Am I Just My Brain? - Paperback
Sharon DirckxOriginal price was: ₹899.00.₹399.00Current price is: ₹399.00.
Brain scientist Sharon Dirckx explores the mind, soul & human identity. Are we more than machines? A compelling Christian response to materialism.
Part of the Questioning Faith. Series
In stock
Am I Just My Brain? — Body, Mind, Soul and the Question of What It Means to Be Human
You are carrying an extraordinary object around with you everywhere you go.
Weighing approximately 1.4 kilograms, containing roughly 86 billion neurons, capable of processing information at speeds that dwarf the most powerful computers ever built — the human brain is, by any measure, one of the most remarkable structures in the known universe. And modern neuroscience is uncovering more of its extraordinary complexity with every passing year.
But here is the question that neuroscience, for all its brilliance, cannot fully answer:
Are you your brain?
Is the self — the thinking, choosing, experiencing, loving, wondering person who wakes up in your body every morning — simply the output of electrochemical processes in a biological machine? Is consciousness just what brains do when they reach a certain level of complexity? Is free will an illusion produced by neural firing patterns you did not choose? Do you have a soul — or is that idea simply a comforting fiction invented by prescientific minds that did not know any better?
These are not peripheral questions. They are the most fundamental questions anyone can ask about what it means to be human — and the answers have profound implications for how we understand ourselves, how we treat each other, what we think morality means, and whether any of it ultimately matters.
Am I Just My Brain? by Sharon Dirckx — a brain imaging scientist with a PhD from the University of Cambridge — is a rigorous, accessible, and genuinely important engagement with exactly these questions. Drawing on the latest research from biology, philosophy, theology, and psychology, it points toward a bigger picture of human identity that goes beyond the reductive materialism of popular neuroscience to suggest compelling answers to the deepest questions of human existence.
The Questions This Book Takes Seriously
What Is the Relationship Between Brain and Mind? The brain and the mind are clearly connected — damage the brain and the mind changes. But does that connection mean the mind is simply the brain, or does it point to something more? Dirckx examines this question with scientific precision and philosophical care — showing that the relationship between brain and mind is genuinely one of the most contested and fascinating questions in contemporary science and philosophy.
Are We More Than Machines? The materialist account of human beings — that we are, at bottom, nothing more than physical processes happening in biological hardware — has enormous cultural momentum. It shapes education, shapes law, shapes how people think about mental health, moral responsibility, and human dignity. Dirckx examines this account seriously and honestly — and shows why it struggles to account for some of the most fundamental features of human experience.
Is Free Will an Illusion? If every thought, every choice, every act of apparent decision-making is simply the output of prior physical causes in the brain — if there is no room in the materialist picture for genuine agency — then what becomes of moral responsibility, of love, of genuine relationship? Dirckx engages this question with both scientific literacy and philosophical rigour, showing why the free will debate matters far more than it might initially appear.
Do We Have a Soul? The idea that human beings have an immaterial dimension — a soul — is widely dismissed in secular academic culture as an unscientific relic. But Dirckx examines the evidence and arguments on both sides with genuine fairness, showing that the dismissal is far less settled than it is often presented, and that serious philosophers and scientists continue to find compelling reasons to take the soul seriously.
Not Just What Am I — But Who Am I and Why Am I? Perhaps most importantly, Dirckx moves beyond the purely descriptive question of what human beings are made of to the deeper, personally urgent questions of identity, meaning, and purpose. Who are you — not as a collection of atoms or a product of evolutionary processes, but as a person? And why are you here — is there a purpose to your existence beyond the bare biological fact of it?
A Scientist Who Is Also a Christian
What makes Am I Just My Brain? particularly valuable and particularly trustworthy is the perspective of its author.
Sharon Dirckx is not a theologian speculating about neuroscience from a safe distance. She is a working brain imaging scientist — with a PhD from the University of Cambridge and postdoctoral research experience — who has spent her career at the intersection of scientific investigation and the deepest questions about human nature. She knows the neuroscience from the inside. She understands what the research does and does not show. And she writes as someone who has found, through rigorous engagement with both the science and the broader questions it raises, that a Christian understanding of human beings — as embodied souls made in the image of God — is not undermined by modern neuroscience but is, in many ways, more coherent and more satisfying than the materialist alternative.
