Whether our personality, intelligence, and behavior are more likely to
be shaped by our environment or our genetic coding is not simply an idle
question for today's researchers. There are tremendous consequences to
understanding the crucial role that environment and genes each play. How
we raise and educate our children, how we treat various mental diseases
or conditions, how we care for our elderly--these are just some of the
issues that can be informed by a better understanding of brain
development.
In The Great Brain Debate, the eminent neuroscience researcher John
Dowling looks at these and other important issues. The work that is
being done on the connection between the brain and vision, as well as
the ways in which our brains help us learn new languages, are
particularly revealing. From this groundbreaking new research, Dowling
explains startling new insights into how the brain functions and how it
can (or cannot) be molded and changed. By studying the brain across the
spectrum of our lives, from infancy through adulthood and into old age,
Dowling shows the ways in which both nature and nurture play key roles
over the course of a human lifetime.