Monday, December 27, 2004

Ingram: The Barmaid's Brain—This Is Your Brain on Beer?

SCIENCE LIGHT

Even if one day scientists completely understand the wiring and chemistry of the human brain, it will still be difficult not to be amazed by an organ that can memorize the lyrics to all the Spice Girls' songs after one hearing or conjure up the equations describing the origin of the universe. Even more amazing is that the same brain can do both...

Jay Ingram has collected in The Barmaid's Brain 21 essays concerning human behavior, curiosities of life, science and history, natural battles and how things work. Each of them approaches a topic with the same left-field perspective. For example, the barmaid of the title is able to remember 95% to 100% of a 15-drink order given to her out of sequence in the noisy environment of a busy bar. The essay The Barmaid's Brain explores not only that we evidence these feats of memory, but why and how.

The Invention of Thievery looks at the way a learned behavior (in this case, birds removing foil caps from milk bottles to get at the cream) spreads through a population. The Vinland Map examines how we decide that a contended datum has been proved, especially when there is a strong belief structure in place to dispute it. An Uneasy Bargain probes the relationship between gene mapping (knowledge gathering) and genetic engineering, asking, "Once we know that a mutant gene is the cause of a disease of condition, do we have a responsibility to eliminate it?

The essays are written in an easy, approachable style, with a minimum of jargon, statistics or abstruse footnotes. If they lack some of the weight they might otherwise bring to some very weighty subjects, at least they may lead you to do the research on the questions you find intriguing. This is a great bathroom or coffee-table book—pick it up, read a few pages, put it down.

 

If you enjoy The Barmaid's Brain, watch for Ingram's new book, The Velocity of Honey, coming in trade-size paperback in early 2005.

5 Comments:

Anonymous Anonymous said...

This sounds like a great book for a non-Science guy like me. I'm especially interested in The Invention of Thievery: that's a topic I've always wondered about. My curiosity got kicked off years ago when I saw film footage of an ape or gorilla using a tree branch to try and get food out of a tree. Set off a million questions in my mind.

Thanks for spreading with the word on this book.

Tue, 28 Dec 2004

2/23/2005 6:05 PM  
Blogger DrPat said...

I do find 'em! Part of the joy of having such a large library of my own is that at 3 AM, when I wake with a racing brain, I can pull something from a shelf instead of turning on the TV.

Tue, 28 Dec 2004

2/23/2005 6:06 PM  
Anonymous Anonymous said...

I've read this book 10 times over since year 8, it is so readable and sassy and it really sparked my interest in science. My favourite chapters are "The Plant that Rolls" and the "AntLion King". If this book was used in schools, we'd have a smarter population.

8/11/2005 9:21 PM  
Anonymous Anonymous said...

http://jayingram.blogspot.com/

8/15/2005 8:33 PM  
Blogger samraat said...

sangambayard-c-m.com

4/03/2010 9:11 PM  

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