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[ºÏÀ¯·´ 07ȸ] The Future of the Mind : ¸¶À½ÀÇ ¹Ì·¡ (Paperback)

The Scientific Quest to Understand, Enhance, and Empower the Mind* ¡º¸¶À½ÀÇ ¹Ì·¡¡» ¿µ¾î¿ø¼­

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  • »óÇ°¹øÈ£
    18077
  • ISBN / ÄÚµå
    9780307473349
  • ÀÛ°¡
    Michio Kaku (¹ÌÄ¡¿À °¡Äí)
  • ÃâÆÇ»ç
    Knopf Doubleday Publishing Gro
  • Pub. Date
    2/17/2015
  • Format
    Paperback, 400 Page
  • Size
    130mm * 201mm * 23mm

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      NOW A #1 NEW YORK TIMES BESTSELLER

      ¡°Compelling¡¦.Kaku thinks with great breadth, and the vistas he presents us are worth the trip¡±
      —The New York Times Book Review

      The New York Times best-selling author of PHYSICS OF THE IMPOSSIBLE, PHYSICS OF THE FUTURE and HYPERSPACE tackles the most fascinating and complex object in the known universe: the human brain.
              
      For the first time in history, the secrets of the living brain are being revealed by a battery of high tech brain scans devised by physicists. Now what was once solely the province of science fiction has become a startling reality. Recording memories, telepathy, videotaping our dreams, mind control, avatars, and telekinesis are not only possible; they already exist. 
       
      THE FUTURE OF THE MIND gives us an authoritative and compelling look at the astonishing research being done in top laboratories around the world—all based on the latest advancements in neuroscience and physics.  One day we might have a "smart pill" that can enhance our cognition; be able to upload our brain to a computer, neuron for neuron; send thoughts and emotions around the world on a "brain-net"; control computers and robots with our mind; push the very limits of immortality; and perhaps even send our consciousness across the universe. 
                
      Dr. Kaku takes us on a grand tour of what the future might hold, giving us not only a solid sense of how the brain functions but also how these technologies will change our daily lives. He even presents a radically new way to think about "consciousness" and applies it to provide fresh insight into mental illness, artificial intelligence and alien consciousness.  

      With Dr. Kaku's deep understanding of modern science and keen eye for future developments, THE FUTURE OF THE MIND is a scientific tour de force—an extraordinary, mind-boggling exploration of the frontiers of neuroscience.

       

      Editorial Reviews

      The New York Times Book Review - Adam Frank

      Kaku thinks with great breadth, and the vistas he presents us are worth the trip even if some of them turn out to be only dreamscapes.

      Publishers Weekly

      12/16/2013
      In this expansive, illuminating journey through the mind, theoretical physicist Kaku (Physics of the Future) explores fantastical realms of science fiction that may soon become our reality. His futurist framework merges physics with neuroscience to model how our brains construct the future, and is loosely applied to demonstrations that ¡°show proof-of-principle¡± in accomplishing what was previously fictional: that minds can be read, memories can be digitally stored, and intelligences can be improved to great extents. The discussion, while heavily scientific, is engaging, clear, and replete with cinematic references. Kaku¡¯s claims, however, often lack generalizability: his points about human thought are derived from research studies and patterns that emerge from discrete areas of analysis under highly sophisticated technological surveillance. The place of these esoteric conclusions in the nuanced processes of our daily life is rarely explained. Likewise, each issue raised, while fascinating, is equally fleeting: topics skip from telepathy helmets to cell phone MRIs in just over a page. Legal and ethical complications, too, arise with each predicted advance, though aren¡¯t given the attention they demand. These new mental frontiers make for captivating reading, yet Kaku¡¯s optimism and enthusiasm provides cover for what are mostly overhyped claims. Agent: Stuart Krichevsky. (Feb.)

      Library Journal

      09/15/2013
      Having wowed us with New York Times best sellers like Physics of the Future, CUNY physics professor Kaku takes us into the new neuroscience, showing us that recording memories and videotaping our dreams aren't sf fantasies but reality. And soon we might be able to upload our brains to a computer. With an eight-city tour.

