The Intentional Brain: Motion, Emotion, and the Development of Modern Neuropsychiatry
328The Intentional Brain: Motion, Emotion, and the Development of Modern Neuropsychiatry
328Hardcover
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Overview
Neuropsychiatry has a distinguished history, yet its ideals and principles fell out of fashion in the early twentieth century as neurology and psychiatry diverged into separate disciplines. Later, neuropsychiatry reemerged as the two disciplines moved closer again, accelerated by advances in neuroanatomy, neurochemistry, and drugs that alter the functioning of the central nervous system. But as neuropsychiatrist Michael R. Trimble explains in The Intentional Brain, the new neuropsychiatry has its own identity and is more than simply a borderland between two disparate clinical disciplines.
Looking at neuropsychiatry in the context of major cultural and artistic achievements, Trimble explores changing views of the human brain and its relation to behavior and cognition over 2,500 years of Western civilization. Beginning with the early Greek physicians and moving through the Middle Ages, the Enlightenment, the romantic era, the World Wars, and up to the present day, he explores understandings about the brain’s integral role in determining movement, motivation, and mood. Persuasively arguing that storytelling forms the backbone of human culture and individuality, Trimble describes the dawn and development of artistic creativity and traces the conflicts between differing philosophical views of our world and our position in it.
A sweeping history of the branch of medicine concerned with both psychic and organic aspects of mental disorder, the book reveals what scientists have learned about movement and emotion by studying people with such diseases as epilepsy, syphilis, hysteria, psychosis, movement disorders, and melancholia. The Intentional Brain is a marvelous and interdisciplinary look at the clinical interface between the mind and the brain.
Product Details
ISBN-13: | 9781421419497 |
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Publisher: | Johns Hopkins University Press |
Publication date: | 06/15/2016 |
Pages: | 328 |
Product dimensions: | 6.30(w) x 9.10(h) x 1.10(d) |
Age Range: | 18 Years |
About the Author
Table of Contents
Preface ix
1 Origins of the Romance 1
2 The Middle Ages: Darkness and Light 14
3 The Renaissance 26
4 The Enlightenment 47
5 Romanticism: Early Developments 69
6 Late Romanticism: Strange Times 96
7 Charcot's Joints 111
8 The Division of the Hemispheres 138
9 Fin de Siècle 162
10 The Turn of the Screw 183
11 The In-Between Years 207
12 After the War: Back to the Front 226
13 Coda 249
14 Neuropsychiatry, Then and Now 273
Acknowledgments 289
Name Index 291
Subject Index 300
What People are Saying About This
Dr. Trimble has made a tremendous contribution to the history of neuropsychiatry from the ancient Greeks to the present day. The Intentional Brain is sure to be well received by readers in the mental health sciences and professions and by those with an interest in medical history.
Known to psychiatrists, neurologists, and medical historians as the neuropsychiatrists’ neuropsychiatrist, Michael Trimble has written a tour de force: an assessment of the ‘culture’ of mind–brain relations beginning with the ancients and ending in the present, and highlighting the romantic era of the nineteenth century as a crucial turning point. There is nothing else like it.
This is Trimble at his best. Some might describe the attempt as overly ambitious, but Trimble brings together a detailed understanding of the history of western thought and weaves into that our conceptions and understanding of neuroscience and neuropsychiatry. This is a delightful read, with interesting vignettes and astute understanding.
Accessible and enjoyable. This book's breadth of vision will appeal to a wide audience.
Known to psychiatrists, neurologists, and medical historians as the neuropsychiatrists’ neuropsychiatrist, Michael Trimble has written a tour de force: an assessment of the ‘culture’ of mind–brain relations beginning with the ancients and ending in the present, and highlighting the romantic era of the nineteenth century as a crucial turning point. There is nothing else like it.—Edward Shorter, PhD, FRSC, University of Toronto
Accessible and enjoyable. This book's breadth of vision will appeal to a wide audience.—Anthony David, MD, King's College London
Dr. Trimble has made a tremendous contribution to the history of neuropsychiatry from the ancient Greeks to the present day. The Intentional Brain is sure to be well received by readers in the mental health sciences and professions and by those with an interest in medical history.—Derick E. Vergne, MD, Tufts School of Medicine
This is Trimble at his best. Some might describe the attempt as overly ambitious, but Trimble brings together a detailed understanding of the history of western thought and weaves into that our conceptions and understanding of neuroscience and neuropsychiatry. This is a delightful read, with interesting vignettes and astute understanding.—Mark S. George, MD, Medical University of South Carolina