The Making and Breaking of Minds: How social interactions shape the human mind

Isabella Sarto-Jackson
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The Making and Breaking of Minds: How social interactions shape the human mind

Isabella Sarto-Jackson
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Found in: Well Being, Psychology & Psychiatry

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Overview

294 PAGESENGLISH

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[...] In summary, it is seldom that an author can master contributions from so many scientific fields and then integrate collective content into a cogent explanation of human behavior that is unique and inexplicable from a single discipline's perspective. This is truly a book that will cause the reader to rethink their worldview in multiple dimensions, including social, medical, political, and scientific perspectives. The unproductive dogma that has guided the nature versus nurture debate for too many years is laid bare by the author's clear argument that human behavior is the product of integrative systems incorporating genetics, epigenetics, neurobiology, environment, cultural, social and individual context. Neurosciences have exploded with new discoveries resulting in an all too often explanation of human behavior as a linear extension of brain processes. Social sciences, on the other hand, explain human behavior and social institutions from the perspective that views the human brain as a black box or, worse, a set of predetermined genetic modules guiding innate behaviors.

What a wonderful book, scientifically informed, compassionate, and a major contribution to mental wellness and effective interventions. I highly recommend that all scholars interested in human behavior, in all its many dimensions, read this and take note of a coming revolution in the science of us.


Dr Daniel O. Larson



Upon thorough reading of the book of Isabella Sarto-Jackson "The Making and Breaking of Minds" I conclude that this is an up-to-day book, in view of the rapidly changing world and human knowledge of it. To revaluate the idea about the selfish rational human individual who thrives by steadily calculating how to maximize one's own profit, to abandon the simplex and naive framework of the selfish gene and of genes as exclusive units of Darwinian selection is not an abstract academic task but the urgent need to abolish the pernicious ideology that affects the present human condition. The author of the book argues that there is a mutual, reciprocal causality between genes as "bookkeepers" of the evolutionary acquired potentials and the actual and continually changing environment and backs her arguments by a plethora of novel empirical data. I find particularly valuable those chapters of the book that highlight the importance of critical phases in human ontogeny, in particular, the early childhood and the adolescence when neglecting of parents (and social neglect in general), stress and traumatic experiences may leave permanent traces in the genome (by silencing some of the genes, or epigenetically marking them). And I appreciate that the last chapter ("Resilience & Nurture Put into Practice") provides some advice and recommendations on how to alleviate the injury and/or build up a harmonious personality.


Dr Ladislav Kováč

Professor of Biochemistry

Comenius University

Bratislava

Slovakia

  • Published date: Apr 29, 2022
  • Language: English
  • No. of Pages: 294
  • Publisher: Vernon Art and Science
  • ISBN: 9781648894657
  • Dimensions: 6.0" W x 0.62" L x 9.0" H

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