      Kirkus Reviews

      2013-12-14
      Having written the enthusiastic but strictly science-based Physics of the Impossible (2008) and Physics of the Future (2011), Kaku (Theoretical Physics/City Univ. of New York) turns his attention to the human mind with equally satisfying results. Aware that predictions limited to a lifetime are usually wrong--where are the flying cars, cancer cures and Mars colonies foretold in the 1950s?--the author expands his forecasts to the next few centuries. He has no trouble foreseeing telepathy, telekinesis, intelligence pills, artificial memories and mind control. He agrees that centuries of research by physicians and neuroscientists has borne fruit, but he boasts that the end of the 20th century saw his own profession, physics, produce spectacular advances, with more to come. Acronymic high-tech machines (fMRI, PET, ECOG, DTI) allow researchers to watch the brain reason, see, remember and deliver instructions. Telepathy is no longer a fantasy since scanners can already detect, if crudely, what a subject is thinking, and genetics and biochemistry now allow researchers to alter memories and increase intelligence in animals. Direct electrical stimulation of distinct brain regions has changed behavior, awakened comatose patients, relieved depression, and produced out-of-body and religious experiences. Similar to the human genome program, massive research efforts in the United States and Europe to reverse-engineer the brain have the potential to vastly increase human potential as well as relieve disease and injury. "[W]e should treasure the consciousness that is found on the Earth," writes the author. "It is the highest form of complexity known in the universe, and probably the rarest." Kaku is not shy about quoting science-fiction movies and TV (he has seen them all). Despite going off the deep end musing about phenomena such as isolated consciousness spreading throughout the universe, he delivers ingenious predictions extrapolated from good research already in progress.

      From the Publisher

      Praise for The Future of the Mind

      ¡°In this expansive, illuminating journey through the mind, theoretical physicist Kaku (Physics of the Future) explores fantastical realms of science fiction that may soon become our reality. His futurist framework merges physics with neuroscience... applied to demonstrations that ¡°show proof-of-principle¡± in accomplishing what was previously fictional: that minds can be read, memories can be digitally stored, and intelligences can be improved to great extents. The discussion, while heavily scientific, is engaging, clear, and replete with cinematic references... These new mental frontiers make for captivating reading¡±
      -Publishers Weekly
       
       
      ¡°Kaku turns his attention to the human mind with equally satisfying results
      ¡¦Telepathy is no longer a fantasy since scanners can already detect, if crudely, what a subject is thinking, and genetics and biochemistry now allow researchers to alter memories and increase intelligence in animals. Direct electrical stimulation of distinct brain regions has changed behavior, awakened comatose patients, relieved depression, and produced out-of-body and religious experiences¡¦ Kaku is not shy about quoting science-fiction movies and TV (he has seen them all)¡¦ he delivers ingenious predictions extrapolated from good research already in progress.¡±                                                                                                                                     
      -Kirkus Reviews

      ¡°Facts to ponder: there are as many stars in our galaxy (about 100 billion) as there are neurons in your brain; your cell phone has more computing power than NASA had when it landed Apollo 11 on the moon. These seemingly unrelated facts tell us two things: our brains are magnificently complex organisms, and science fiction has a way of becoming reality rather quickly. This deeply fascinating book by theoretical physicist Kaku explores what might be in store for our minds: practical telepathy and telekinesis; artificial memories implanted into our brains; and a pill that will make us smarter. He describes work being done right now on using sensors to read images in the human brain and on downloading artificial memories into the brain to treat victims of strokes and Alzheimer¡¯s. SF fans might experience a sort of breathless thrill when reading the book—This stuff is happening! It¡¯s really happening!—and for general readers who have never really thought of the brain in all its glorious complexity and potential, the book could be a seriously mind-opening experience.¡±
      -Booklist

      Praise for Physics of the Future
       
      "[A] wide-ranging tour of what to expect from technological progress over the next century or so.... fascinating—and related with commendable clarity"—Wall Street Journal

      "Mind-bending........Kaku has a gift for explaining incredibly complex concepts, on subjects as far-ranging as nanotechnology and space travel, in language the lay reader can grasp....engrossing"—San Francisco Chronicle

      "Epic in its scope and heroic in its inspiration"—Scientific American
       
      "[Kaku] has the rare ability to take complicated scientific theories and turn them into readable tales about what our lives will be like in the future.....fun...fascinating. And just a little bit spooky"—USA Today
       
      Praise for Physics of the Impossible
       
      "An invigorating experience"
      -The Christian Science Monitor

       
      ¡°Kaku's latest book aims to explain exactly why some visions of the future may eventually be realized while others are likely to remain beyond the bounds of possibility. . . . Science fiction often explores such questions; science falls silent at this point. Kaku's work helps to fill a void.¡±—The Economist
       
      ¡°Mighty few theoretical physicists would bother expounding some of these possible impossibilities, and Kaku is to be congratulated for doing so. . . . [He gets] the juices of future physicists flowing.¡±—Los Angeles Times
       
       
       
       

      The Barnes & Noble Review

      Since the publication of Michio Kaku's first book, Hyperspace, in 1994, the personable (his many media appearances testify to his charm), verbally gifted, enthusiastic, science-proselytizing physicist has shared his own feelings of awe at the universe and the humans who inhabit it. Reading one of his books is like hijacking Kaku's oversized intelligence and enthusiasms to stoke your own sense of wonder. The Future of the Mind is no exception.

