SOCIAL SCIENCES

The Other Side of Normal

How Biology Is Providing the Clues To Unlock the Secrets of Normal and Abnormal Behavior
The Other Side of Normal: How Biology Is Providing the Clues To Unlock the Secrets of Normal and Abnormal Behavior. Morrow. May 2012. c.384p. illus. bibliog. ISBN 9780061492198. $27.99. PSYCH
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Smoller (psychiatry & epidemiology, Harvard Univ.) has written a highly interesting and accessible study of brain science and behavior. Couching his discussion in the familiar debate about nature vs. nurture, he makes the case that these forces work together in a complicated dance that determines human individuality. He frequently references the Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders and the controversies there surrounding the definitions of normal vs. abnormal behavior. He seems to conclude that what is normal is most frequently defined in contrast to what is not normal. He ends his investigation of the normal by noting that abnormal behavior can be treated, the brain "rewired" with drug therapy. Smoller leaves unanswered the question of the ethical implications of manipulating the "abnormal" brain.
VERDICT This thoroughly documented work provides enough information to satisfy the science-savvy without leaving the rest of us behind. Personal asides scattered throughout keep the tone from being textbook-dry. Readers interested in human behavior will be fascinated. [See Prepub Alert, 11/21/11.]
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