CEU Press

Foreword
Barbara J. Sahakian
Preface: The Brain in Political Research
Introduction: The State of Neuropolitics
Chapter One: The Brain: A Philosophical and Historical Introduction
Chapter Two: The Neuropolitics of Us and Them
Chapter Three: Social Neuroscience, Political Attitudes, and Election Campaigns
Chapter Four: The Listening Brain: The State We Ought to Be In
Epilogue: Inconclusive Scientific Postscript
Notes
Subject Index
Name Index
We have politics on our mind—or, rather, we have politics in different parts of our brains. In this path-breaking study, Matt Qvortrup takes the reader on a whistle stop tour through the fascinating, and sometimes frightening, world of neuropolitics; the discipline that combines neuroscience and politics, and is even being used to win elections.
Putting the 'science' back into political science, The Political Brain shows how fMRI-scans can identify differences between Liberals and Conservatives, can predict our behaviour with sometimes greater accuracy than surveys, and can explain the biology of uprisings, revolutions, and wars.
Not merely a study of empirical evidence, the book shows how the philosophical theories of, among others, Plato, Aristotle, and Spinoza can be supported by brain scans. Along the way, it also provides an overview of the state-of-the-art knowledge of the organ that shapes our politics. The book shows that if we rely on evolutionary primitive parts of the midbrain—those engaged when we succumb to polarised politics—we stand in danger of squandering the gains we made through the last eight million years.