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Details

Autor(en) / Beteiligte
Titel
The Alphabet and the Brain : The Lateralization of Writing
Ort / Verlag
Berlin, Heidelberg : Springer Berlin Heidelberg
Erscheinungsjahr
1988
Link zum Volltext
Beschreibungen/Notizen
  • General Introduction -- 1 Biological Foundations -- 1 Gene-Culture Coevolution: Culture and Biology in Darwinian Perspective -- 2 Learning and Selection in the Nervous System -- 3 Neuronal Group Selection: A Basis for Categorization by the Nervous System -- 2 The Evolution of Writing Systems -- 4 Writing: The Invention and the Dream -- 5 The Origin of the Greek Alphabet -- 6 Relationships Between Speech and Writing Systems in Ancient Alphabets and Syllabaries -- 7 Graphic Systems, Phonic Systems, and Linguistic Representations -- 3 Writing Right and Left -- 8 Canons of Alphabetic Change -- 9 Logical Principles Underlying the Layout of Greek Orthography -- 10 The Material Conditions of the Lateralization of the Ductus -- 11 Psychology of Literacy: East and West -- 4 Neuropsychological Considerations -- 12 The Biology of Writing -- 13 Language Processing: A Neuroanatomical Primer -- 14 Orthography, Reading, and Cerebral Functions -- 15 Literacy and the Brain -- 16 The Processing of Ja
  • This book is a consequence of the suggestion that a major key toward understanding cognition in any advanced culture is to be found in the relationships between processing orthographies, language, and thought. In this book, the contributors attempt to take only the first step, namely to ascertain that there are reliable constancies among the interactions between a given type of writing and specific brain processes. And, among the possible brain processes that could be investigated, only one apparently simple issue is being explored: namely, whether the lateralization of reading and writing to the right in fully phonemic alphabets is the result of formalized but essentially random occurrences, or whether some physiological determinants are at play. The original project was much more complicated. It began with Derrick de Kerckhove's attempt to establish a connection between the rise of the alphabetic culture in Athens and the development of a theatrical tradition in that city from around the end of the 6th century B. c. to the Roman conquest. The underlying assumption, first proposed in a conversation with Marshall McLuhan, was that the Greek alphabet was responsible for a fundamental change in the psychology of the Athenians and that the creation of the great tragedies of Greek theatre was a kind of cultural response to a condition of deep psychological crisis