Short-listed for the Royal Society Winton Prize for Science
Books, the Best Book of Ideas Prize, and the Society of Biology
Book Awards - Book of the Year: Sunday Times, Sunday Express, and
New Scientist
A new consensus is emerging among cognitive scientists: rather
than possessing fixed, unchanging memories, we create new
recollections each time we are called upon to remember. As
psychologist Charles Fernyhough explains, remembering is an act of
narrative imagination as much as it is the product of a
neurological process. In Pieces of Light, he illuminates this
compelling scientific breakthrough in a series of personal stories,
each illustrating memory's complex synergy of cognitive and
neurological functions.
Combining science and literature, the ordinary and the
extraordinary, this fascinating tour through the new science of
autobiographical memory helps us better understand the ways we
remember--and the ways we forget.
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