What It's Like to Be a Dog
And Other Adventures in Animal Neuroscience
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Audible Standard 30-day free trial
Buy for $18.63
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Narrated by:
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Joe Hempel
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By:
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Gregory Berns
What is it like to be a dog? A bat? Or a dolphin? To find out, neuroscientist Gregory Berns and his team began with a radical step: they taught dogs to go into an MRI scanner - completely awake. They discovered what makes dogs individuals with varying capacities for self-control, different value systems, and a complex understanding of human speech. And dogs were just the beginning.
In What It's Like to Be a Dog, Berns explores the fascinating inner lives of wild animals from dolphins and sea lions to the extinct Tasmanian tiger. Much as Silent Spring transformed how we thought about the environment, so What It's Like to Be a Dog will fundamentally reshape how we think about - and treat - animals. Groundbreaking and deeply humane, it is essential listening for animal lovers of all stripes.
©2017 Gregory Berns (P)2017 TantorListeners also enjoyed...
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Not much about dogs
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I did not feel that he actually answered the question, 'What it's like to be a dog?' or any other animal for that matter. He did find out how a given animal uses the structure of its brain to perceive its world. But not what its emotions, social structure, and value systems are, only if it has the bandwidth to have any.
This is a decent enough book if you are into esoteric science written for the laymen.
Please be advised this is
NOT A BOOK ABOUT DOGS.
NOT ABOUT DOG
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By Gregory Berns
This book is result of research and study of animal neuroscience. If it has a brain cortex, it has a sense of self and has many other emotional experiences and feelings similar to humans. It’s an expansion of what we know about the non-human species of life on this planet. While brains may be wired differently to support different niches of life, this leads to the differences of the ability to focus and respond to different stimuli. MRI scanner resolution is getting finer and finer and is providing the data that allows us to understand the brain and what it is like to be an animal. We are learning how much consciousness and self-awareness that animals have and are close to being able to completely simulate and thus understand what it’s like to be a dog or other animal. If we find that animal brains have the same emotional and self-awareness of humans, then what do we do, and how do we change. And, what does this say for the evolution of mankind.
If it has a brain it can feel and has emotions
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worth listening to if you have an interest in animal behavior or neurobiology.
interesting read.
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