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Shadows of the Mind A Search for the Missing Science of Consciousness

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ISBN-10: 0195106466

ISBN-13: 9780195106466

Edition: Reprint 

Authors: Roger Penrose

List price: $34.99
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A New York Times bestseller when it appeared in 1989, Roger Penrose's The Emperor's New Mind was universally hailed as a marvelous survey of modern physics as well as a brilliant reflection on the human mind, offering a new perspective on the scientific landscape and a visionary glimpse of the possible future of science. Now, in Shadows of the Mind, Penrose offers another exhilarating look at modern science as he mounts an even more powerful attack on artificial intelligence. But perhaps more important, in this volume he points the way to a new science, one that may eventually explain the physical basis of the human mind. Penrose contends that some aspects of the human mind lie beyond…    
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Book details

List price: $34.99
Publisher: Oxford University Press, Incorporated
Publication date: 8/22/1996
Binding: Paperback
Pages: 480
Size: 9.25" wide x 6.06" long x 0.94" tall
Weight: 1.496
Language: English

Albert Einstein was born on March 14, 1879 in Ulm. He spent his childhood in Munich where his family owned a small machine shop. By the age of twelve, Einstein had taught himself Euclidean Geometry. His family moved to Milan, where he stayed for a year, and he used it as an excuse to drop out of school, which bored him. He finished secondary school in Aarau, Switzerland and entered the Swiss Federal Institute of Technology in Zurich. Einstein graduated in 1900, by studying the notes of a classmate since he did not attend his classes out of boredom, again. His teachers did not like him and would not recomend him for a position in the University. For two years, Einstein worked as a substitute…    

Preface
Acknowledgements
Prologue
Why we Need New Physics to Understand the Mind
Consciousness and computation
The Godelian case
The case for non-computability in mathematical thought
What New Physics we Need to Understand the Mind
Does Mind Have a Place in Classical Physics?
Structure of the Quantum World
Quantum theory and reality
Quantum theory and the brain
Implications?
Epilogue