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| View Larger Image | The Man Who Tasted Shapes (Bradford Books) | Paperbackby Richard E. Cytowic (Author)
| List Price: | $24.95 | | Price: | $16.47 | | You Save: | $8.48 (34%) | | | Available: | Usually ships in 24 hours |
| | Binding: | Paperback | | Publisher: | The MIT Press | | Page Count: | 296 Pages | | Publication Date: | September 01, 2003 | | Sales Rank: | 193,259rd |
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EDITORIAL REVIEWS | Product Description Richard Cytowic's dinner host apologized, "There aren't enough points on the chicken!" He felt flavor also as a physical shape in his hands, and the chicken had come out "too round." This offbeat comment in 1980 launched Cytowic's exploration into the oddity called synesthesia. He is one of the few world authorities on the subject. Sharing a root with anesthesia ("no sensation"), synesthesia means "joined sensation," whereby a voice, for example, is not only heard but also seen, felt, or tasted. The trait is involuntary, hereditary, and fairly common. It stayed a scientific mystery for two centuries until Cytowic's original experiments led to a neurological explanation--and to a new concept of brain organization that accentuates emotion over reason. That chicken dinner two decades ago led Cytowic to explore a deeper reality that exists in everyone, he argues, but often just below the surface of awareness, which is why finding meaning in our lives can be elusive. In this medical detective adventure, Cytowic shows how synesthesia, far from being a mere curiosity, illuminates a wide swath of mental life and leads to a new view of what it means to be human--a view that turns upside down conventional ideas about reason, emotional knowledge, and self-understanding. This 2003 edition features a new afterword. |
CUSTOMER REVIEWS (Average Customer Rating: 4.0 based on 17 reviews)
| I want more! by Valerie Hansen (Portland, OR) 4 Stars July 31, 2009 Excellent book, but not enough of it. I wanted more theory and less storytelling. We know a lot more about synesthesia now, and many more people have symptoms in varying degrees of it than previously realized. I would like to see a follow up book - SOON please!
| | The book tasted great! by Matthew S. Stone (Brooklyn, NY) 5 Stars June 22, 2009 For those of you who have, or think they have synesthesia, this is a must read book.
| | A Neuroscience Student's Review of The Man Who Tasted Shapes by Philip C. Tharp (Atlanta, GA) 3 Stars October 21, 2008 Overview and Overall Opinion
This review will inform potential readers of the topics covered in The Man Who Tasted Shapes, while providing a critique and personal opinion regarding the efficacy and general style of writing exhibited by the author, Richard E. Cytowic. Although the book presents interesting ideas and awakens great interest in the subject of synesthesia, Cytowic's pretentious prose and somewhat contrived recollections often overshadow his apparent fascination with the topic.
Introduction, Style, and Structure
In The Man Who Tasted Shapes, neurologist Richard E. Cytowic presents the reader with an in depth report of his quest to solve the mystery of synesthesia and provide the medical underpinnings that might explain the underlying rationale behind the rare phenomenon. Cytowic accomplishes this through a conversational style and a chapter structure that clearly identifies important points for the reader to understand.
Overview and Critique of Part One
The novel is divided into two parts, with the first section being the most pertinent to the subject of the book, synesthesia, and also comprising the majority of the text. Synesthesia, literally "feeling together," is confusion between senses, in which perception through a particular sensation leads to an associated response in another sense. It is in Part One of the book, which Cytowic gleefully dubs his "medical mystery tale," where the reader is plunged into the realm of science and medicine as it pertains to synesthesia. After introducing the experiences of synesthete Michael Watson, the instigating factor behind the author's obsession, Cytowic explores his personal background and his experiences as a medical student. These chapters introduce the reader to Cytowic's distaste for technology and the method in which medical doctors are taught to diagnose and treat in today's society. For example, he states that "patients have been reduced to objects, and physicians to dispassionate feeders of the machines" (p. 38). He continually revisits these thoughts throughout the novel to the point at which I felt as though he was forcing his ideas upon me. In the middle of this extensive and unnecessary digression, Cytowic provides a succinct description of the outdated "standard view" of the brain as linearly functioning mental processes that are localized in various regions and supremely governed by the cortex. I felt relieved when Cytowic took a hiatus from this more technical writing and provided an in depth history of synesthesia, citing famous writers, such as Vladimir Nabokov, composers, and other artists who experienced the phenomenon.
