TY - BOOK AU - Zeki,Semir TI - Splendors and miseries of the brain: love, creativity, and the quest for human happiness SN - 1405185589 (hbk. : alk. paper) AV - QP 376 Z39.2009 PY - 2009///, CY - Chichester, UK, Malden, Mass. PB - Wiley-Blackwell KW - Brain KW - Physiology KW - Cerebro - KW - Psicología KW - Concepts KW - Physiological aspects KW - Conceptos KW - Aspectos psicológicos KW - Aptitud creadora KW - Love KW - Amor - N1 - Incluye referencias bibliográficas (páginas [213]-226) e índice; Abstraction -- The brain and its concepts -- Inherited brain concepts -- The distributed knowledge-acquiring system of the brain -- The acquired synthetic brain concepts -- The synthetic brain concept and the platonic ideal -- Creativity and the source of perfection in the brain -- Ambiguity in the brain and in art -- Processing and perceptual sites in the brain -- From unambiguous to ambiguous knowledge -- Higher levels of ambiguity -- Michelangelo and the non-finito -- Paul Cézanne and the unfinished -- Unfinished art in literature -- Conte by Arthur Rimbaud -- The brain's concepts of love -- The neural correlates of love -- Brain concepts of unity and annihilation in love -- Sacred and profane -- The metamorphosis of the brain concept of love in Dante -- Wagner and Tristan und Isolde -- Thomas Mann and Death in Venice -- A neurobiological analysis of Freud's civilization and its discontents N2 - This work examines the elegant and efficient machinery of the brain, showing that by studying music, art, literature, and love, we can reach important conclusions about how the brain functions. It discusses creativity and the search for perfection in the brain; examines the power of the unfinished and why it has such a powerful hold on the imagination; discusses Platonic concepts in light of the brain; shows that aesthetic theories are best understood in terms of the brain; discusses the inherited concept of unity in love using evidence derived from the world literature of love; addresses the role of the synthetic concept in the brain (the synthesis of many experiences) in relation to art, using examples taken from the work of Michelangelo, Cezanne, Balzac, Dante, and others ER -