10
0
Support the library.
Your support helps keep books free for everyone ❤️
📍 Noticed
One Hand Clapping: Unraveling the Mystery of the Human Mind
by Nikolay Kukushkin
Sponsored
Synopsis
Neuroscientist Nikolay Kukushkin reveals how consciousness evolved out of the natural world, from the birth of the cell to the majesty of our modern minds.
Science says that you are nothing but a chemical reaction—a collection of atoms and molecules, like rocks, paperclips, and everything else in ...
Science says that you are nothing but a chemical reaction—a collection of atoms and molecules, like rocks, paperclips, and everything else in ...
Neuroscientist Nikolay Kukushkin reveals how consciousness evolved out of the natural world, from the birth of the cell to the majesty of our modern minds.
Science says that you are nothing but a chemical reaction—a collection of atoms and molecules, like rocks, paperclips, and everything else in the physical universe. But if that’s so, where is the place in this world for your consciousness? In a word, why does it feel so special to be you?
Like the Zen Buddhist riddle pondering the imponderable—the sound of a single hand clapping—One Hand Clapping asks the seemingly unanswerable question of how the human mind came to exist within the material world. In search of an answer, neuroscientist Nikolay Kukushkin takes readers on a billion-year journey through time from the roots of our existence to the advent of Homo sapiens, reimagining the story of our evolution. The result is an exhilarating book that embeds our consciousness within a single, unified story of life on Earth.
Illuminated by Kukushkin’s revolutionary account of what makes us what we are, the so-called “hard problem” of consciousness—the mystery by which our first-person feelings arise from the brain—evaporates like a dream. Instead, the book reveals the deep continuity between our consciousness and nature itself.
A work of ambitious intellectual scope, One Hand Clapping is distinguished as much by its originality as by the breadth of its imaginative reach—drawing from neuroscience, evolution, philosophy, and a rich tapestry of cultural references, all brought to life by the author’s own whimsical illustrations. Told with the drama and daring of a mythical epic, it reaches deep into our oceanic past to show for the first time how the entire course of Earth’s history, from the earliest nonliving particles, ultimately led to the formation of our own minds.
In a time of technological confusion, Kukushkin’s book is an ode to the human being—an unfolding of Nature itself, blessed with the gift to contemplate the world and to hear the sound of one hand clapping.
You May Also Like
The Crack in Space
Philip K. Dick
Princess Daisy
Judith Krantz
Billy the Lost Boiler (Billy the Boiler Adventures)
Ali Anderson
Neil Grant's Book of spies and spying
Neil Grant
The MAGA Doctrine: An Insightful Analysis of how Trump reshaped Conservatism, from the Late Turning Point USA Founder
Charlie Kirk
Tidespeaker
Sadie Turner
Memoir Picks
View All
The Book of Hope: A Survival Guide for Trying Times
Jane Goodall
Bossypants
Tina Fey
When Breath Becomes Air
Paul Kalanithi
What My Bones Know
Stephanie Foo
All the Beauty in the World: The Metropolitan Museum of Art and Me
Patrick Bringley
All the Way to the River: Love Loss and Liberation
Elizabeth Gilbert