Neuropolis cover art

Neuropolis

A Brain Science Survival Guide

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About this listen

Are we our brains? How can you map the mind? Can brain scans read our minds?

Based on Rob Newman’s live stand-up show and new BBC Radio 4 series, his thought-provoking new book explores the scientific breakthroughs that have turned received ideas of brain science upside down.

After imagining volunteering for a brain-imaging experiment meant to locate the part of the brain that lights up when you’re in love, comedian Robert Newman emerged with more questions than answers.

In Neuropolis Newman argues that the current claim that the brain is just a complicated computer derives from science, but from a combination of philosophical stowaways and a version of evolutionary biology that owes little to Darwin. He questions why brain science is devoted to such a peculiarly reductionist world view, when really exciting advances in neuroscience go untold, such as awe-inspiring discoveries about the origins of memory in ancient oceans. He also shows that our brains are inextricably and profoundly intertwined with our bodies, the natural world and the world we have made, including hilarious accounts of his own participation in neurological experiments.

Debunking the common, even brainless interpretations of brain science, he celebrates the more intriguing and underreported advances in neuroscience with zest and wit.

Biological Sciences Consciousness & Thought Neuroscience & Neuropsychology Philosophy Psychology Psychology & Mental Health Science Human Brain Comedy Funny Thought-Provoking Witty

Critic reviews

Praise for Rob Newman:

‘Dissing bad science, capitalists and Brian Cox, Newman’s low-octane cabinet of neuroscientific curiosities has nonconformist bite’ Guardian

‘A fascinating and highly original book, the sort you pick up idly and then discover that two hours have gone by’ The Spectator

‘Newman combines proper scientific argument with dazzling shafts of wit’ The Times

'The Brain Show is a delight' The Daily Telegraph

‘Scalpel-sharp analysis … very funny’ The Psychologist

‘Hilarious … delightfully eccentric … skilfully done’ Nature

‘He is one amazing comedian’ Time Out

All stars
Most relevant
Unfortunately, Newman's voice sends me to sleep. The content is very entertaining but I ended up returning this and buying the paperback.

better to read than listen to

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I can imagine people coming to this being bewildered, it's funny but Newman funny. Not rolling about the floor funny but very dry, sometimes fanciful.

helps if you get his humour

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funny fascinating and furiously funny. It's common sense thinking, uncommonly sensible thinking, so common it's downright rare.

fascinating

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Clever and sometimes counterintuitive, but always funny. A lot less stuffy than a lot of similar titles, and personally I think it's a refreshing dig at some of the self important works on the subject.

Newman at his best

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Newman demonstrates a (deliberate?) misunderstanding of evolutionary biology, neuroscience, psychology, artificial intelligence, logic, software engineering and science itself as he cherry picks supporting evidence and applies argument ad absurd, confirmation bias and false dichotomy to, in his mind, debunk Swaab, Eagleman, Dawkins, Hawking, Pavlov and more. He doesn't offer anything more substantial than a metaphorical "I reckon it's like this". Most of his arguments appear to be ground in unrecognised ignorance, the rest in dogma.
This would be easier to stomach if he was funny. His TV and stand up performances have been brilliantly clever and frequently hilarious. This book is neither.

"I reckon, yeah?"

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