The Mind Club
By Daniel M. Wegner and Kurt Gray
By Daniel M. Wegner and Kurt Gray
By Daniel M. Wegner and Kurt Gray
By Daniel M. Wegner and Kurt Gray
Category: Psychology | Philosophy
Category: Psychology | Philosophy
-
$19.00
Mar 21, 2017 | ISBN 9780143110026
-
Mar 22, 2016 | ISBN 9781101606421
YOU MAY ALSO LIKE
On Thin Ice
The Doodle Revolution
The Art of Non-Conformity
The Experts’ Guide to Doing Things Faster
Soul Traveler
Brain Trust
Livewired
The Power of Onlyness
13 Things that Don’t Make Sense
Praise
“If we could only mind read, we would know how our first date or job interview really went. In reality, we understand little about what goes on in the minds of others, even those we think we know best. According to psychologists Wegner and Gray, ‘you can never be certain that other minds even exist.’ The authors explore these uncertainties, weaving together personal anecdotes and research on human behavior and perception to try to unravel the mysteries of the mind.”—Scientific American
“Daniel Wegner was among the world’s cleverest, wittiest, and most beloved social psychologists. The Mind Club is genuinely novel, with brilliantly conceived studies on some of the deepest issues the mind of man can ponder.”—Steven Pinker, author of The Stuff of Thought and How the Mind Works
“Reading The Mind Club will take your thoughts about minds to places you never imagined…[Wegner and Gray] have created a true page-turner: witty, quirky and insightful.”—New Scientist
“A wonderful and strange book; science-fiction thought experiments (‘robot versus baby’) informed by social psychology experiments of fascinating design, part ethics, philosophy, neuroscience… authentically mind-boggling. And fun!”—Boing Boing
“A layman’s guide to understanding how humans come to understand the minds of others… where and why people draw the line between perceiving another (or an inanimate object) as having a mind or not.”—Brian Resnick, Vox
“Daniel Wegner’s final book is a masterpiece made ever more precious by his untimely death. Thankfully, his brilliance and wit live on—in these pages, and in his collaborator and protégé, Kurt Gray, who presents their ideas with clarity, depth, and style. The Mind Club is not to be missed.”—Daniel Gilbert, author of Stumbling on Happiness
“One of psychology’s greatest and one of its best young minds—who better to remind us to mind minds.”—Michael Norton, Harvard Business School Professor and coauthor of Happy Money: The Science of Happier Spending
“A pleasure for anyone comfortable with the thought that knowing others’ minds will improve our own.”—Kirkus
“Daniel Wegner was one of psychology’s most creative minds, and Kurt Gray was one of his most creative collaborators. The Mind Club describes their biggest idea together using thought-provoking examples, clever writing, and brilliant experiments. Essential reading for anyone who owns a mind and wants to know how to use it!”—Nicholas Epley, Professor of Behavioral Science, University of Chicago Booth School of Business and author of Mindwise
“Did he intend to cause harm? Did she feel pain and suffer? When it comes to morality—abortion, animal rights, legal culpability—many of the deepest questions boil down to: Does he or she (or even it) have a properly working mind? In lucid prose, Wegner and Gray explore the profound nature and implications of this question—one that is becoming all the more complex as lines of awareness and intent blur in a world where technology is rapidly advancing.”—David DeSteno, author of Out of Character
“An engaging ride through the hidden science of the human mind. If this book doesn’t change the way you see the world, and yourself, nothing will.”—Jonah Berger, Wharton Professor and Bestselling Author of Contagious and Invisible Influence
“The world lost an intellectual giant when Daniel Wegner passed. Lucky for us, his legendary wit and conversation-stoking discoveries live on in The Mind Club, and indeed in the career and voice of Kurt Gray, one of Daniel’s last doctoral students. The Mind Club draws you in with fun facts that hold grave implications for the meaning of life, loss, and morality.”—Barbara Fredrickson, author of Positivity and Love 2.0
“Science writing at its best: informative, entertaining, and thought-provoking. Who knew that the debate over whether an embryo is human can be explained by the same processes that have you believing your car has it in for you? Gray is a gifted young scientist who shares his insights in an easy, delightfully snarky way. But the best thing about The Mind Club is that it gives us one more chance to perceive Wegner’s mind, in all its glorious wit and intelligence; for those of us who knew him, this is a gift, and for those who didn’t, it’s an opportunity not to be missed.”—Lisa Feldman Barrett, Ph.D., Director of the Interdisciplinary Science Laboratory and University Distinguished Professor of Psychology at Northeastern University and author of How Emotions Are Made
21 Books You’ve Been Meaning to Read
Just for joining you’ll get personalized recommendations on your dashboard daily and features only for members.
Find Out More Join Now Sign In