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Imagination is about far more than whether people think of themselves as creative or not. We use our imagination all the time in planning, anticipating, daydreaming, reminiscing and being able to enjoy other people's stories.

 

In fact, we don't live in the here and now as much as we might think. Imagination isn't the exception to our daily lives; it's our default setting.

 

From hallucinations to sleepwalking, from REM sleep to delusions, neurologist Adam Zeman brilliantly guides us through the latest scientific discoveries in the world of the imagination. Imagine looking at a cube and your eye will trace the contours of the cube as if you were actually seeing it. Imagine inhaling and the airflow through your nose will increase. In grief, you might imagine that you saw your loved one again ' and be consoled by the experience. And yet some people have no visual imagination at all ' they would even be unable to picture their family if asked to ' but still lead fulfilling, even highly creative, lives.

 

From how infants perceive the world to how we can anticipate the thoughts of other people, from the benefits of play to mental disorders, The Shape of Things Unseen dazzles and delights in its insights into the workings of the human mind.

The Shape of Things Unseen

  • By Adam Zeman

       

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  • Book Details

    Imprint: Bloomsbury Circus
    Publication date: 16/01/2025
    Format: Hardback, 234 x 153 mm | 352 pages

  • About the Author

    Adam Zeman is Honorary Fellow, Centre for Clinical Brain Sciences, at the University of Edinburgh, and Honorary Professor of Neurology at the University of Exeter. He was brought up in London and trained in Medicine at Oxford University Medical School, after a first degree in Philosophy and Psychology. His earlier books include Consciousness: A User's Guide, A Portrait of the Brain, and, as co-author, Epilepsy and Memory.

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