• The Aesthetic Brain

  • How We Evolved to Desire Beauty and Enjoy Art
  • By: Anjan Chatterjee
  • Narrated by: Bernard Setaro Clark
  • Length: 8 hrs and 18 mins
  • 4.3 out of 5 stars (79 ratings)

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The Aesthetic Brain  By  cover art

The Aesthetic Brain

By: Anjan Chatterjee
Narrated by: Bernard Setaro Clark
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Publisher's summary

The Aesthetic Brain takes the listener on a wide-ranging journey through the world of beauty, pleasure, and art. Chatterjee uses neuroscience to probe how an aesthetic sense is etched in our minds and evolutionary psychology to explain why aesthetic concerns feature centrally in our lives. Along the way, Chatterjee addresses fundamental questions: What is beauty? Is beauty universal? How is beauty related to pleasure? What is art? Should art be beautiful? Do we have an instinct for art? Chatterjee starts by probing the reasons that we find people, places, and even numbers beautiful. At the root of beauty, he finds, is pleasure. He then examines our pleasures by dissecting why we want and why we like food, sex, and money and how these rewards relate to aesthetic encounters. His ruminations on beauty and pleasure prepare him and the listener to face art. He wanders through the problems of defining art, understanding contemporary art, and interpreting ancient art. He explores why art, something that seems so useless, also feels fundamental to our humanity. Replete with facts, anecdotes, and analogies, this empirical guide to aesthetics offers scientific answers without deflating the wonders of beauty and art.

©2014 Oxford University Press (P)2014 Audible Inc.

What listeners say about The Aesthetic Brain

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Disappointing

I am a potter and I often listen to audiobooks while I work in the studio. I was interested in this book because I listed to a very short podcast on this subject which described how people all over the world preferred an image of particular landscape regardless of where they lived. I found that fascinating and hoped this book would tell me more along those lines.
The description looked so great, I neglected to listen to the sample before purchase- my mistake. The narration is of the old fashioned type that always reminds me of WWII news clips or 1960's nature shows. I was only able to get an hour in. I heard nothing I hadn't heard before about why certain people are more attractive to the opposite sex- facial symmetry, pointy chins, etc. I was really annoyed as I thought the book was going to be about art and neuroscience. I do not care which Hollywood actress the author is attracted to. That's not interesting to me and the objectification of women embedded in that discussion is not something I want to spend my time on. Between the narration, familiar information (to me anyway), and the way the book is written, I thought maybe I had bought a book published a long time ago (actually just 2013). When I realized I didn't like either the narrator or the book, I turned it off and went to find something else. I'm sorry I spent money on this one.

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11 people found this helpful

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    4 out of 5 stars
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A fine contribution

A responsible, sober, up-to-date, and clear take on evolutionary neuroaesthetics, Chatterjee's book navigates the science and the anxiety the science elicits with tact and aplomb.

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3 people found this helpful

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    4 out of 5 stars
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A Beautiful Brain Child

This book is a perfect introduction to the field of experimental neuroaesthetics. It informs and inspires readers to dig deeper into a personal understanding of what and why art is.

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2 people found this helpful

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Brains and beauty

Information is great, it was a good deal to get there. From the esthetics of faces and places, through common philosophy of beauty to the Neuroesthetics and some implications. If you did not study psychology or neurology the (like me) , the brainsystems will seem a bit complicated. But it is really worth while to see it through.

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2 people found this helpful

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Artist take on this book.

As an artist it was a great pleasure to be painting and listening to this audio book. Great insights that gained new understanding as I watched them transpire on the canvas in real time. Truly gave comprehension to experiences I have strived to understand my throughout my art career. The message of how freedom causes an explosion of diversity is a precious message that makes me even more grateful to live in a time where I can live that.

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1 person found this helpful

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Unique and Interesting Contemplation of Art

Well read and written. Worth a listen if you are interested in this topic.

I didn’t think neuroscience would have anything valuable to contribute to the discussion of art, but this book offers a unique and insightful perspective on it while maintaining a genuine appreciation for it.

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    2 out of 5 stars
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This Author Does Not Understand Art

This person has a very pedantic understanding of art, which frankly, most often misses the point altogether. I disagree with much of his thesis as well regarding why we love great art, our purpose for creating it, and what more or less defines art.

If given the opportunity to do it over again I would not waste my time or money on this one.

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Litany of Facts

I would suggest that any person who is very visually oriented approach this book with caution, or at least an image of the brain in front of you. The author goes on and on with things like, when a person sees something like X the Y part of the brain lights up, and just keeps on lifting things like that. The areas of the brain have very technical names, and are often abbreviated. There's very little synthesis going on in any individual chapter.

I kept wishing that the author built the story around parts of the brain and what they do, telling a story, synthesizing things, rather than around the visual stimulus coming first followed by the brain activity. Very frustrating, and I will be happily returning this.

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    4 out of 5 stars
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Glad I got this one!

I wasn't sure what to expect from this book. I got it because I've wondered about beauty and aesthetics for years:

"Why are flowers beautiful?"

I haven't finished the book yet, as I began listeting to it yesterday – but can already say it's a wonderful book! It talks about human beauty, baby face bias, fibonacci / golden ratio: aka "right down my alley"!

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Good and understandable

I enjoyed the first half of the book but it seemed to me to get a little off track in some chapters. Still glad i listen to it thougg

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