Craig said About Jonah Lehrer's "Proust Was A Neuroscientist," Craig said:

"This book about the relation of art & the mind is compatible with MOQ."


Ant McWatt replied:

Quite a juxtaposition in that intriguing title, Craig!  (Does that mean Oscar 
Wilde was an astrophysicist?  Platt a charity worker in Africa?)  Anyway, any 
particular wisdom in this book that actually throws light on the MOQ?



dmb says:
Jonah Lehrer was a journalist, a science journalist, until his fall from grace. 
He was fired - and effectively bounced out of the profession is a plagiarism 
scandal. Even before his cheating was discovered, his books were harshly 
criticized by actual scientists. 

There's an old review (11th November, 2007) of Jonah Lehrer's "Proust Was A 
Neuroscientist" in Slate for example. The reviewer discredits the book's main 
premise. Here's the premise in Jonah Lehrer's own words: "We now know that 
Proust was right about memory, Cezanne was uncannily accurate about the visual 
cortex, Stein anticipated Chomsky, and Woolf pierced the mystery of 
consciousness; modern neuroscience has confirmed these artistic intuitions."

The reviewer undermines this premise by pointing out that these artists weren't 
scientist and did not discover things things either. They were getting their 
ideas from elsewhere. (If memory serves, Proust was William James's 
brother-in-law.)

"Many of the breakthroughs attributed to the artists profiled in the book seem 
to have been prefigured—or even stated outright—by contemporary theorists like 
William James. Indeed, the architect of American psychology lurks in almost 
every chapter: In a discussion of Cezanne's discovery that the mind fabricates 
an image of the world from our sensory impressions, Lehrer quotes from James' 
Pragmatism, saying substantially the same thing; when he explains how Woolf 
discovered our splintered consciousness, it's James again, on the "mutations of 
the self"; a chapter on Gertrude Stein's discovery of the language instinct 
begins with her work in William James' laboratory at Harvard; and so on. (For a 
discussion of James' considerable influence on Proust, you'll have to look 
elsewhere.) Midway through the book, I started to wonder if a better title 
would have been James Was a Psychologist."

I don't if the book would illuminate the MOQ or not but this connection with 
James does, at least, make the idea seem plausible. 



                                          
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