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The Ceiling Outside: The Science and Experience of the Disrupted Mind

Paperback / softback

Main Details

Title The Ceiling Outside: The Science and Experience of the Disrupted Mind
Authors and Contributors      By (author) Noga Arikha
Physical Properties
Format:Paperback / softback
Pages:304
Dimensions(mm): Height 214,Width 134
Category/GenrePhilosophy
Phenomenology and Existentialism
Neurosciences
ISBN/Barcode 9781529385472
ClassificationsDewey:128.2
Audience
Tertiary Education (US: College)
Professional & Vocational
General

Publishing Details

Publisher John Murray Press
Imprint Basic Books
Publication Date 28 April 2022
Publication Country United Kingdom

Description

As her mother slips into the fog of dementia, a philosopher grapples with the unbreakable links between our bodies and our sense of self.? Vanessa wakes from a coma to find she has lost ten years of memories and that she has become a person she does not recognise. Toussaint, a Haitian immigrant, is haunted by voices. Thomas no longer knows how to answer questions and a retired teacher loses the use of her right hand because of an inexplicable pain. Noga Arikha began studying these patients and their confounding symptoms in order to explore how our physical experiences inform our identities. Soon after she began her work, the question took on unexpected urgency, as Arikha's own mother began to show signs of Alzheimer's disease. Weaving together stories of her subjects' troubles and her mother's decline, Arikha searches for some meaning in the science she has set out to study. She explores how the self studies itself and how it loses itself, delving into the scientific research that can help us understand how deeply interconnected are our minds and bodies. The result is an unforgettable journey across the ever-shifting boundaries between ourselves and each other.

Author Biography

Noga Arikha is a philosopher and historian of ideas. The author of Passions and Tempers: A History of the Humours, she is associate fellow of the Warburg Institute and honorary fellow of the Center for the Politics of Feelings, London, and research associate at the Institut Jean Nicod, Paris. She is based in Florence, Italy.

Reviews

Noga Arikha is that rare author whose deep knowledge of philosophy, science, and the arts allows her to move deftly from the quandaries of medical diagnosis and the scientific ideas that inform them to the intimate narratives of people afflicted with illnesses that threaten the coherence of that mysterious thing we call "a self." Astute, compassionate, and brilliant, The Ceiling Outside is finally an adventure story in the bewildering drama of being -- Siri Hustvedt, bestselling author of Memories of the Future Noga Arikha is a poet and a painter with the soul of a scientist. Trust her to guide you through a study of suffering and healing that will leave you humanly richer and, wonder of wonders, at peace with yourself -- Antonio Damasio, David Dornsife Chair in Neuroscience, University of Southern California, and author of Descartes' Error With grace, rigour and imagination, Arikha brings together the languages of mind, brain, and embodied human experience to give us a book that fascinates on every page -- Lisa Appignanesi, author of Mad, Bad and Sad: A History of Women and the Mind Doctors and Everyday Madness A moving journey to the roots of the self, which uniquely combines the author's deep knowledge of its neuropsychological foundations with a touching humanistic sensibility. A must read -- Vittorio Gallese, Professor of Psychobiology at the University of Parma, Italy A luminous, intellectually dense meditation on mind -- Kirkus Reviews Like Oliver Sacks and the neuroscientist Antonio Damasio, Arikha structures her exploration of these larger questions around individual cases. Each is fascinating not only in itself, but also as an opportunity for Arikha to expand on the historical and social understandings of particular ailments, and of the evolution of those understandings -- Harper's Magazine Arikha has a gift for making scientific technicalities digestible by baking them into irresistible narratives and wise reflections . . . Arikha is a formidable scholar of medicine. As an impartial observer, she regards the history of the human sciences as inclusive, across both time and place, and it is refreshing to hear about traditional philosophical topics such as the mind-body problem or the distinction between the normal and the pathological from non-Western and premodern perspectives. -- American Scholar