Many behavioral biologists are looking for answers to the mysterious interactions between human thought and the body. Robert M. Sapolsky, a neurosurgeon in the United States, a neuroscientist, a biologist professor at Stanford University, a researcher and author of "Papers on the Testosterone Problem and Biology of Other Human Pain". This book shows to the readers why people act in their way and what happens when events occur. Sapolsky covers many topics on the relationship between the human body and the brain and the research field.
Robert M. Sapolsky is the author of non-fiction works, including primate memoirs, testicular troubles, and why zebra does not become an ulcer. He is a professor of biology and neurology at Stanford University and has received the MacArthur Foundation's genius scholarship. He lives in San Francisco with his wife, two children and a dog.
Robert M. Sapolsky is an excellent scientist and elegant prose stylist, Rara Avis. Thirty years ago, at the age of 28 he gained the MacArthur genius scholarship and then worked as a neurobiologist and primologist at Stanford University where he worked in Kenya and announced it. A book of unique title "Why Zebra". Please do not bother ulcers with testosterone. "His new book is a wonderful piece of his work, but unlike his earlier works he devoted his eager efforts to hard science because it hides the myriad reflections of human behavior. , A way to unravel the mystery of cognition - but 'behavior' keeps the bar high
Performance: Our best human biology and worst Sapolsky, Robert M. - I can not recommend doing it well enough. This is the first two books of my year, an interdisciplinary study of mind. It brings together many of the themes and science I studied independently and incorporates them into persuasive reading. Our mathematical world: I pursue Tegmark, Max which is the ultimate essence of reality, from Mark Selcow 's recommendation. Tegmark leads the reader to visit experimental physics which is not experimental every year. This is indeed a curvilinear and strange life. I have a complex relationship with faith, and this book is as close to the Bible I saw in science.