the neuroscience of how brains process information and control behavior, elaborating on two themes: that, contrary to conventional wisdom, one's emotions do not cause one's behaviors and that, contrary to anthropomorphism, nonprimate animals may not have emotions, or even consciousness. The book contains provocative, sometimes unsettling descriptions of experiments, by Le Doux and others, that demonstrate how much seemingly conscious, willed behavior is actually unconscious and automatic, along with detailed discussions of the complex interactions of perception, memory, emotions, and cognition that underlie consciousness. However, Le Doux's writing tends to bog down in impenetrably dense terminology: "The dorsal and ventral lateral prefrontal cortex regions also receive inputs from the multimodal convergence zone in the neocortical pareital and temporal lobes." Though this exhaustive study brings up some fascinating concepts, the often arcane presentation will deter all but the most devoted of lay readers. Agent: Katinka Matson, Edge. (Sept.)

(c) Copyright PWxyz, LLC. All rights reserved
Review by Library Journal Review

Neuroscientist LeDoux (neural science, psychology & psychiatry, New York Univ.; Anxious) draws a hard line in the sand between the human mind and that of all other species. In the first part of this two-part volume he takes readers on a long journey through the evolutionary tree of life, emphasizing the physical features and behaviors that connect all life forms. The second part focuses on those mental faculties that separate Homo sapiens from other animals: cognition, consciousness, memory, and the capacity of the human brain for language, reasoning, and culture. In his view animal brains lack this functionality, and he takes issue with scientists such as Frans de Waal, Marc Bekoff, and Jane Goodall, whose research shows that animals have emotions and other states of consciousness comparable to those of humans. Chapters are short, easily digested essays, but the sections on theories of consciousness and memory are highly technical and, despite helpful illustrations, may cause the general science reader to glaze over. VERDICT Recommended for those with a strong background in evolutionary cognition who enjoyed Daniel Dennett's From Bacteria to Bach and Back. For an alternate viewpoint on animal cognition turn to de Waal's Are We Smart Enough To Know How Smart Animals Are?--Cynthia Lee Knight, Hunterdon Cty. Historical Soc., Flemington, NJ

(c) Copyright Library Journals LLC, a wholly owned subsidiary of Media Source, Inc. No redistribution permitted.
Review by Kirkus Book Review

An in-depth examination of "the place of human beings in the nearly four-billion-year-long history of life."Humans are the only creatures that talk, reason, and reflect on who we are, but all organisms do many of the same things we do to survive, writes LeDoux (Science and Psychiatry/New York Univ.; Anxious: Using the Brain To Understand and Treat Fear and Anxiety, 2015, etc.). Plenty of popular authors describe the history of life, but LeDoux wants readers to remember as well as enjoy, so he divides his book into short, pithy chapters, each explaining a single evolutionary advance. Four billion years ago, something acquired the ability to extract energy from its surroundings and to reproduce, so it fit the definition of "life." To continue living, it had to survive by avoiding dangers and pursuing necessities. The author emphasizes that action and even learning and memory don't require a nervous system. "Behavior is notprimarily a tool of the mind but of survival," he writes, continuing, "the connection of behavior to mental life, like mental life itself, is an evolutionary afterthought." Creatures without nerves did fine for several billion years. Primitive hydra evolved a simple nerve net that enabled much quicker responses, but since the net was generalized, hydra behavior is identical no matter what part of its body is stimulated. Its close kin, jellyfish, developed the first concentrated collections of neurons to control specialized actions such as swimming and prey capture. Nervous systems and then brains gradually grow more complicated, and LeDoux delves into the nature of awareness, perception, deliberation, memory, language, emotion, and, finally, consciousness. Like all good educators, the author begins simply. The first half of the book is a superb overview of evolution; the second half gradually focuses on brain structure and function. Readers will learn a great deal of deep neuroscience, although, despite a generous stream of illustrations, they will need to pay close attention.A dense but expert history of human behavior beginning at the beginning. Copyright Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.

Copyright (c) Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.