16. 左脑,右脑,一个大脑,两个大脑

A. Scull
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引用次数: 2

摘要

这是一个奇怪的任务:不是作为一个非神经科学家,被要求为一本关于大脑左右半球的结构和功能的书写一篇评论,因为《大师和他的使者》毕竟是针对聪明的普通读者的,在这种情况下,我至少可以声称自己是一个普通读者;而是受邀为一份读者主要局限于神经学家和神经科学家的杂志做这样的评估,这些读者在基础脑科学方面的专业知识要比我高几个数量级,也要复杂得多。如何处理这样的任务?我没有必要花太多篇幅来批评伊恩·麦吉尔克里斯特(Iain McGilchrist)对研究文献的掌握程度,因为有成千上万的评论家比我更有能力进行这样的评估。麦吉尔克里斯特利用研究文献来证明自己的观点。相反,像其他非专业读者一样,我必须在很大程度上相信他所声称的代表了当前神经科学知识的状态,并将把我的大部分注意力转移到其他地方:他的分析是关于大脑二元性的长期历史辩论;他试图从神经科学的狭隘发现转变为一种非常大胆和雄心勃勃的尝试,以理解这些发现的含义,正如他在副标题中所说的那样,“西方世界的形成”。人类和哺乳动物的大脑由两个半球组成,这一点早已为人所知。公元前三世纪的希腊医生就知道并推测了大脑的分裂,McGilchrist在很大程度上顺便提到,盖伦的解剖学研究,主要是在动物身上进行的,使所有感兴趣的人都知道了大脑的这种基本二元性
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
16. Left Brain, Right Brain, One Brain, Two Brains
It is an odd assignment, this one: not as a non-neuroscientist the request to write a review of a book on the structure and functioning of the left and right hemispheres of the brain, for The master and his emissary is after all aimed at the intelligent general reader, and in this context I can at least lay claim to being a general reader; but rather the invitation to make such an assessment for a journal whose readership is largely confined to neurologists and neuroscientists, an audience whose expertise on the underlying brain science is orders of magnitude greater and more sophisticated than mine. How to tackle such a task? It makes no sense for me to devote much space to a critique of Iain McGilchrist’s mastery of the research literature on which he draws to make his case, for there are literally thousands of reviewers more competent than I to undertake such an assessment. Instead, like other non-specialist readers, I must perforce take largely on trust his claims to represent the current state of neuroscientific knowledge, and will turn most of my attention elsewhere: to where his analysis sits in a long-running historical debate on the duality of the brain; and to an examination of his attempt to move from the narrow findings of neuroscience to a remarkably bold and ambitious attempt to understand their implications for, as he puts it in his subtitle, ‘the making of the Western world’. ![Graphic][1] That human and mammalian brains are composed of two hemispheres has long been known. Greek physicians from the third century before the Christian Era knew of and speculated about the divided brain, and McGilchrist mentions, largely in passing, that Galen’s anatomical researches, mostly conducted on animals, made this basic duality of the brain known to all interested parties from … [1]: /embed/inline-graphic-1.gif
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