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Sign up todayProust Was a Neuroscientist
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Learn moreIn this technology-driven age, itโs tempting to believe that science can solve every mystery. After all, science has cured countless diseases and even sent humans into space. But as Jonah Lehrer argues in this sparkling debut, science is not the only path to knowledge. In fact, when it comes to understanding the brain, art got there first.
Taking a group of artists โ a painter, a poet, a chef, a composer, and a handful of novelists โ Lehrer shows how each one discovered an essential truth about the mind that science is only now rediscovering. We learn, for example, how Proust first revealed the fallibility of memory; how George Eliot discovered the brainโs malleability; how the French chef Escoffier identified umami (the fifth taste); how Cรฉzanne worked out the subtleties of vision; and how Gertrude Stein exposed the deep structure of language โ a full half-century before the work of Noam Chomsky and other linguists. Itโs the ultimate tale of art trumping science.
More broadly, Lehrer shows that thereโs a cost to reducing everything to atoms and acronyms and genes. Measurement is not the same as understanding, and this is what art knows better than science. An ingenious blend of biography, criticism, and first-rate science writing, Proust Was a Neuroscientist urges science and art to listen more closely to each other, for willing minds can combine the best of both, to brilliant effect.
JONAH LEHRER is editor at large for Seed magazine and the author of Proust Was a Neuroscientist. A graduate of Columbia University and a Rhodes Scholar, Lehrer has worked in the lab of Nobel Prizeโwinning neuroscientist Eric Kandel and has written for The New Yorker, the Washington Post, and the Boston Globe. He edits the "Mind Matters" blog for Scientific American, and writes his own highly regarded blog, "The Frontal Cortex."