"McNamara makes a seminal contribution to both evolutionary psychology and the neuropsychology of sleep and dreams. Drawing upon animal studies, cognitive neuroscience, attachment theory, sleep disorders, content analysis, developmental psychology, memory, emotion, play, narrative, imagery, and metaphor, McNamara portrays dreams as the creative product of an adaptive process that is crucial to the development of both authentic human communication and "hard-to-fake" emotions, as well as (in all likelihood) human culture in general. During this process REM (rapid eye movement) and non-REM sleep are often antagonistic, yet dreaming can occur in either. McNamara deconstructs many orthodox perspectives, most notably the notion that dream content is a meaningless chance occurrence, while salvaging what is consistent with current data. Destined to become an instant classic, this book reads like a detective story as McNamara explores such puzzles as why unpleasant dreams outnumber pleasant ones. McNamara's own "costly signal" theory regarding the function of REM sleep (which he saves for the final chapter) is original and articulate; many readers will find it convincing. Highly recommended. Upper-level undergraduates and above."-Choice
"[I]ntended to explore new approaches to potential functions of REM and REM-related dreaming."-SciTech Book News
"ÝI¨ntended to explore new approaches to potential functions of REM and REM-related dreaming."-SciTech Book News
?McNamara makes a seminal contribution to both evolutionary psychology and the neuropsychology of sleep and dreams. Drawing upon animal studies, cognitive neuroscience, attachment theory, sleep disorders, content analysis, developmental psychology, memory, emotion, play, narrative, imagery, and metaphor, McNamara portrays dreams as the creative product of an adaptive process that is crucial to the development of both authentic human communication and "hard-to-fake" emotions, as well as (in all likelihood) human culture in general. During this process REM (rapid eye movement) and non-REM sleep are often antagonistic, yet dreaming can occur in either. McNamara deconstructs many orthodox perspectives, most notably the notion that dream content is a meaningless chance occurrence, while salvaging what is consistent with current data. Destined to become an instant classic, this book reads like a detective story as McNamara explores such puzzles as why unpleasant dreams outnumber pleasant ones. McNamara's own "costly signal" theory regarding the function of REM sleep (which he saves for the final chapter) is original and articulate; many readers will find it convincing. Highly recommended. Upper-level undergraduates and above.?-Choice
?[I]ntended to explore new approaches to potential functions of REM and REM-related dreaming.?-SciTech Book News
"McNamara comes to the difficult issues of dream research with a fresh eye that allows him to take into account all the relevant new findings in both neuropsychology and content analysis, and the result is an original and highly creative synthesis that transcends the tired orthodoxies of the past. Even if his provocative theory does not prove to be the whole answer, his book is a major contribution because it will stimulate new research directions and force everyone to rethink their current assumptions."-G. William Domhoff Research Professor University of California, Santa Cruz