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  • The Boy Who Felt Too Much

  • How a Renowned Neuroscientist and His Son Changed Our View of Autism Forever
  • By: Lorenz Wagner
  • Narrated by: David DeVries
  • Length: 6 hrs and 13 mins
  • 4.5 out of 5 stars (2 ratings)

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The Boy Who Felt Too Much

By: Lorenz Wagner
Narrated by: David DeVries
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Publisher's Summary

An International Bestseller, the Story behind Henry Markram’s Breakthrough Theory about Autism, and How a Family’s Unconditional Love Led to a Scientific Paradigm Shift

Henry Markram is the Elon Musk of neuroscience, the man behind the billion-dollar Blue Brain Project to build a supercomputer model of the brain. He has set the goal of decoding all disturbances of the mind within a generation. This quest is personal for him. The driving force behind his grand ambition has been his son Kai, who has autism. Raising Kai made Henry Markram question all that he thought he knew about neuroscience, and then inspired his groundbreaking research that would upend the conventional wisdom about autism, expressed in his now-famous theory of Intense World Syndrome.

When Kai was first diagnosed, his father consulted studies and experts. He knew as much about the human brain as almost anyone but still felt as helpless as any parent confronted with this condition in his child. What’s more, the scientific consensus that autism was a deficit of empathy didn’t mesh with Markram’s experience of his son. He became convinced that the disorder, which has seen a 657 percent increase in diagnoses over the past decade, was fundamentally misunderstood. Bringing his world-class research to bear on the problem, he devised a radical new theory of the disorder: People like Kai don’t feel too little; they feel too much. Their senses are too delicate for this world.

©2022 Lorenz Wagner (P)2022 Library Ideas

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Enlightening

An amazing, enlightening story. I loved it, our journey has been similar with our son (minus the neuroscience bit!) it’s given me a lot to think about with how we can help him and also a lot more questions too! The narrators voice was a little robotic and hard for me to listen too but I got used to it eventually.

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