* Your assessment is very important for improving the workof artificial intelligence, which forms the content of this project
Download Are you your brain?
Craniometry wikipedia , lookup
Limbic system wikipedia , lookup
Intracranial pressure wikipedia , lookup
Clinical neurochemistry wikipedia , lookup
Embodied cognitive science wikipedia , lookup
Animal consciousness wikipedia , lookup
Biochemistry of Alzheimer's disease wikipedia , lookup
Time perception wikipedia , lookup
Nervous system network models wikipedia , lookup
Evolution of human intelligence wikipedia , lookup
Lateralization of brain function wikipedia , lookup
History of anthropometry wikipedia , lookup
Causes of transsexuality wikipedia , lookup
Activity-dependent plasticity wikipedia , lookup
Neuroscience and intelligence wikipedia , lookup
Dual consciousness wikipedia , lookup
Neurogenomics wikipedia , lookup
Functional magnetic resonance imaging wikipedia , lookup
Neuromarketing wikipedia , lookup
Neuroesthetics wikipedia , lookup
Human multitasking wikipedia , lookup
Donald O. Hebb wikipedia , lookup
Artificial general intelligence wikipedia , lookup
Neuroeconomics wikipedia , lookup
Blood–brain barrier wikipedia , lookup
Human brain wikipedia , lookup
Neuroinformatics wikipedia , lookup
Aging brain wikipedia , lookup
Neural correlates of consciousness wikipedia , lookup
Haemodynamic response wikipedia , lookup
Neurophilosophy wikipedia , lookup
Neurotechnology wikipedia , lookup
Neurolinguistics wikipedia , lookup
Neuropsychopharmacology wikipedia , lookup
Selfish brain theory wikipedia , lookup
Neuroplasticity wikipedia , lookup
Sports-related traumatic brain injury wikipedia , lookup
Neuroanatomy wikipedia , lookup
Cognitive neuroscience wikipedia , lookup
Brain morphometry wikipedia , lookup
Mind uploading wikipedia , lookup
Holonomic brain theory wikipedia , lookup
Brain Rules wikipedia , lookup
History of neuroimaging wikipedia , lookup
Are you your brain? Steven Rose [email protected] St. Augustine’s Questions  How does the brain/mind encompass: Vast regions of space and time Abstract thoughts, numbers The idea of god Logical propositions and false arguments. Brain versus Mind? (Emily Dickinson, 1862)  The Brain - is wider than the Sky  For - put them side by side  The one the other will contain -  With ease - and you -beside  The Brain is just the weight of God  For - heft them - Pound for Pound  And they will differ - if they do  As Syllable from Sound  Emily Dickinson, c 1862 Three Neuro Decades  1990s – decade of the brain  2000s – decade of the mind  2013 - EU announces €1 billion for a ‘human brain project’ to build a virtual brain through computer simulation.  Obama announces BRAIN – a $3billion project tracking all the trillions of connections between nerve cells in the human brain (starting with mouse!) paid for by NIH, DARPA etc  Will help ‘epilepsy, depression, schizophrenia, autism, dementia..stroke, cerebral palsy….’ (and the military)  And the reach of the neurosciences grows ever longer  Neurolaw  Neurowar  Neuroeconomics  Neuromarketing  Neuroaesthetics  Neuroeducation  Neuroethics……….  And neuroculture?? The core assumption of modern neuroscience  Minds and consciousness are brain processes  To cure the mind one must cure the brain  But these claims are not uncontested Brains and Minds: Four philosophical propositions  Dualism: Body/brain …. Soul/mind two different types of stuff  Identity: Brain/mind are two aspects of the same phenomenon  Epiphenomenalism: Mind emerges from brain  Mechanical materialism: Minds are ‘nothing but’ brains  NOTE! I am not going to agree with any of these! Not all neuroscientists have been hard materialists  Descartes and the pineal gland  Sherrington’s enchanted loom  Sperry’s downward causation  Eccles and the liaison brain – the god of  the synapses Some modern Dualists  Edelman – you are your brain.. plus free will!  Libet - the 350msec gap and the brain’s ‘free won’t’  And some closet dualists – Dawkins, Pinker  ‘only we can rebel against the tyranny of our selfish genes  ‘if my genes don’t like it they can go jump in the lake’ 19th century materialists  Thomas Huxley: Mind is to brain like the whistle to the steam train  Moleschott, Vogt et al: The brain secretes thought like the kidney secretes urine; genius is a matter of phosphorus Modern materialists  Crick – ‘you are nothing but a bunch of neurons’  Kandel – ‘you are your brain’  Silva – ‘ruthless reductionism’  Gazzaniga – ‘the ethical brain’  LeDoux – ‘synaptic self’  Changeaux – ‘neuronal man’ And some philosophers follow suit  Churchland – neurophilosophy and ‘folk psychology’  Dennett – ‘consciousness explained’ Some problems for materialists  Subjective experience and qualia – how does conscious experience emerge from brain chemistry/physics  How did consciousness evolve (Darwin v Russell Wallace)  Free will and determinism – ‘my brain made me do it.’ But if this were true  Minds wouldn’t matter at all – we only need think brains  But minds do matter; we have self-awareness; minds have reasons, are conscious and are evolved properties of humans, with Darwinian survival functions. These are irreducible properties.  So we also have to assume that although there is a qualitative jump between us and our nearest evolutionary relatives (chimps, bonobos) that these and maybe other big brained animals have rudimentary forms of consciousness (Damasio; Nagel) fMRI promises to solve the mind/brain question Brain sites for every thought and feeling ‘A happy marriage between fMRI and experimental psychology can bridge the divide between mind and brain’ Phrenology – external and internal ‘Psychopathic Brains?’ The Right and the Good: Distributive Justice and Neural Encoding of Equity and Efficiency*  Subjects making decisions re allocating meals to children in Ugandan orphanage  Quandary: to share limited food equally (equity) but inadequately, or giving enough food to chosen few (efficiency).  Result: ‘Insula encodes inequity, putamen efficiency’  *Hsu et al Science 320, 1092-5, 2008 Brain sites for everything  Mathematical ability  Romantic love  Moral judgments  Voting tendency  Terrorist thoughts  Psychopathy  And of course consciousness Neurolove So what’s the problem?  Overestimates the power of fMRI  Blood flow surrogate measure  Timescale (seconds )too long  Volume too great :50mm3 contains 5m neurons, 50b synapses 22km dendrites, 220km axons!  Mistakes activity for location Romantic love, psychopathy – and a dead salmon But there are more fundamental problems  These studies reify processes, thoughts and judgements – turning concepts from the social realm (efficiency, terrorism, psychopathy..) into localisable ‘things’ in the brain So here’s a thought experiment Let’s invent a cerebroscope The cerebroscope  Detects the activity of every neuron in my brain millisecond by millisecond The cerebroscope  So it will interpret my brain activity as Steven reading this caption, giving this seminar? •Or will it? A more dynamic cerebroscope  Not only reads the present state of my synapses but has plotted them millisecond by millisecond from their formation.  So could you now ‘read off’ my mind from my brain? I still think the answer is no The experience may impose a unique pattern in my synapses etc, but can that pattern in turn be read as unique to the experience? The pattern may show I am talking, but will it show the content of my speech? Because  There’s more to the brain than wiring diagrams and neurotransmitters  Modulators, field effects etc  The brain is in the body  hormones, immune system But more fundamentally: brain and body are part of the biosocial world in which we are embedded Minds are not Brains Minds are to brains like legs are to walking. We don’t say ‘my legs are walking’ but that we use our legs to walk Similarly, it is we who have minds and consciousness, and we use our brains to think Nor are our minds in our bodies (as St Augustine suggested)  Maybe as philosopher Gilbert Ryle suggested we don’t have minds (noun); instead we mind (verb). • Minding is a hybrid, not a reified brain process, though it requires the brain, but an ever-changing relationship between an individual and the physical social cultural and historical world;  Consciousness is relational, the dynamic product of present and past brain and body activity, life history and social context, a process, not a reified ‘thing.’
 
									 
									 
									 
									 
									 
									 
									 
									 
									 
									 
									 
									 
									 
									 
									 
									 
									 
									 
									 
									 
									 
									 
									 
									 
									 
									 
									 
									 
									 
									 
									 
									 
                                             
                                             
                                             
                                             
                                             
                                             
                                             
                                             
                                             
                                            