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One Hand Clapping

Unravelling the Mystery of the Human Mind

Nikolay Kukushkin

$45

Hardback

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English
Swift Press
03 February 2026
Like the Zen Buddhist riddle pondering the imponderable - the sound of a single hand clapping - One Hand Clapping asks the seemingly impossible question of how the human mind came to exist within physical reality. In search of this answer, Kukushkin takes readers on a billion-year journey to the roots of ""nature's ideas"" which define a human being, from breathing and moving to wanting and liking.

Using gleaming analysis and cutting-edge science alongside doodles from the author, this elegant and absorbing book reaches deep into our oceanic past to show how the evolution of the most basic features of cells and molecules at the dawn of life on Earth ultimately led to the formation our own minds. It turns out that dinosaurs are to blame for human suffering, lungs exist thanks to lichens, and the major event in the life of our ancestors over the last eon was the transformation into worms. One Hand Clapping is the story of humans and our inner worlds, spanning the entire journey from inorganic molecules to the emergence of language - a journey as epic as myth, but true.
By:  
Imprint:   Swift Press
Country of Publication:   United Kingdom
Dimensions:   Height: 234mm,  Width: 153mm, 
ISBN:   9781800755000
ISBN 10:   1800755007
Pages:   304
Publication Date:  
Audience:   General/trade ,  ELT Advanced
Format:   Hardback
Publisher's Status:   Active

Nikolay Kukushkin is a Russian-born neuroscientist based in Brooklyn. He holds a Bachelor's degree in Biology from St. Petersburg State University, a D. Phil. in biochemistry from Oxford University, and received post-doctoral training at Harvard Medical School. He is currently a clinical assistant professor at New York University's Liberal Studies, and a research fellow at NYU's Center for Neural Science, where he studies the molecular, cellular and evolutionary foundations of memory formation. At NYU, he teaches an acclaimed course, ""Life Science,"" on which the present book is loosely based. An earlier version of One Hand Clapping won the most prestigious book prize for Russian nonfiction, the Enlightener (Prosvetitel) Award, as well as the Alexander Belyaev Medal, awarded to the best Russian-language nonfiction and science fiction.

Reviews for One Hand Clapping: Unravelling the Mystery of the Human Mind

'Brilliant, bold, and beautifully articulated, One Hand Clapping is the best of biological thought. Starting with the origins of life, Kukushkin deftly solves the chicken-and-egg problem, moves gracefully to the notion of emergence, and concludes with a compelling account of ourselves as curious creatures, co-constructing our cultural niches ― and all that entails for being you and me' - Karl J. Friston, Professor of Neuroscience, University College London 'Dazzling and breathtaking… Be prepared to abandon your pre-conceptions as Kukushkin takes readers on an audacious journey across the aeons of life on earth to arrive at one of the most thorough and yet provocative accounts for what makes humans the species we are. One Hand Clapping takes the scientific concepts of function, emergence, and recursion to new levels, freeing them from the tedium of simply technical explanations into jaw-dropping moments of insight that will leave you shaking with revelation. Do your brain a favour and read this masterpiece' - Bruce Hood, author of The Self Illusion and The Science of Happiness ‘A fun, engaging journey from the origins of life to the consciousness of human minds. Kukushkin sees the magic in the world and helps the reader see it, too. But not the impenetrable magic that wallows in mystery – instead, the kind of magic that leads to better questions, and deeper insight. Highly recommended to anyone who wants to better understand the world of molecules and why we are simultaneously in that world, but also, paradoxically, beyond it’ - Michael Levin, Distinguished Professor of Biology and Director of the Allen Discovery Center, Tufts University 'It is a thrilling paradox to have the human mind read this work and learn its own origin, yet Kukushkin conquers it with ease… This ambitious telling is delivered in a digestible manner through the use of clever metaphors, entertaining doodles, and rigorous scientific data… This is an instant classic, for anyone interested in evolutionary psychology and neuroscience or who has a brain that wants to know about itself' - Library Journal


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