cover image Scatterbrain: How the Mind’s Mistakes Make Humans Creative, Innovative, and Successful

Scatterbrain: How the Mind’s Mistakes Make Humans Creative, Innovative, and Successful

Henning Beck. Greystone, $27.95 (336p) ISBN 978-1-77164-401-3

Neuroscientist Beck reveals how the brain’s faults actually enhance its functionality in this delightful study. These integral flaws and errors “mask the hidden strengths of our brain,” even as they create false memories, lead to math errors, and stymie decision-making. In a friendly and colloquial voice, with examples drawn from popular iconography and everyday life, Beck cites current research in neuropsychology to explain various mental phenomena—for example, why humans forget names and faces, how they learn from mistakes, and why they aren’t adept at rote learning but understand the way the world works. A lively discussion about creativity shows why people are rarely innovative on demand but can generate new ideas that are neither planned nor regulated. Readers will come to appreciate how the brain’s disorderly operating system is an advantage, and that being imperfect is what gives rise to new ideas, as Beck sums up when he pinpoints “the unique characteristic of human thought [as being] that it is not flawless and exact.” Illuminating, and a joy to read, this offers, in comparison to other recent neuroscience titles, a refreshingly accessible and relatable take on the brain’s inner workings that should appeal to both science buffs and casual readers. (Oct.)