ABSTRACT

These essays from one of our most stimulating thinkers showcase Tallis's infectious fascination, indeed intoxication, with the infinite complexity of human lives and the human condition. In the title essay, we join Tallis on a stroll around his local park - and the intricate passages of his own consciousness - as he uses the motif of the walk, the amble, to occasion a series of meditations on the freedoms that only human beings possess. In subsequent essays, the flaneur thinks about his brain, his relationship to the rest of the animal kingdom, his profession of medicine and about the physical world and the claims of physical science to have rendered philosophical reflection obsolete. Taken together the essays continue Tallis's mission to elaborate a vision of humanity that rejects religious myths while not succumbing to scientism or any other form of naturalism. Written with the author's customary intellectual energy and vigour these essays provoke, move and challenge us to think differently about who we are and our place in the material world.

chapter 1|17 pages

Am I My Brain?

chapter 2|20 pages

Was Schubert a Musical Brain?

chapter 4|15 pages

Are Conscious Machines Possible?

chapter 6|6 pages

A Conversation with My Neighbour

chapter 7|12 pages

Silk: Metamorphoses Beyond Biology

chapter 9|6 pages

You Chemical Scum, You

chapter 10|6 pages

Did Time Begin with a Bang?

chapter 11|6 pages

A Hasty Report from a Tearing Hurry

chapter 13|23 pages

On Caring and Not Caring

chapter 14|9 pages

Coinages of the Mind: Hallucinations

chapter 15|9 pages

Becoming the Prisoners of Our Free Choices

chapter 16|29 pages

The Right to an Assisted Death