Despite Cytowic's somewhat wooden writing style, in the middle and latter portion of Part One he is able to engagingly convey his experimental process and study of synesthesia. Cytowic pinpoints the source of synesthetic experiences as occurring at a "low to intermediate [mental] level" within brain processes, indicating that sensational associations in synesthetes are without meaning and "the link [between them] is mostly invariant" (p. 108). In perhaps his most intriguing chapter, Cytowic compares synesthesia to certain altered mental states, including LSD induced synesthesia and temporal lobe epilepsy. He then uses this information to hypothesize that the limbic system within the brain, specifically the hypothalamus, is the location responsible for synesthesia. He further purports that the limbic system is the highest processing center within the brain, as it is responsible for emotion, and insists that "it is emotion, much more than reason, that makes us human" (p. 156).
Throughout this first section Cytowic also provides anecdotal stories to connect his philosophical and medical proposals to more immediately relatable concepts. He provides firsthand accounts of two synesthetes, Michael and Victoria, who also happen to be the subjects in his experiment to identify the diagnostic criteria for and types of synesthesia. In depth descriptions of Michael, who experiences sensations of touch when he tastes food, are particularly captivating and draw the reader further into the novel. I felt that if Cytowic had included additional case studies like that of Michael, the novel would have been more successful in both conveying different aspects of synesthesia and maintaining my interest throughout its entirety. However, periodically, dialogue spoken by other people in the novel seemed to be spoken in the same style as if it was Cytowic himself. This leads me to seriously doubt either the accuracy with which he recalled his conversations or his journalistic integrity.
The most obvious problem within this first section of the book was Cytowic's repetition of facts and information. At times it seemed as though he forgot what he had previously stated in other chapters, and, using almost the exact same wording, replicated definitions of concepts. In effect, Cytowic either intentionally or unintentionally made me feel as though I were not smart enough to grasp what he was explaining. Furthermore, his constant separation of key words into their Greek or Latin roots became tiresome and overused as the novel progressed.
Overview and Critique of Part Two
The final section of the book, Part Two, is composed of a short collection of essays written by Cytowic in which he applies his conclusion regarding synesthesia, the limbic system, and emotion to opinionated philosophical thoughts on human consciousness and artificial intelligence. I felt as though this section was entirely unnecessary and distinctly off topic from the major focus of the novel. These brief chapters only brought to mind Cytowic's previous divergence into his disapproval of technology (which he returns to here), and again I found myself wanting to read something other than his musings and opinions, which seemed trite and somewhat obvious.
Summary
In summary, I felt as though The Man Who Tasted Shapes effectively covered the interesting subject of synesthesia and provided a fascinating study of the medical explanation behind the phenomenon. However, the author's writing style tended to detract from the overall impact of the book, and several of his chosen topics of discussion seemed out of place and forcefully opinionated. I recommend this novel to readers who are particularly interested in synesthesia or those who are looking to discover a unique neurological occurrence.
| | Fascinating by Wildflower1977 (Cape Cod, MA) 5 Stars February 15, 2008 I am fascinated by synesthesia but have been unable to find many books about it. I found this one satisfied my need to not only hear more about what the experiences of synesthesia are like, but also some of the science behind it.
| | One of the most eye-opening books I've ever read by Cat Bordhi 5 Stars January 01, 2008 I love this book. If you've ever noticed that some of your senses mingle - for instance, a food tastes jagged or sharp (and I don't mean something you could photograph), or sounds produce movement and shape and color in your mind's eye - then you will find much to fascinate you in these pages. I suspect that highly creative people have a greater degree of synesthesia than average, because it allows their perceptions to cross-reference and produce new possibilities and insights.
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