Anil Seth is a professor of cognitive and computational neuroscience at the University of Sussex, and co-director of the Sackler Centre for Consciousness Science.
"Whenever I hear that someone has found a new theory of
consciousness, I start to lose my own... So when the latest
would-be Einstein announces yet another theory, my eyes start to
glaze over in anticipation of drivel and disappointment.
Neuroscientist Anil Seth's Being You is the exception that
proves the rule. If you only read one book about consciousness, it
must be his... An impressive work that handles complex issues with
exceptional insight and beautiful clarity."
-Julian Baggini, Wall Street Journal
"[Seth] tells us about the Japanese roboticist who builds
'Geminoids'-robots as similar to human beings as possible,
including one resembling himself, which delivered a 45-minute
lecture to a large audience of students. It is a brilliant
book..."
-Claire Tomalin, New York Times Book Review
"Exhilarating... a vast-ranging, phenomenal achievement that will
undoubtedly become a seminal text."
-The Guardian
"Seth makes a convincing case that perception masquerades as
conscious reality... Fluent and accessible."
-Financial Times
"Drawing on philosophy, biology, cognitive science, neuroscience
and artificial intelligence, he argues that our brains are
prediction machines that constantly invent our world and then
correct our mistakes, so that our sense of self derives from our
body."
-Nature
"Imaginative and compelling..."
-Scientific American
"A fantastic exposition to a family of revolutionary ideas gaining
increasing support both from neuroscience and
artificial-intelligence research. It is a much-rewarding read, both
for people familiar with the central questions of consciousness and
the interested newcomer."
-World Literature Review
"Exhilarating, informed, passionate and provocative in equal
measure-as much a groundbreaking work of philosophy as of science.
It's a book that lingers with you, while at the same time forcing
you to rethink exactly who and what "you" are."
-Research Professional News
"In lucid, engaging prose Seth deftly navigates long-standing
philosophical debates over the nature of consciousness...
awe-inspiring."
-New Statesman
"An accessible, unfailingly interesting look inside the workings of
the human brain, celebrating its beguiling nature."
-Kirkus
"[Seth's] extraordinary debut sets out his exhilarating new theory
about how we experience the world."
-The Bookseller (Editor's Choice)
"[Anil Seth] takes on the prodigious task of defining
consciousness and explaining its origins in this intense
survey."
-Publishers Weekly
"One of the most authoritative voices in a central question of
neuroscience: what is consciousness? His new book is a page-turner
and a mind-blower. If you've ever wondered how billions of neurons
chattering in the dark equate to your experience, start here...
Beautifully written, crystal clear, deeply insightful."
-David Eagleman, neuroscientist at Stanford University,
author of Livewired and Incognito
"A brilliant beast of a book. A wide ranging synthesis pulling
together disparate stands-from philosophy, science, literature,
personal experience and speculation-this latter being the most
exciting for me, despite some proposals being as yet unproven. Seth
proposes to explain not just what and how we are, but probably
provocative for some folks, why we are the way we are. Why do we
have the feeling of continually being the same person? (When
obviously I, at least, am not.) Why do we have this feeling of
being self aware? What is it for? Hugely inspirational-I filled up
10 pages with exuberant notes. Keep a pencil handy."
-David Byrne, founding member of Talking Heads
"There could hardly be a better guide to the theories-good and
bad-currently swirling around the science of consciousness. Seth
writes with grace and charm, gently demolishing bad ideas-such as
panpsychism, and Integrated Information Theory-while building a
case for his own very good idea that consciousness is a kind of
controlled hallucination, the brain's best guess at inventing the
future."
-Nicholas Humphrey, neuropsychologist and author A History of
the Mind and Soul Dust
"Seth provokes us to think about thinking. And he offers what the
interested reader always needs-a book which makes complex ideas
readable, relatable, and gripping. If you want to understand his
subject better-he'll help you. And who wouldn't want to better
understand consciousness? In our lives, there is nothing weirder or
more fundamental."
-Alex Garland, director of EX MACHINA
"Being You offers us new cause for astonishment and wonder.
Through expert science writing and engaging personal narrative,
Anil gives us a new perspective on everything we perceive, down to
space and time itself. Being You is a must read for anyone
seeking a better understanding of the brain and how nature sculpts
the human experience."
-Annaka Harris, author of Conscious
"Reality is real, but how our brains construct a picture of
reality-perceiving, integrating, predicting-is far from direct.
It's a complicated, fascinating mess, which neuroscientists are
just beginning to piece together. Anil Seth's Being You is a
wonderfully accessible and comprehensive account of how our minds
capture the world, and how that makes us who we are."
-Sean Carroll, author of Something Deeply Hidden
"In this lucid and thought-provoking exploration of the nature of
consciousness, Seth takes us closer than ever to making sense of
our experience of being conscious selves. A must-read."
-Anil Ananthaswamy, award-winning journalist and author of
Through Two Doors at Once and The Man Who Wasn't
There
"A fascinating book. A joy to read. Anil Seth explores fundamental
questions about consciousness and the self from the perspective of
a philosophically-informed neuroscientist. Highly recommended."
-Nigel Warburton, author of A Little History of Philosophy
and Philosophy
"Insightful and profound. The nature of consciousness is still one
of the hardest problems in science, but Anil Seth brings us closer
than ever before to the answer. This a hugely important book."
-Jim Al-Khalili, author of The World According to
Physics
"What makes you, you? What explains your consciousness and sense of
self? In this remarkable and ground-breaking work, Anil Seth offers
a surprising answer, rooted in the new science of the predictive
brain. Compulsory reading for anyone who wants to better understand
their inner 'beast machine.'"
-Andy Clark, author of Surfing Uncertainty: Prediction, Action,
and the Embodied Mind
"Seth is uniquely placed to truly advance our understanding of one
of humanity's deepest riddles."
-Chris Anderson, Curator of TED
"The treatment of consciousness on offer is eclectic and delivered
with a particular kind of generosity: it is both generous to the
reader, in its earnest (and successful) attempt to lay bare the
essentials of different contributions. It is generous to these
contributions per se: ranging from anaesthesia-the art of
turning people into objects-from information theory to the
Wizards of Odds (abductive Bayesian inference), from the
Beholder's Share to the free energy principle-aptly defined
as there are more ways of being mush than there are of being
alive. It's denouement is a millennial take on being A Beast
Machine: a potent account of embodied sentience and selfhood.
An account that is rendered irresistible by Anil Seth's gentle and
inclusive arguments."
-Karl Friston, University College London
"Anil Seth is one of the world's leading consciousness
researchers-his take on the subject is unique and refreshing, and
his talks and writing always exciting, accessible, and engaging. I
look forward to his book-length account concerning experience and
its place in nature."
-Christof Koch, Allen Brain Institute, author of Consciousness:
Confessions of a Romantic Reductionist
"Anil Seth thinks clearly and sharply on one of the hardest
problems of science and philosophy, cuts through weeds with a
scientist's mind and a storyteller's skill."
-Adam Rutherford, author of A Brief History of Everyone Who Ever
Lived
"Anil Seth was my most anticipated guest in 2021, and our
conversation was one of the highlights of the year. If you can only
read one book this year, it should be Being You."
-Ginger Campbell, MD, host of Brain Science, the world's
leading neuroscience podcast
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