Historical and conceptual issues in psychology, by Brysbaert, M and Rastle, K (second edition) - a summary
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Foundations of psychology
Chapter 7
The mind-brain problem, free will and consciousness
Throughout history, humans have been impressed by their ability to reflect about themselves and the world around them.
Self: the feeling of being an individual with private experiences, feelings and beliefs, who interacts in a coherent and purposeful way with the environment.
Mind-brain problem: issue of how the mind is related to the brain.
Three main views
Mind: aggregate of faculties humans (and animals) have to perceive, feel, think, remember and want.
Dualism: view of the mind-body relation according to which the mind is immaterial and completely independent of the body; central within religions and also in Descartes’ philosophy.
Dualism in religion and traditional philosophy
Religion
Dualism is central to religions.
They are grounded in the belief that people possess a divine soul created by God, which temporarily lives in the body, and which leaves the corpse upon its death.
The soul is what gives people their purpose and values in life.
It usually aims for the good, but can be tempted and seduced by evil forces.
This gave rise to the demonologist view of psychopathology.
Demonologists view: the conviction that mental disorders are due to possession by bad spirits.
Plato and Descartes
Dualism was central in the philosophies of Plato and Descartes.
Cartesian dualism: theories in which the mind is seen as radically different from the body and as independent of the biological processes in the brain.
Dualism in philosophical writing does not focus to the mind’s fate after death.
Dualism in early psychology and lay thinking
Dualism in early psychology
In the second half of the nineteenth century a growing number of scientists began to question the dualistic view.
They were unwilling to reduce the human mind to nothing but brain tissue.
The distinction between mind and body was attractive to early psychologists because it provided them with their own study area that could not be invaded and taken over by brain scientists.
Dualism in lay thinking
Dualism nowadays still is the fundamental attitude people have about the relationship between the mind and the brain.
Dualism puts consciousness at the centre of human functioning and seems to give humans free will
Dualism has an intuitive appeal because it puts conscious information processing at the centre of our functioning and it gives us the feeling of being in control of our actions.
In dualist models consciousness is the core of human existence
Dualism in general gives priority to the mind.
Our conscious, deliberate thinking is at the centre of our existence and controls our actions.
Consciousness: word referring to the private, first-person experiences an individual lives through; contains all the mental states a person is aware of; part of the mind that can be examined with introspection.
Dualism puts consciousness at the centre of the person, because the mind (or soul) is the acting unit and the mind coincides with consciousness.
The actions of an individual are guided by the private, first-person experience of that individual.
Dualism and free will
Because in the dualist view consciousness is the centre of the mind, nothing happens unless it is licensed by the mind.
Free will: situation in which individuals can choose their course of action; choice is the outcome of an informed deliberation.
Three conditions must be met before an action can be described to free will:
Problems with dualism
Although dualism strongly agrees with human intuitions, it has come under severe attack since the second half of the nineteenth century, to such an extent that it is no longer a viable approach within the philosophy of mind.
The interaction problem
How to explain the mechanisms by which an independent mind (or soul) can influence the body.
Similarly, how can a non-physical, spiritual mind control physical brain processes?
The existence of unconscious control processes
The discovery that many mental functions seemed to happen outside consciousness.
John Locke was the first to give rise to this issue.
Leibniz (1646-1716)
Thought that the human mind could not be limited to conscious thinking.
He compared the universe to a living organism.
The building blocks were not material particles, but energy-laden and soul-invested units, which he called monads.
Four types of monads
Human consciousness was not aware of the activity of the simple monads and, to a large extent, of the sentient monads.
Still, these monads could motivate human behaviour.
Kant also started to wonder how much wider human knowledge was than the part people were conscious of.
Kant thought of unconscious representations as dark representations.
Leibniz’s and Kant’s thoughts were music in the ears of the German Romanticists.
They saw evidence for the argument that rational thinking was but the tip of human potential and the most interesting part of the mind was active below the level of consciousness.
They urged their readers to strive for unconscious artistic productivity and intuitive aesthetic sense.
The study of unconscious processing gained further momentum from the nineteenth-century neuropphysiologic discovery that reflexes and bodily functions were controlled by the spinal cord and subcortical structures, not by the cerebral hemispheres.
The disappearance of mystery forces in the scientific world
A reason why dualism lost its appeal was that it needed the existence of an immaterial, mysterious, animistic ‘soul’.
