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Reading an interesting book

Started by McQ, September 09, 2008, 03:46:33 PM

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McQ

I wanted to share a book title with you all. I'm currently reading a very interesting book by Jonah Lehrer, Proust Was a Neuroscientist.

# Publisher: Houghton Mifflin Company
# Pub. Date: November 2007
# ISBN-13: 9780618620104

I'll give you the encapsulated review by Barnes and Noble:

The Barnes & Noble Review

Two venerable and interconnected philosophical problems permeate Proust Was a Neuroscientist by Jonah Lehrer -- a fascinating, succinct (197-page), if sometimes over-ambitious examination of the ways in which the work of Walt Whitman, Paul Cézanne, Igor Stravinsky, and five other artists anticipated some modern discoveries about the brain. Those two problems are the mystery of the conscious self -- how and why it is we are aware of our own being in the world -- and the question of free will.


I've found it pretty good. Lehrer writes very well, and it goes fast, as the chapters are short; each one is about a different person. I did read a review of the book that was of the opinion that Lehrer overstates his case and ignores a lot of other relevant information. At first I disagreed with that person's review, but as I got farther into the book, I tend to agree that he does overstate his case a fair bit.

However, it doesn't stop me from enjoying the book, or learning new and interesting things about both historical figures and neuroscience. I highly recommend the book. It is available in paperback for under $20 (U.S.)

My favorite chapter has actually been on Auguste Escoffier (the great French chef).

So if you're looking for a good read, check your local library, or hit your bookstore!
Elvis didn't do no drugs!
--Penn Jillette

curiosityandthecat

On a related note, a Proust summarizing competition.
[spoiler:i640esi4]The cast:

VOICE OVER: Eric Idle
ARTHUR MEE: Terry Jones
HARRY: Graham Chapman
RONALD: Michael Palin

The sketch:

      (The hall of the Memorial Baths, Swansea, done up for a gala occasion. There is a stage with flags, bunting and flowers. Echoing noise of audience antidpation. Muffled tannoy announcements in background.)

      Voice Over: Good evening, and welcome to the Arthur Ludlow Memorial Baths, Newport, for this year's finals of the All-England Summarize Proust Competition. (pull back slightly to reveal big banner across the top of the stage: 'Alll-England Summarize Proust Competition') As you may remember, each contestant has to give a brief summary of Proust's 'A La Recherche du Temps Perdu', once in a swimsuit and once in evening dress. The field has now narrowed to three finalists and your judges tonight are... (cut to panel of judges at long desk; they are all cut-outs of smiling photos of the following) Alec and Eric Bedser, ex-Surrey cricketers, Stewart Surridge, ex-captain of Surrey, Omar Sharif, Laurie Fishlock, ex-Surrey opening batsman, Peter May, the former Surrey and England Captain, and Yehudi Menuhin, the world-famous violinist and the President of the Surrey Cricket Club. And right now it's time to meet your host for tonight - Arthur Mee!

      (Showbiz music, applause, and Arthur Mee appears from the back of the stage; he wears the now traditional spangly jacket. He comes forward and speaks into the mike ; the sound is rather hollow and strident as in big halls with a hastily rigged PA.)

      Mee: (TERRY J) Good evening and welcome, whereas Proust would say, 'la malade imaginaire de recondition et de toute surveillance est bientôt la même chose'. (roars of applause; quick shot of grinning faces of the jury) Remember each contestant this evening has a maximum of fifteen seconds to sum up 'A La Recherche du Temps Perdu' and on the Proustometer over here... (curtain pulls back at back of stage to reveal a true, enormous, but cheap, audience appreciation gauge; it lists the seven books of Proust's masterwork in the firm of a thermometer) you can see exactly how far he gets. So let's crack straight on with our first contestant tonight. He's last year's semi-finalist from Luton - Mr Harry Bagot. (Harry Bagot, in evening dress, comes forward from back of stage, he has a number three on his back; Mee leads the applause for him) Hello Harry. Now there's the summarizing spoh you're on the summarizing spot, fifteen seconds from now.

     (Music starts, continuity-type music. The needle of the Proustometer creeps up almost iraperceptibly to a tiny level.)

      Harry: Proust's novel ostensibly tells of the irrevocability of time lost, the forfeiture of innocence through experience, the reinstatement of extra-temporal values of time regained, ultimately the novel is both optimistic and set within the context of a humane religious experience, re-stating as it does the concept of intemporality. in the first volume, Swarm, the family friend visits...

      (Gong goes, chord of rausic, applause. The meter has hardly risen at all.)

      Mee: Well tried, Harry.

      Voice Over: A good attempt there but unfortunately he chose a general appraisal of the work, before getting on to the story and as you can see (close up of Proustometer) he only got as far as page one of 'Swarm'sWay', the first of the seven volumes. A good try though and very nice posture,

      (Cut back to the stage.)

      Mee: Harry: Bagot, you're from Luton?

      Harry: Yes, Arthur, yeah.

      Mee: Now Harry what made you first want to try and start summarizing Proust

      Harry: Well I first entered a seaside Summarizing Proust Competition when I was on holiday in Bournemouth, and my doctor encouraged me with it.

      Mee: And Harry, what are your hobbies outside summarizing?

      Harry: Well, strangling animals, golf and masturbating.

      Mee: Well, thank you Harry Bagot.

      Harry: walks off-stage. Music and applause.

      Voice Over: Well there he goes. Harry Bagot. He must have let himself down a bit on the hobbies, golf's not very popular around here, but never mind, a good try.

      Mee: Thank you ladies and gentlemen. Mr Rutherford from Leicester, are you ready Ronald? (Ronald is a very eager man in tails) Right. On the summarizing spot. You have got fifteen seconds from now.

      Ronald: Er, well, Swann, Swann, there's this house, there's this house, and er, it's in the morning, it's in the morning - no, it's the evening, in the evening and er, there's a garden and er, this bloke comes in - bloke comes in - what's his name - what's his name, er just said it - big bloke - Swarm, Swarm

     (The gong sounds. Mee pushes Ronald out.)

      Mee: And now ladies and gentlemen, I'd like you to welcome the last of our all-England finalists this evening, from Bingley, the Bolton Choral Society and their leader Superintendent McGough, (a big choir comes on, immaculately drilled, each holding a score, with Fred Tomlinson as superintendent McGough) All right Bingley, remember you've got fifteen seconds to summarize Proust in his entirety starting from now.

     First Soloist: Proust, in his first book wrote about... fa la la...

      Second Soloist: Proust in his first book wrote about...

      Tenors: He wrote about...

      (They continue contrapuntally, in madrigal, never getting beyond these words until they rallentando to say...)

      All: Proust in his first book wrote about the... (gong sounds)

      Voice Over: Very ambitious try there, but in fact the least successful of the evening, they didn't even get as far as the first volume. (the singers leave the stage)

      Mee: Well ladies and gendemen, I don't think any of our contestants this evening have succeeded in encapsuladng the intricacies of Proust's masterwork, so I'm going to award the first prize this evening to the girl with the biggest tits.[/spoiler:i640esi4]

Added it to my Anobii list.  :D
-Curio

Will

My first thought on reading the thread title: "The Bible? Nah, not interesting."

That sounds really interesting. I'll shoot by B&N on the way home from work.
I want bad people to look forward to and celebrate the day I die, because if they don't, I'm not living up to my potential.