Editorial Review:
In Mozart’s Brain and the Fighter Pilot, eminent neuropsychiatrist and bestselling author Richard Restak, M.D., combines the latest research in neurology and psychology to show us how to get our brain up to speed for managing every aspect of our busy lives.
Everything we think and everything we choose to do alters our brain and fundamentally changes who we are, a process that continues until the end of our lives. Few people think of the brain as being susceptible to change in its actual structure, but in fact we can preselect the kind of brain we will have by continually exposing ourselves to rich and varied life experiences. Unlike other organs that eventually wear out with repeated and sustained use, the brain actually improves the more we challenge it.
Most of us incorporate some kind of physical exercise into our daily lives. We do this to improve our bodies and health and generally make us feel better. Why not do the same for the brain? The more we exercise it, the better it performs and the better we feel. Think of Restak as a personal trainer for your brain—he will help you assess your mental strengths and weaknesses, and his entertaining book will set you to thinking about the world and the people around you in a new light, providing you with improved and varied skills and capabilities. From interacting with colleagues to recognizing your own psychological makeup, from understanding the way you see something to why you’re looking at it in the first place, from explaining the cause of panic attacks to warding off performance anxiety, this book will tell you the whys and hows of the brain’s workings.
Packed with practical advice and fascinating examples drawn from history, literature, and science, Mozart’s Brain and the Fighter Pilot provides twenty-eight informative and realistic steps that we can all take to improve our brainpower. Cached date: AWS Called=true
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Customer Reviews
Average Customer Rating: 
Never too old to use your brain 2008-06-25 Ask anyone: you're destined to end in a rocking chair with a shawl...while a 4-inch drool hangs from your lower lip and eyeballs pinwheel in their sockets--right? That's because, as everyone knows, brain cells don't reproduce and just go to brain cell heaven, leaving you with a vacuum--right?
Richard says "no" to both. He says that your 3-pound brain is unlike any other organ...that it never wears out or grows old! Sure, and brain cells reproduce. In exact opposition to common belief, your brain is capable of both learning and growth in size and complexity until the day you die.
And no, Richard is no flower-child-kook or cult leader. If you "Google" Richard Restak, you'll get 37,200 hits. He is an MD neurologist, also a neurophychiatrist, and a clinical professor of neurology at George Washington University's Medical Center. If that isn't good enough, he has written some 18 or 20 well accepted books...at least two of which were main selections of the book of the month club.
Richard is the first to say that you'll acquire your 4-inch drool if you let the circuits and connections--that you took great effort to establish in younger years--atrophy from disuse. As your daddy always told you, "what you don't use, you lose".
So...Richard is a head-guy, right? As such, he'd like to keep you sharp and eagle-eyed and forever becoming smarter and smarter. To do that, he offers-up a litany tasks and brain exercises that you'd easily spend 24-7 before getting started...some hard, really hard. Stuff you would hate doing...though he claims you'd love in the end. Maybe drools ain't that bad. Or, maybe you'd get a "lot of bang for the buck" by doing some of these exercises. Read his "Mozart's Brain and the Fighter Pilot" to judge for yourself.
That you're not doomed to the rocker isn't his only revelation...here is a big one. You'll first need to bear with me. Learning involves establishing more and more connections...but in varying specific brain locations, depending on the type of learning. Now, the left hemisphere stores thoughtful/reasoning, analog-type stuff...like language, chess playing, results of reading or mathematics study, and etc. The right hemisphere stores digital-type stuff, as images.
Here is the thing: before television, much learning resided in the logic-based left hemisphere. You played cards and told stories with your friends, or read books, or played musical instruments. So, your left hemisphere became the 900 pound thought gorilla. Television spoon-feeds your right hemisphere with digital information...MTV, sound-byte news, and etc...leaving the logic circuits of the left hemisphere with nothing to store, and undeveloped! Among the nasty results, says Richard, is runaway Attention-Deficit among children and now adults. There is developing a universal inability to focus on a given subject lasting more than a 3-minute sound-byte.
Oh, and bye the way...once storage and connections are formed, they never disappear...they atrophy. Restoring atrophied connections is often accomplished quickly.
I thought you'd like to know that there is hope for you.
Mozart's Brain 2008-04-13 This book would be most useful to students of human anatomy, medicine and biology. The author begins with an exhaustive description of how the brain operates. He explains that we should not be wedded to notions of rationality or order.
Three important states are described. These are the passive state. The passive state is conceptually similar to watching TV or listening to calm music. The intellectual state involves solving an involved puzzle, playing chess or reading. The physical state involves playing sports. Our brains cope with all three states.
Another important point enunciated involves differential time frames to co-exist simultaneously in our brain. Associative links can lead to new learning by aiding recall. Remembering can be enhanced through exercise and practice. Individual thoughts are characterized by the left brain; whereas, images are articulated in the right brain.
The author mentions unique ways to cope with uncertainty and ambiguity through deep concentration and reflection techniques. Overall, this work provides important perspectives on how the brain operates and how to enhance its current/potential functioning. There are important implications for Alzheimer's patients. The acquisition would be a worthy purchase for students of biology, medicine, biochemistry, psychology and anatomy.
Bogged Down, Too Brainy 2008-04-12 Although there were some interesting parts, this book (I had the audio-book version) ultimately disappointed as it bogged down, and got downright boring.
Underwhelming 2007-09-01 Basically a book of memory and brain exercises, with a few anecdotes thrown in. I was expecting more about brain function in diverse areas of human endeavor. The title is one of the best things about the book. The exercises are probably effective, but seem so tedious I can't imagine doing them (physical activity has shown this need not be the case with exercise). Worth a magazine article, perhaps, but not an entire book. Disappointing.
Summer holiday reading 2007-01-23 In "Mozart's Brain and the Fighter Pilot" Dr. Richard Restak extends in his capacity of acting as an intermediate between knowledge of brain functions and the people in general. If it were not for the title it is difficult to think about how to sell the book and spread that knowledge. The book describes in simple words and in short chapters, sites of brain activity as well as its functions combined with advises as to stimulate those areas and functions in order to maintain the nervous tissue activity. This combined with personal anecdotes and experiences. I found the whole book a very nice experience although some of the advises were somewhat difficult to follow due to personal circumstances (I agree with that of writing down). A remarkable paragraph is that where Restak cites the writer Jorge Luis Borges, an Argentinian as myself, as an example of making notable associations (and Borges' erudition). Indeed, that paragraph cites a painter from Uruguay, who I did not know till that moment but for the fact that I was in the beach, in Uruguay, and had seen that name at a Hotel one day before! This is indeed an astonishing coincidence which yet is to be explained by Restak himself. This was a summer vacation reading which I really enjoyed and although I did with Mozart citation I was not able to find that referring to the "Fighter Pilot". Dr. Ricardo Drut patologi@netverk.com.ar
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