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Your Brain Is (Almost) Perfect: How We Make Decisions
Read Montague

Your Brain Is (Almost) Perfect: How We Make Decisions

Plume (Sep 25, 2007)
9780452288843
| Paperback
352 pages | 137 x 208 mm | English
Dewey 153
LC Classification BF441 .M66 2007
LC Control No. 2006019015

Subject

  • Choice (Psychology)
  • Decision Making
  • Education / Decision-Making & Problem Solving
  • Medical / Neuroscience
  • Psychology / Cognitive Psychology

Plot

"A fascinating introduction" (Steven Pinker) to the science of decision-making One of the leading thinkers in the computational neuroscience revolution offers a brilliant new perspective on the mind?s decision-making process. Why do we make the choices we make? How can science explain free will? If our brains are like slow computers originally programmed for survival with goals like food, water, and sex, why do we make choices that go against our own biological best interests? Where do values come from? What role do emotions play? From how we decide what we consume to the romantic, ethical, and financial choices we make, Read Montague guides readers through a new approach to the mind that is both entertaining and illuminating.

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Added Date Mar 14, 2015 23:45:54
Modified Date Feb 10, 2016 01:04:30