Surfaces and Essences
Analogy as the Fuel and Fire of Thinking
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Narrated by:
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Sean Pratt
About this listen
Analogy is the core of all thinking.
This is the simple but unorthodox premise that Pulitzer Prize-winning author Douglas Hofstadter and French psychologist Emmanuel Sander defend in their new work.
Hofstadter has been grappling with the mysteries of human thought for over 30 years. Now, with his trademark wit and special talent for making complex ideas vivid, he has partnered with Sander to put forth a highly novel perspective on cognition.
We are constantly faced with a swirling and intermingling multitude of ill-defined situations. Our brain's job is to try to make sense of this unpredictable, swarming chaos of stimuli. How does it do so? The ceaseless hail of input triggers analogies galore, helping us to pinpoint the essence of what is going on. Often this means the spontaneous evocation of words, sometimes idioms, sometimes the triggering of nameless, long-buried memories.
Why did two-year-old Camille proudly exclaim, "I undressed the banana!"? Why do people who hear a story often blurt out, "Exactly the same thing happened to me!" when it was a completely different event? What did Albert Einstein see that made him suspect that light consists of particles when a century of research had driven the final nail in the coffin of that long-dead idea?
The answer to all these questions, of course, is analogy - making - the meat and potatoes, the heart and soul, the fuel and fire, the gist and the crux, the lifeblood and the wellsprings of thought.
Analogy-making, far from happening at rare intervals, occurs at all moments, defining thinking from top to toe, from the tiniest and most fleeting thoughts to the most creative scientific insights. Like Gödel, Escher, Bach before it, Surfaces and Essences will profoundly enrich our understanding of our own minds.
©2013 Basic Books (P)2013 Gildan Media LLCCritic Reviews
What listeners say about Surfaces and Essences
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- Deet
- 08-07-2015
An interesting topic ruined
This book starts well and I was enjoying a complex and interesting explanation of language and the development of concepts.
Unfortunately, the book contains incredibly long lists of examples for every concept, even the most obvious ones. For example, the chapter on acronyms contains a full 10 minute long (and it feels longer) list of well-known acronyms, when 3 or 4 examples would have sufficed. The narrator does his best, but there's little that can be done to make that material incredibly dull. Most chapters contain these incredibly long and monotonous lists of figures of speech, I found them totally distracting and annoying.
I honestly can't understand why these lists have been included, it really marrs what would otherwise have been an interesting listen.
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