      This time around, Kaku is going to focus on inner space, not outer space. Proclaiming in his introduction that the universe and the human mind are the parallel and paramount subjects we must understand, Kaku intends to step us through the past couple of decades of neuro-discoveries, a period during which more has been learned about the human brain than in all prior history. And having grounded us, he will then extrapolate these findings to new heights.

      It takes only a succinct and stimulating forty pages or so — the first chapter — for Dr. Kaku to summarize the state of our knowledge about the brain up to the revolutionary moment when the MRI and other high- tech tools appeared. He delivers a concise portrait of what we knew in those Dark Ages about the brain's enigmatic organization, cellular operations, and overall functionality, as determined by crude dissections and black-box experimentation. Then, before venturing to outline our current and more sophisticated understanding, he gives us in Chapter 2 a "space-time theory of consciousness," defining just what the intelligent brain does, in instances from bacteria on up to humanity. Now he and the reader are fully prepared to approach and appreciate the avant-garde findings, and so ends Book I, "The Mind and Consciousness."

      In Book II, "Mind over Matter," Dr. Kaku delves into four main areas: telepathy, telekinesis, memories, and genius. He ushers us into laboratories he has personally visited — the list of scientists interviewed for this opus stretches to seven pages of close-set names — and shows us how the ability to detect, record, and interpret the signals of the brain during its daily operations leads naturally to such developments as brain-to-brain and brain-to-machine interfaces. Different modes of intelligence and intelligence amplification get a once-over, although prospects for baseline tinkering with the reasoning powers of the brain are less sanguine: "There are also indications from the laws of physics that we have reached the maximum natural limit of intelligence, so that any enhancement of our intelligence would have to come from external means." Get ready for Monty Python's strap-on brains.

      Two observations about the book up to this point in the text. While many of the individual findings Kaku presents might ring a bell in the mind of the reader as having been spotted in past headlines, it's the grand accumulation of them all in one visionary presentation, and the syncretic drawing of connections among them, that is Kaku's unique contribution. Also of note: much of the discussion is illuminated by Kaku's frequent references to science fiction films and books. Outing himself up front as an SF fan from childhood, he has lots of fun with his citations, which convey in familiar layman's scenarios the speculations which he is discussing with greater accuracy and precision.

      Book III is titled "Altered Consciousness," and while it exhibits a definite progression and scheme, it is something of a grab bag of topics, and I wonder if some themes should have been broken out under separate headers.

      We begin still firmly rooted in the human realm, with a look at dreaming, mind control techniques, and such freakish states as out-of-body experiences. Dr. Kaku also extends his "space-time" formulation to cover mental illness as well. Here, as before, our guide devotes time to the many societal implications of the new sciences, affirming that any potential technologies do not exist in a vacuum.

      Then, in Chapter 10, we shift to artificial intelligence, a somewhat big leap, although a little retroactive attention to the book's title reminds us that the discussion was never going to be limited to purely organic minds. We look at reverse-engineering the brain into some artificial substrate, then uploading it. Encoding the mind in pure energy is next, followed by some speculations on what a truly alien intelligence would look like, ending with some hopeful concluding remarks.

      I found a few omissions of interesting folks: Howard Gardner, on the topic of multiple kinds of intelligence; Patricia Churchland, on issues of free will; and Mihaly Csikszentmihalyi, on that creative state he has dubbed "flow." I would have liked to learn about any advances in these realms. But such quibbles are moot in the face of Michio Kaku's wide-ranging, optimistic, and lively survey of the miracles contained in three pounds of gray matter — and its silicon and alien equivalents — that we all possess.

      Author of several acclaimed novels and story collections, including Fractal Paisleys, Little Doors, and Neutrino Drag, Paul Di Filippo was nominated for a Sturgeon Award, a Hugo Award, and a World Fantasy Award — all in a single year. William Gibson has called his work "spooky, haunting, and hilarious." His reviews have appeared in The Washington Post, Science Fiction Weekly, Asimov's Magazine, and The San Francisco Chronicle.

      Reviewer: Paul Di Filippo

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