Philosophical Foundations of Neuroscience. P. M. S. Hacker

Чтение книги онлайн.

Читать онлайн книгу Philosophical Foundations of Neuroscience - P. M. S. Hacker страница 19

Philosophical Foundations of Neuroscience - P. M. S. Hacker

Скачать книгу

as is patent in the development of talk of dictionaries and concept-stores in the brain. It is self-defeating to appeal to pragmatism, as if experiments could validate analogies independently of laying down verifiable criteria of identity and difference (the extension of hydrodynamic analogies to electricity theory is not self-validating or self-confirming ).

      M. R. Bennett

      P. M. S. Hacker

      1 Philosophical Problems in Neuroscience: Their Historical Roots

      The more than two thousand years of the history of what became known as cognitive neuroscience shows that the discipline is grounded in correlations of human behaviour, reflecting psychological powers such as seeing, hearing, remembering, etc, with areas of the brain and their function. Such correlations are often erroneously taken to show that psychological attributes pertain to parts of the brain (the occipital cortex perceives, the hippocampus remembers), whereas the correlations are with the behaving human being, who perceives and remembers.

      Galen

      In the second century ad Galen identified the proper functioning of the enkephalon which is necessary for the mental powers of humans. This was based on careful clinical observations of the many injured charioteers and gladiators he had access to, followed by careful pathological examination of their bodies. Galen may be thought of as the initiator of what became known as the clinico-pathological procedure in neurology, whereby correlations are sought between abnormal behaviour and a diseased state of the body. In this case Galen observed that the ability to think and reason were impaired when damage had occurred to the brain, but not to other parts of the body. Unfortunately, when he passed on to the question of what particular parts of the brain were necessary for reasoning he departed from the clinical-pathological method, and guessed that it was the ventricles, considering the cortex as merely the wall of the ventricles.

      Nemesius

      In the fourth century ad Nemesius believed he could affirm and extend Galen’ s claim that the ventricles were correlated with possession of human powers using the clinico-pathological approach. He claimed to show that injury or disease to each of the ventricles led to behavioural deficits indicative of the failure of a particular power. For example, if the front ventricles are harmed then the senses are abnormal but thought remains normal. This example of incorrect conclusions drawn through application of the clinic-pathological technique indicates how difficult the search for correlations can be, and is manifest even in the search for the primary visual cortex, for which a consensus was reached only towards the end of the nineteenth century.

      Thomas Willis

      Figure 1 Illustrations from Cerebri Anatome of Thomas Willis, showing on the left the underside of a normal human brain and on the right of a brain from a person suffering from congenital mental weakness. Reproduced with the permission of the library of St John’s College, Oxford

      Clinico-pathological correlations in the nineteenth century

      Single neuron investigations and fMRI in the twentieth century:primacy of behaviour

      In the twentieth century the correlations revealed following careful application of the clinico-pathological technique were followed by neuroscientific investigations into the neural mechanisms operating within the identified cortical areas. The introduction of new techniques by Adrian and Eccles in the first half of the twentieth century allowed for a new level of spatial resolution relating psychological powers and cortical function, namely that of a neuron within the already identified

Скачать книгу