Reading Minds: A Guide to the Cognitive Neuroscience Revolution
Book Details
- Publisher : Routledge
- Published : 2010
- Cover : Paperback
- Pages : 256
- Category :
Neuroscience - Category 2 :
Popular Psychology - Catalogue No : 28671
- ISBN 13 : 9781855757141
- ISBN 10 : 1855757141
Reviews and Endorsements
'Michael Moskowitz's mind works by visiting every known knowledge depository on a topic he is interested in, acquiring what is most interesting and suggestive, taking all the bits home, assembling them into a coherent story of development by discovering their hidden connections, and then figuring out what is new and what is truly significant in the story. The method works well when he is being a clinician; and it works well when he is being an intellectual historian. In Reading Minds, it works really, really well as Moskowitz explains why modern cognitive neuroscience is revolutionary in its take on how minds work. He tells the theory, and he shows it as a theory builder.'
- Elisabeth Young-Bruehl, PhD, Author of numerous books, including prize-winning biographies of Hannah Arendt and Anna Freud
'Through his engaging, casual and accessible style, with stories from daily life, the clinical arena and the laboratory, Moskowitz will succeed at informing, provoking and entertaining the lay reader, although his scholarly rigour will also make this book appealing to clinicians and academics. He effectively brings together the theory and practice of a range of disciplines in a refreshing way, making them comprehensible even to the untrained reader, a skill seldom displayed in this field... this is an exciting book, written with boundless enthusiasm - a joy to read.'
- The British Journal of Psychiatry
'This very engaging and scholarly volume serves as an excellent introduction to this increasingly relevant subject and is to be enjoyed not only by the general public, but by those of us in the field as well.'
- Brian Koehler PhD, President, the International Society for the Psychological Treatments of the Schizophrenias and Other Psychoses
'An analyst, an academic and an editor, Moskowitz is a psychoanalytic entrepreneur with a mission. He wants to rescue psychoanalysis from the academic isolation and bitter scholarly skirmishes that have dogged it for the last twenty years by bridging the divide between clinicians and theorists who work in various disciplines'
- The New York Times
'It's about brain research and depression, romance and developmental psychology, primate research and borderline pathologies - sometimes all at the same time. We are carried along and rewarded with a fascinating read: Moskowitz has profound psychological knowledge - he explains studies and takes us into research laboratories; he shows us his warm-hearted and humorous way of talking to his patients about their needs and desires in their lives with others.'
- On Culture, German National Radio
'Moskowitz, a psychoanalyst and organisational consultant, promises a great deal having captured our attention with his title, and he manages to deliver. Through his engaging, casual and accessible style, with stories from daily life, the clinical arena and the laboratory, Moskowitz will succeed at informing, provoking and entertaining the lay reader, although his scholarly rigour will also make this book appealing to clinicians and academics. He effectively brings together the theory and practice of a range of disciplines in a refreshing way, making them comprehensible even to the untrained reader, a skill seldom displayed in this field. His experience working in a variety of settings, clinical, organisational and academic, is evident in his work as he seamlessly blends concepts from different schools of thought.'
- British Journal of Psychiatry