This is all tied up with the knotty problem of consciousness, or awareness, that is currently taxing the minds of philosophers and neuroscientists.
Ordinary language, supplemented by diagrams, mathematical formulae, and neologized technical nouns, verbs, and adjectives, is adequate for the expression of neuroscientists' amazingly impressive discoveries.
The neuroscientists respond, and a final comment is offered by the language scientists.
In the 1960s, a single field, cybernetics, was populated by information theorists, computer scientists, and neuroscientists, all studying common problems.
For some neuroscientists, a cognitive explanation is no more than a metaphor located in brain space and time.
As the authors are neuroscientists, a preponderance of a radical reductionism identifying mind and brain is to be expected.
I strongly recommend it to all psychiatrists, as well as to all neuroscientists and philosophers.
Emotion has always been a frightening topic for neuroscientists.