Out of our minds : a history of what we think and how we think it Felipe Fernandez-Armesto.

By: Fernández-Armesto, FelipeMaterial type: TextTextLanguage: English Publication details: Sunon & Schuster New Delhi 2019Description: 464pISBN: 9789386797582 (HB)Subject(s): Thought and thinking | Intellectual life | Philosophy | General
Contents:
Mind out of matter: the imaginative animal -- Gathering thoughts: thinking before agriculture -- Settled minds: early "civilized" thinking -- The great sages: the first named thinkers -- Thinking faiths: ideas in a religious age -- Rebirth: thinking through plague and cold -- Global enlightenments: joined-up thinking in a joined-up world -- The climacteric of progress: nineteenth-century certainties -- The revenge of chaos: unpicking certainty -- The age of uncertainty: twentieth-century hesitancies -- The end of ideas.
Summary: To imagine – to see that which is not there – is the startling ability that has fuelled human development and innovation through the centuries. As a species we stand alone in our remarkable capacity to refashion the world after the pictures in our minds. Traversing the realms of science, politics, religion, culture, philosophy and history, Felipe fernandez-armesto reveals the thrilling and disquieting tales of our imaginative leaps. Through ground-breaking insights in cognitive science, he explores how and why we have ideas in the first place, providing a tantalising glimpse into who we are and what we might yet accomplish. Fernandez-armesto shows that bad ideas are often more influential than good ones; that the oldest recoverable thoughts include some of the best; that ideas of Western origin often issued from exchanges with the wider world; and that the pace of innovative thinking is under threat.
Item type: BOOKS
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Includes index.

Mind out of matter: the imaginative animal -- Gathering thoughts: thinking before agriculture -- Settled minds: early "civilized" thinking -- The great sages: the first named thinkers -- Thinking faiths: ideas in a religious age -- Rebirth: thinking through plague and cold -- Global enlightenments: joined-up thinking in a joined-up world -- The climacteric of progress: nineteenth-century certainties -- The revenge of chaos: unpicking certainty -- The age of uncertainty: twentieth-century hesitancies -- The end of ideas.

To imagine – to see that which is not there – is the startling ability that has fuelled human development and innovation through the centuries. As a species we stand alone in our remarkable capacity to refashion the world after the pictures in our minds. Traversing the realms of science, politics, religion, culture, philosophy and history, Felipe fernandez-armesto reveals the thrilling and disquieting tales of our imaginative leaps. Through ground-breaking insights in cognitive science, he explores how and why we have ideas in the first place, providing a tantalising glimpse into who we are and what we might yet accomplish. Fernandez-armesto shows that bad ideas are often more influential than good ones; that the oldest recoverable thoughts include some of the best; that ideas of Western origin often issued from exchanges with the wider world; and that the pace of innovative thinking is under threat.

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The Institute of Mathematical Sciences, Chennai, India

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