This combination of genuine scientific credibility and genuine Christian conviction makes her one of the most trustworthy and most compelling voices available on these questions — and makes this book an outstanding resource for both Christians wanting to understand the issues and sceptics who deserve a serious, scientifically literate engagement with whether we are more than our brains.
What This Book Will Help You Do
- Understand the current state of neuroscience and what it does and does not tell us about human identity, consciousness, and the mind-body relationship
- Engage seriously and confidently with the materialist claim that we are simply our brains — understanding its strengths, its weaknesses, and its implications
- Think clearly about the relationship between brain and mind, body and soul from a perspective that takes both modern science and Christian theology seriously
- Understand why the questions of free will, consciousness, and human identity matter far more than they might initially seem — and how the answers shape everything from ethics to relationships to the meaning of life
- Find a compelling, scientifically grounded case for the Christian understanding of human beings as more than machines — as embodied persons made in the image of a personal God
- Give this book to sceptical friends or family members who need a serious, credible, intellectually honest engagement with what science does and does not tell us about what we are
- Grow in your own confidence in the Christian account of human nature — understanding why it is not scientifically naive but genuinely better supported by the evidence than the reductive materialism that dominates popular culture
Who Should Read This Book?
Am I Just My Brain? is essential reading for:
- Christians who want to understand the relationship between neuroscience and Christian faith — and to engage confidently with the claim that science has shown we are nothing more than physical beings
- Students in biology, psychology, philosophy, or neuroscience who are encountering materialist accounts of human nature and need a serious, credible Christian response
- Anyone who has ever wondered whether consciousness, free will, or the soul are real — or whether they are simply comforting fictions that modern science has made untenable
- Thoughtful sceptics and seekers who are genuinely open to examining whether the materialist picture of humanity is as complete as it is claimed to be
- Pastors and church leaders wanting a scientifically credible, theologically sound resource on human nature to recommend to questioning members of their congregation
- Small groups wanting a rigorous, discussion-generating study on what it means to be human from the perspectives of science, philosophy, and Christian theology
- Christians in India navigating the growing influence of scientific materialism and secular naturalism in education and professional life — and needing a confident, credible response to its claims about human identity
- Anyone who wants to give a thoughtful, intellectually serious gift to a sceptical friend that challenges the assumption that science has settled the question of what we are
About the Questioning Faith Series
Am I Just My Brain? is part of the Questioning Faith series — a collection of accessible, rigorous, and intellectually serious books that engage the biggest questions people ask about faith, science, and the meaning of human existence. Each title in the series is written by a recognised expert in their field and is designed to be both genuinely challenging for the committed Christian and genuinely accessible for the thoughtful sceptic.
Other titles in the Questioning Faith series are available at forthetruth.in.
Also by Sharon Dirckx — look for her other titles exploring science, faith, and the big questions of human existence.
More Than a Brain — More Than a Machine
The materialist story of human beings — that we are nothing more than our neurons, that consciousness is an illusion, that free will is a fiction, that the self is a convenient shorthand for physical processes that have no ultimate meaning or direction — is the dominant story of our cultural moment. It shapes education, shapes medicine, shapes law, and shapes the quiet assumptions that millions of people carry about what they are and why they are here.
But it is not the only story. And Sharon Dirckx argues, with scientific credibility and genuine intellectual care, that it is not the best story — that the evidence, honestly examined, points toward a picture of human beings that is richer, more complex, and more genuinely human than materialism can accommodate.
The Christian story — that human beings are embodied souls, made in the image of a personal God, with genuine agency and genuine dignity, for genuine purpose — is not a retreat from the evidence. It is, Dirckx argues, a more honest and more satisfying account of what the evidence actually shows.
Am I Just My Brain? is an invitation to examine that evidence — and to discover that the answer to the question is, gloriously and consequentially: no.
- Weight : 1.05 kg
- Dimensions : 19.56 × 12.7 × 1.52 cm
- Language : English
- Pages : 160
- Format : Paperback
- ISBN : 9781784982751
- Publisher : THE GOOD BOOK COMPANY
- HSN : 4901
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