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Faith talks to NYU psychologist Gary Marcus about why he thinks the brain is more a cobbled-together product of evolutionary tinkering than some ideal natural design, as explained in his new book “Kluge.”
The human brain possesses stunning talents; we still have no idea how it does most of what it does. You might think that an organ of such power would represent the absolute zenith in biological design – Mother Nature’s magnum opus. But according to my next guest, the opposite is true – the brain is more like a clumsy, two-bit contraption held together by duct tape and chewing gum. Gary Marcus is professor of psychology at New York University, and he’s written a new book about what he sees as the brain’s oddly jury-rigged design. It’s called Kluge: The Haphazard Construction of the Human Mind.