By Jay Ingram, published in 1994.
The title of this science book, ‘The Burning House’, comes from a very interesting case of people with brain damage to the right hemisphere. Why are you looking at me - both of mine are damaged so does not apply.
In short, this is a book which explores the (1994) knowledge of the human brain and how it operates and what happens when things go wrong. It is written for the laymen so understanding is not mired in techno speak.
It’s a fun read which takes a look at a brain museum (no, really) and even talks about how Einstein’s brain is still in a jar in the apartment of the man who performed his autopsy. This novel attempts to explain the parts of the brain and how they contribute to our perceptions of the world around us and how it does the things it does - like feats of memory and face recognition.
I have to say I was quite sucked in by the topics, though it seemed a wee bit random in its approach. Still, a good read that will have you taking note of what has been researched and wondering what it all means.
It seems that stroke victims, those that suffer a stroke in the right hemisphere, lose the ability to pick up information on the left side of images in some cases - hence the burning house. These stroke victims were tested by being shown a picture of two houses. One is burning of the left side and the other is whole. When asked to decide which one they would like to live in, they responded by saying they were both the same so it didn’t matter.
Strange. But even more strange cases of the brain are explored inside this book. Like the man who could recall and entire blackboard of numbers and equations after looking at it only once. The case where a patient had his hippocampus removed, later to find out he could no longer store long term memories at all.
And the end of the book deals with dreams and why we have them. And, since the human brain is so complex and we don’t really know how it does what it does, rival theories abound. If you don’t get the brain answers you are looking for, you will at least be opened up to the general idea of how the brain works and what happens when some of it is damaged or removed.
Fascinating reading in any event. If you want a quick overview of the brain and some fun case studies this is the book to read. Be warned though, you may be scratching your head afterwards as most topics have no definitive answers. The brain, rest assured, is very complex and good at what it does.