dondodi's review

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challenging informative reflective medium-paced

5.0

Fascinating and brilliantly written, although sometimes a bit too technical in the medical details of neurobiology, this thought-provoking book is a must-read if you’re interested in the mind and brain sciences and specifically in the topic of consciousness.

Read my full review here:
The Feeling of What Happens – Dodi Reads 

liz_ross's review

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challenging informative reflective medium-paced

4.25

A really interesting book, well-explained and with strong arguments. António Damásio wrote an extraordinary books about consciousness and his arguments are so strong and clear that I found myself agreeing with him and his theory to what really is consciousness.

Damásio takes it off the pedestal we so often put it on, splits it in several different parts and gives strong arguments to validate the division. And does that all with such passion for the subject that you can't help wanting to know more, to read more, to find out what else he has to say.

The best part, though, is that even if having a knowledge base about anatomy and biology helps, it isn't a must to understand the book. Damásio explains the simple just as the complex, always with the same passion and attention that makes this book so extraordinary, easy to read and interesting.

A must read read for anyone interested in the mystery of the consciousness, offering a different perspective about it that is actually pretty reasonable and believable. I wouldn't be surprised if in some years, we would get the confirmation that Damásio's theory is correct.

Full review coming soon!

rebus's review

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1.0

Damasio wrote one of the most important books about neurology, and now he's writing new age woo hoo. 

dilby's review

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Marvelous. If Descartes' Error was a methodical deconstruction of the dualist notion of "pure reason," The Feeling of What Happens represents an equally rigorous attempt to explain the powerful intuition that motivated it: the feeling that "my experience" is truly and meaningfully mine, that experience is something quite special and distinct from everything else we are made aware of in the world.

As it turns out, the body-minded-brain (a useful Damasian formulation) works very hard to render experience in a disembodied first-person point-of-view. Operating beneath and alongside our consciousness is a network of embodied cognitive processes involving constant successive representations of the body, the always already emotionally charged construction of sensory images (sight, sound, taste, touch, proprioception, etc), the perception of "background feelings" and information about our surroundings, and so on and so forth. Consciousness is material, but it hides its materiality.

Equally significant, for me, is Damasio's ongoing reframing of human experience around feeling and emotion, a project he continues from the previous book. Consciousness itself is, in Damasio's view, a feeling that one's experiences are one's own, or rather a feeling of one's experiences as one's own. The complex organization of such feelings into a unified and narrative self is one of the features that seems, for our perspective, to be unique to human beings.

The primacy of feeling as a process relating organisms to objects (which here means literally anything that can affect something else) points Damasio in the direction of the radically level playing field of Spinoza's ethics, which frames interactions between any two beings in terms of potentia agendi ("the potential to do" or "the ability to act") and is the seed that blossomed into posthumanism and affect theory. Although perhaps I am reading too much into this because I know that the title of Damasio's next book is Looking for Spinoza. Either way, I'm reading it ASAP.
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