Oscar Zarate: 5 books

Book cover of Introducing Mind and Brain

Introducing Mind and Brain

A Graphic Guide

by Angus Gellatly, Oscar Zarate
Language: English
Release Date: April 5, 2018

How do emotions affect your basic decision making? Why do certain smells prompt long-forgotten memories, and what makes us suddenly self-conscious? How does the biological organ, the brain, give rise to all of the thoughts in your head – enable you to think, to feel, to be conscious and aware...
Book cover of FREE Introducing Graphic Guide Sampler
by Cathia Jenainati, J.P. McEvoy, Oscar Zarate
Language: English
Release Date: July 14, 2014

Introducing Graphic Guides is the bestselling series which explores big ideas from Quantum Theory to Psychoanalysis using concise, authoritative text and graphic novel-style illustrations. For the very first time 28 titles are now available in ebook format for all e-reading devices. This free ebook...
Book cover of Introducing Evolutionary Psychology
by Dylan Evans, Oscar Zarate
Language: English
Release Date: June 18, 2015

How did the mind evolve? How does the human mind differ from the minds of our ancestors, and from the minds of our nearest relatives, the apes? What are the universal features of the human mind, and why are they designed the way they are? If our minds are built by selfish genes, why are we so cooperative?...
Book cover of Introducing Quantum Theory

Introducing Quantum Theory

A Graphic Guide

by J.P. McEvoy, Oscar Zarate
Language: English
Release Date: June 5, 2014

Quantum theory confronts us with bizarre paradoxes which contradict the logic of classical physics. At the subatomic level, one particle seems to know what the others are doing, and according to Heisenberg's "uncertainty principle", there is a limit on how accurately nature can be observed....
Book cover of Introducing Existentialism

Introducing Existentialism

A Graphic Guide

by Richard Appignanesi, Oscar Zarate
Language: English
Release Date: June 18, 2015

Richard Appignanesi goes on a personal quest of Existentialism in its original state. He begins with Camus' question of suicide: 'Must life have a meaning to be lived?' Is absurdity at the heart of Existentialism? Or is Sartre right: is Existentialism 'the least scandalous, most technically austere'...
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