Two prime examples of mysterious ‘substances’ that had been postulated in science before but which in the end turned out to be materialistic phenomena that could be measured and manipulated
Given the mysteries of phlogiston and vital force in the end turned out to be chemical and biological processes that could be manipulated, an increasing number of scholars began to claim that something similar would happen to the mind.
Interim summary
The alternative: materialism
The idea of an independent, incorporeal mind (soul) as the core of a human being struck British empiricists in the eighteenth and the nineteenth centuries as quite implausible, although they had to be careful not to upset the church too much.
David Hume openly declared he saw no good reason why one should believe in a soul.
The idea of the mind as nothing other than a brain operation really took off towards the end of the nineteenth century.
Materialism: view about the relationship between the min and brain that considers the mind as the brain in operation.
Within psychology, the rise of materialism was one of the reasons why behaviourists wanted to get away from the study of ‘consciousness’.
The consequences for consciousness and free will
Materialism does not require consciousness or free will.
Consciousness is folk psychology
Paul Churchland (1981)
Consciousness as the centre of the human mind and the controller of human actions was not only an illusion but also a dangerous idea.
It gives individuals a misunderstanding of what makes them tick.
Consciousness and the associated opinions were examples of folk psychology.
Folk psychology: collection of beliefs lay people have about psychological functioning; no efforts made to verify them empirically or to check them for their internal coherence.
Is there still room for free will?
Rickard Dawkins (1979-2006)
The evolutionary theory was misunderstood in the first century after its introduction by Darwin.
The selection actually concerns the survival of DNA molecules.
In Dawkins’s view, humans are nothing more than survival machines for the genes that they carry around.
Problems with materialism
How can different experiences be compared?
Identity problem: the difficulty the materialistic theory of the mind-brain relationship has to explain how two events can be experienced as the same despite the fact that their realisation in the brain differs.
How is it possible for two humans to communicate if their brain codes differ?
Given the complexity and the flexibility of the human brain, it is next to impossible for two experiences of a particular input to be encoded in exactly the same way. How can the brain know these codes refer to the same stimulus?
How can we build a mind as the by-product of a brain?
Nobody has a convincing idea of how the human mind could be a by-product of the biological processes of the brain.
Interim summary
Information transcends its medium
The efforts to make machines intelligent would confront researchers with the discovery that information can be thought of as a realm separate from the medium upon which it is realised.
Mathematicians and logicians in the nineteenth and twentieth centuries ventured that all intelligence could be represented by binary symbols upon which Boolean transformations operate.
Every medium capable of doing so could process the same information and was a Turing machine.
A solution to the identity problem
Because information in operational computers was independent of the precise ways in which it had been realised, the physical changes by which computers code zeros and ones worked with them did not really matter.
Similarly, the minute physiological changes that accompany a particular human experience may not be important, as long as they preserve the information code.
The same information can be realised and communicated in multiple ways.
Functionalism in philosophy
Functionalism: in philosophy, view about the relationship between the mind and brain that considers the mind as a separate layer of information implemented on a Turing machine; predicts that the mind can be copied onto another Turing machine.
Functionalists in philosophy from the 1970s onwards examined the functions of information, rather than the precise ways in which the information was realised.
Beam me up, Scotty
Thought experiment: hypothetical scenario that helps with the understanding of a philosophical argument.
What would teleportation do to the mind?
Information as the saviour of free will?
Information allows humans to rebel against the genes
The fact that humans can encode, store, retrieve and manipulate information enables them to pursue intentions that need to coincide with those of the genes.
The robots have a potential to rebel, if they ware willing to use rational thought aimed at their own personal interests.
Memes
Meme: information unit proposed by Dawkins that reproduces itself according to the principles of the evolutionary theory
Dawkins spotted that information shows many similarities with DNA molecules.
DNA need not be the only replicator in the universe. There may be others which also work on the principles of variation, selection and replication.
Dawkins argues that the build-up of information by humans fulfils all the principles of Darwinism.
It might be that humans are not only ‘programmed’ to spread genes, but also to spread information in the form of memes.
The main difference between genes and memes at present is that the formed have managed to harness many organisms, so that they can survive the extinction of a species, whereas the latter (still) largely depend on the human race for their growth and distribution.
Telecopying
If we, during teleporting, copy a human. Would it inherit the human mind, complete with consciousness and free will?
Problems with functionalism
The functionalist network agreed perfectly with cognitive psychology and cognitive neuropsychology.
