List of Figures and Tables |
Acknowledgments |
A Note on References and Style |
Introduction |
The Pre-1860 Legacy / Chapter 1: |
The Search for the Seat of the Soul / 1.1.: |
Brain-Duality and the "Laws of Symmetry" / 1.2.: |
Madness and the Double Brain / 1.3.: |
Arthur Ladbroke Wigan and the "Duality of the Mind" / 1.4.: |
Changing Categories of Reference / 1.5.: |
Language Localization and the Problem of Asymmetry / Chapter 2: |
The Intellectual Context / 2.1.: |
Tan and the Localization of "Articulate Language" / 2.2.: |
The Academie de Medecine Debates / 2.3.: |
Broca and the Question of Human Uniqueness / 2.4.: |
The Discovery of Asymmetry / 2.5.: |
The Doctrine of "la Gaucherie Cerebrale" / 2.6.: |
Asymmetry and "Perfectibility": Why Some People Are More Unique Than Others / 2.7.: |
Left-Right Polarities of Mind and Brain / Chapter 3: |
From Asymmetry to Left-Brain Superiority / 3.1.: |
"No Grin Without a Cat": The Structural Basis of Left-Brain Preeminence / 3.2.: |
The Left Hemisphere and the "Other Side of the Brain" / 3.3.: |
Concluding Thoughts: The Brain as Myth and Metaphor / 3.4.: |
The Post-Broca Case for "Duality of Mind": Basic Issues and Themes / Chapter 4: |
The Wider Context / 4.1.: |
Anatomical and Physiological Considerations / 4.2.: |
Psychiatric Applications / 4.3.: |
Philosophical Implications / 4.4.: |
Popularization and Further Extensions of the Hypothesis / 4.5.: |
Left-Brain versus Right-Brain Selves and the Problem of the Corpus Callosum / Chapter 5: |
Two Brains/Two Opposing Personalities? / 5.1.: |
Frederic Myers on Brain Duality and the "Subliminal Self" / 5.2.: |
The Strange Case of Louis Vive / 5.3.: |
Lombroso on Mediumistic Consciousness and the Right Hemisphere / 5.4.: |
Lewis Pruce and the "Welsh" Case / 5.5.: |
Bleuler on "Unilateral Delirium" / 5.6.: |
Objections to the Brain Duality Hypothesis and the Problem of the Corpus Callosum / 5.7.: |
Unilateral Apraxia and the Problem of the Corpus Callosum: A Second Look / 5.8.: |
The "Experimental Evidence": Metalloscopy and Hemi-Hypnosis / Chapter 6: |
Hysteria and the Double Brain / 6.1.: |
Metalloscopy and the Discovery of "Transfer" / 6.2.: |
Hypnotizing the Double Brain (Phase One) / 6.3.: |
Hypnotizing the Double Brain (Phase Two) / 6.4.: |
Contemporary Reaction and the Decline of a Research Program / 6.5.: |
The Hughlings Jackson Perspective / Chapter 7: |
Dissent from the French Faculty School / 7.1.: |
Basic Principles: Concomitance, Evolution, Localization, Compensation / 7.2.: |
Unilateral Disorders and "Sparing" / 7.3.: |
Propositional (Voluntary) versus Emotional (Automatic) Speech / 7.4.: |
"Imperception" and the Voluntary Functions of the Right Hemisphere / 7.5.: |
The "Duality of the Mental Operations" / 7.6.: |
Applications of the Thesis / 7.7.: |
Freud and Jackson's Double Brain: The Case for a Psychoanalytic Debt / Chapter 8: |
Jackson and the Freudian Monograph "On Aphasia" / 8.1.: |
Freud and Jackson on Language and the Possibility of Consciousness / 8.2.: |
Subject/Object Consciousness versus Primary/Secondary Thought / 8.3.: |
Pathological Subject Consciousness and the Mechanism of Repression / 8.4.: |
The Fate of the Double Brain / Chapter 9: |
From Hysteria to Schizophrenia: The Consequences of Clinical Cartesianism / 9.1.: |
Neurology's Rediscovery of the "Whole" / 9.2.: |
Complementary Trends in the Laboratory / 9.3.: |
The Problem of Hemisphere Differences: New Trends in the Clinic / 9.4.: |
"Split-Brain" Man, and the Launching of a New Era / 9.5.: |
On the Relations between Old Views and New: Some Closing Questions / 9.6.: |
Guide to the Major Structures of the Human Brain Discussed in This Study / Appendix: |
Addenda |
References |
Index |
List of Figures and Tables |
Acknowledgments |
A Note on References and Style |
Introduction |
The Pre-1860 Legacy / Chapter 1: |
The Search for the Seat of the Soul / 1.1.: |