Memory: How We Use it, Lose it and Can Improve it

Author:   David Samuel ,  Steven D Smith
Publisher:   New York University Press
ISBN:  

9780814781456


Pages:   144
Publication Date:   01 September 1999
Format:   Hardback
Availability:   Manufactured on demand   Availability explained
We will order this item for you from a manufactured on demand supplier.

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Memory: How We Use it, Lose it and Can Improve it


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Overview

Few things are so essential to our lives as our memories. In this book, the author draws on a lifetime of scientific research to produce an informative and wide-ranging view of the subject. He examines how memory has been investigated in the past and what modern studies of brain structure and function can tell us about it. The text also discusses short-term and working memory, the limits to and normal loss of memory, the effects of alcohol, anxiety, drugs and Alzheimer's. While exploring future memory research, the text also addresses the age-old question of how to improve our memory and why certain people have such good memories.

Full Product Details

Author:   David Samuel ,  Steven D Smith
Publisher:   New York University Press
Imprint:   New York University Press
Dimensions:   Width: 15.20cm , Height: 2.20cm , Length: 22.90cm
Weight:   0.454kg
ISBN:  

9780814781456


ISBN 10:   0814781454
Pages:   144
Publication Date:   01 September 1999
Audience:   General/trade ,  General
Format:   Hardback
Publisher's Status:   Active
Availability:   Manufactured on demand   Availability explained
We will order this item for you from a manufactured on demand supplier.

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Reviews

Ambitious in scope, yet full of detailed and incisive criticisms of specific cases and theological principles, Getting Over Equality is an uncommon work of truly interdisciplinary scholarship. The provocative legal and theological theses make it a welcome addition to contemporary scholarship in both fields and a recommended text from any course that considers law and religion in the American context. - The Journal of Religion ,


Ambitious in scope, yet full of detailed and incisive criticisms of specific cases and theological principles, Getting Over Equality is an uncommon work of truly interdisciplinary scholarship. The provocative legal and theological theses make it a welcome addition to contemporary scholarship in both fields and a recommended text from any course that considers law and religion in the American context. - The Journal of Religion , Steve Smith is one of the most distinguished scholars now working in the field of religious liberty. His new book, Getting over Equality, makes it abundantly clear that Smith's perspective on religious liberty issues--and, indeed, on the whole field of religious liberty scholarship--is highly distinctive as well as very important. Not everyone will agree with everything that Smith argues in these essays. (I certainly don't.) But everyone who enters into conversation with Smith's essays will achieve thereby a deeper understanding of the complex issues that Smith so thoughtfully and gracefully addresses. -Michael J. Perry, University Distinguished Chair in Law, Wake Forest University, and author of We the People: The Fourteenth Amendment and the Supreme Court Moving beyond stale arguments about the 'separation of church and state' and exposing the incoherence of doctrines of 'equality, ' Smith proposes a vibrant practice of tolerance and prudence that holds high promise for our continuing debate over the role of religion in the public square. His argument is lucid, forceful, sometimes eccentric, and refreshingly free of legalistic cant. -Richard John Neuhaus, Editor-in-Chief, First Things, and author of The Naked Public Square: Religion and Democracy in America


Steve Smith is one of the most distinguished scholars now working in the field of religious liberty. His new book, Getting over Equality, makes it abundantly clear that Smith's perspective on religious liberty issues--and, indeed, on the whole field of religious liberty scholarship--is highly distinctive as well as very important. Not everyone will agree with everything that Smith argues in these essays. (I certainly don't.) But everyone who enters into conversation with Smith's essays will achieve thereby a deeper understanding of the complex issues that Smith so thoughtfully and gracefully addresses. -Michael J. Perry, University Distinguished Chair in Law, Wake Forest University, and author of We the People: The Fourteenth Amendment and the Supreme Court Moving beyond stale arguments about the 'separation of church and state' and exposing the incoherence of doctrines of 'equality, ' Smith proposes a vibrant practice of tolerance and prudence that holds high promise for our continuing debate over the role of religion in the public square. His argument is lucid, forceful, sometimes eccentric, and refreshingly free of legalistic cant. -Richard John Neuhaus, Editor-in-Chief, First Things, and author of The Naked Public Square: Religion and Democracy in America Ambitious in scope, yet full of detailed and incisive criticisms of specific cases and theological principles, Getting Over Equality is an uncommon work of truly interdisciplinary scholarship. The provocative legal and theological theses make it a welcome addition to contemporary scholarship in both fields and a recommended text from any course that considers law and religion in the American context. - The Journal of Religion ,


<p> Ambitious in scope, yet full of detailed and incisive criticisms of specific cases and theological principles, Getting Over Equality is an uncommon work of truly interdisciplinary scholarship. The provocative legal and theological theses make it a welcome addition to contemporary scholarship in both fields and a recommended text from any course that considers law and religion in the American context. - The Journal of Religion ,


""Ambitious in scope, yet full of detailed and incisive criticisms of specific cases and theological principles, ""Getting Over Equality"" is an uncommon work of truly interdisciplinary scholarship. The provocative legal and theological theses make it a welcome addition to contemporary scholarship in both fields and a recommended text from any course that considers law and religion in the American context."" -""The Journal of Religion"", ""Moving beyond stale arguments about the 'separation of church and state' and exposing the incoherence of doctrines of 'equality, ' Smith proposes a vibrant practice of tolerance and prudence that holds high promise for our continuing debate over the role of religion in the public square. His argument is lucid, forceful, sometimes eccentric, and refreshingly free of legalistic cant.""-Richard John Neuhaus, Editor-in-Chief, First Things, and author of ""The Naked Public Square: Religion and Democracy in America"" ""Steve Smith is one of the most distinguished scholars now working in the field of religious liberty. His new book, Getting over Equality, makes it abundantly clear that Smith's perspective on religious liberty issues--and, indeed, on the whole field of religious liberty scholarship--is highly distinctive as well as very important. Not everyone will agree with everything that Smith argues in these essays. (I certainly don't.) But everyone who enters into conversation with Smith's essays will achieve thereby a deeper understanding of the complex issues that Smith so thoughtfully and gracefully addresses.""-Michael J. Perry, University Distinguished Chair in Law, Wake Forest University, and author of ""We the People: The Fourteenth Amendment and the Supreme Court""


Author Information

David Samuel is Emeritus Professor of Physical Chemistry in the Department of Neurobiology at the Weizmann Institute of Science in Rehovot, Israel. He was the Founder and Director of the Centre for the Chemistry of the Brain and Behavior, and a member of the International Brain Research Organization (IBRO). He has been a visiting professor at universities in the UK, Canada, and the US, including the University of California at Berkeley, Harvard and Yale.

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