Marr (1982) argued that information processing could be studies on three levels
The challenge posed by cognitive neuroscience
The clear separation between information processing and brain tissue was questioned by cognitive neuroscience, which argued that human information processing could be understood by examining the brain parts involved in the operations.
This was not ad odds with the functionalist approach.
The adherence of the functionalist approach questioned whether cognitive neuroscience has had any theoretical impact beyond what is already known to psychologists on the basis of behavioural data.
The challenge posed by symbol grounding and survival in a changing environment
Gradually, an important distinction between human and computer became clear.
The difficulties in making computers interact with their surroundings have confronted researchers with the fact that humans seem to have a lot of information based on their interactions with the world.
Information must be grounded in an external reality.
Symbol grounding problem: the finding that representations (symbols) used in computations require a reference to some external reality in order to get meaning.
The solution to the symbol grounding problem has been sought in the interactions humans have with the world through their bodies.
These interactions provide humans with sensory and motor representations in which symbols can be grounded.
Embodied cognition: the conviction that the interactions between the human body and the environment form the grounding (meaning) of human cognition
Four sources of embodied cognition
The human mind is more than a simple Turing machine.
Knowledge of the real world is not completely independent of the substrate on which it is realised.
Interim summary
Humans are thought to be ‘conscious’ of their information processing in ways computers are not.
Two types of consciousness:
Access consciousness
Masked priming
Humans can be influenced by stimuli they do not perceive consciously.
Emotional responses can be based on unconscious information processing.
Cognitive processing could be unconscious as well.
Masked priming: experimental technique to investigate unconscious information processing, consisting of briefly presenting a prime between a forward meaningless mask and a subsequent target, and examining the effect of the prime on the processing of the target.
Implicit memory
Strong evidence for unconscious processing in humans comes from research on implicit learning and implicit memory.
Libet’s study on the initiation of movement
Libet published a study showing that not only perception and memory to a large extent escape conscious control, but the same is true for action control.
According to Wegner, our feelings of doing things is an ‘illusion of conscious will’.
The human mind is programmed to attribute actions to its own initiative as soon as three conditions are met:
The global workspace model
What is difficult to explain within materialism and functionalism is why processing from a certain point onward gives rise to a conscious experience of the event.
Phenomenological consciousness
The Chinese room and Mary thought experiments
Chinese room: thought experiment proposed by Searle to illustrate the difference between information processing in humans and information processing in computers.
Mary thought experiment.
If someone lives in a black and white room, and he or she learns everything there is to know about colour, how come it is different from seeing colour?
Qualia
The absence of meaning in computer processing is very unlike human thinking, where the symbols have extensive and rich meanings, grounded in the interactions with the world.
Qualia: qualities of conscious thoughts that give the thoughts a rich and vivid meaning, grounded in interactions with the world.
Zombies and the hard problem
Zombie thought experiment: thought experiment proposed by Chalmers to illustrate that consciousness is more than the working of the brain or the implementation of information on a Turing machine because it involves a subjective component with qualia.
There can be twin of us, who is and reacts exactly the same as we do, without the experience of qualia. This means that we cannot reduce consciousness to functionalism.
Hard problem: name given by Chalmers to refer to the difficulty of explaining in what respects consciousness is more than accounted for on the basis of functionalism.
What makes our mind different from that of zombies?
Embodied cognition as the source of qualia?
Claims about the importance of qualia in human experiences received a major boost form research on symbol grounding and embodied cognition.
Maybe human experiences feel so rich because they are effectively grounded in our bodily interactions with the world.
Cognitive neuroscience has found compelling evidence for this possibility.
The fact that perceptual and motor areas become co-activated when we say or hear perceptually or motor-related words arguably is the reason why conscious experiences are so rich that they cannot be fully communicated to others by means of words.
Interim summary
Associative thinking: learning on simple associations (correlations) between all types of events; thought to be the basis of automatic, type 1 thinking.
Heuristic-based thinkers: those who think based on heuristics, rules of thumb that do not require as much effort as the scientific method and that most of the time result in good decisions, but that are subject to a number of biases.
Three main differences between conscious and unconscious thought:
Interim summary
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This is a summary of the book: Historical and conceptual issues in psychology, by Brysbaert, M and Rastle, K. This book is about the history of Psychology and how now-day psychology came to be. The book is used in the course 'Foundations of psychology' at the second year of
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