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Minding the Climate - How Neuroscience Can Help Solve Our Environmental Crisis (Hardcover)
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Minding the Climate - How Neuroscience Can Help Solve Our Environmental Crisis (Hardcover)
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A neurosurgeon explores how our tendency to prioritize short-term
consumer pleasures spurs climate change, but also how the brain's
amazing capacity for flexibility can-and likely will-enable us to
prioritize the long-term survival of humanity. Increasingly
politicians, activists, media figures, and the public at large
agree that climate change is an urgent problem. Yet that sense of
urgency rarely translates into serious remedies. If we believe the
climate crisis is real, why is it so difficult to change our
behavior and our consumer tendencies? Minding the Climate
investigates this problem in the neuroscience of decision-making.
In particular, Ann-Christine Duhaime, MD, points to the evolution
of the human brain during eons of resource scarcity.
Understandably, the brain adapted to prioritize short-term survival
over more uncertain long-term outcomes. But the resulting
behavioral architecture is poorly suited to the present, when
scarcity is a lesser concern and slow-moving, novel challenges like
environmental issues present the greatest danger. Duhaime details
how even our acknowledged best interests are thwarted by the
brain's reward system: if a behavior isn't perceived as immediately
beneficial, we probably won't do it-never mind that we "know" we
should. This is what happens when we lament climate change while
indulging the short-term consumer satisfactions that ensure the
disaster will continue. Luckily, we can sway our brains, and those
of others, to alter our behaviors. Duhaime describes concrete,
achievable interventions that have been shown to encourage our
neurological circuits to embrace new rewards. Such small,
incremental steps that individuals take, whether in their roles as
consumers, in the workplace, or in leadership positions, are
necessary to mitigate climate change. The more we understand how
our tendencies can be overridden by our brain's capacity to adapt,
Duhaime argues, the more likely we are to have a future.
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