Open Journal of Philosophy 2011. Vol.1, No.1, 26-34 Copyright © 2011 SciRes. DOI:10.4236/ojpp.2011.11005 The Mind-Body Problem Today Gabri el Vacar iu Department of Philosophy, University of Bucharest, Roumania. Email: gvacariu@yahoo.com Received May 31st, 2011; revised June 25th, 2011; accepted July 12th, 2011 . An old philosophical problem, the mind-body problem, has not been yet solved by philosophers or scientists. Even i f in cognitive n eurosci ence has been a stun ning develop ment in the last 20 years, t he mind-b ody problem remained unsolved. Even if the majority of researchers in th is domain accept the identity theory from an onto- logical viewpoint, many of them reject this position from an epistemological viewpoint. In this context, I con- sider that it is quite possible the framework of this problem to be wrong and this is the main reason the problem could not be solved. I offer an alternative, the epistemologically different world’s perspective, which replaces the world or the universe. In this new context, the mind-body problem becomes a pseudo-problem. Keywords: Cognitive Neuroscience, Mind, Brain, Epistemologically Different Worlds Introduction In cognitive (neuro) science during the last few decades, as in philosophy in the last centuries, the problem of the mind- body (or mind-brain) phenomena is still open to debate. Para- doxically, since Descartes nobody has proposed a viable alter- native view of this problem. Researchers and thinkers have offered some approaches, yet none has gained the assent of the majority of thinkers. Even if most people consider that, onto- logically, mind is a physical entity, many of them do not admit the epistemological reduction of the mind to the brain. Thus, all their efforts are towards “saving the phenomena” of the “world”: in this case, the phenomena being the mind and the brain. The mind-body problem remains a mystery. From this paradoxical situation, we can draw the conclusion that maybe something is wrong with the problem itself, i.e. with its frame- work. As it is showed in Vacariu (2005, 2008, 2011) and Va- cariu and Vacariu (2010), this wrong framework is the idea of the “world” or the “universe” (or, as I called, the “uni- corn-world”). We have always thought that we exist in a unique world or universe. The unity of that world is the postulation of a single o nt olo gical field in to which ever ythi ng h as b een p laced (by “everything” we mean all entities, such as Gods, angels, minds and bodies, planets, tables and microparticles). We can identify this thinking paradigm, this unicorn-world, within the majority of myths, theological doctrines, philosophical ap- proaches, scientific theories, etc. Philosophers and scientists have tried since antiquity to discover the foundations (its struc- ture or its fundamental constituents) of this unicorn-world. The existence of one unique “world” has never been in doubt, even within the multiverse or many worlds approach. However, within this framework, fundamental notions such as “levels”, between “brain and mind”, emergence, supervenience (and notions from phyiscis like “fundamental particles”, the rela- tionships between “microparticles and macroparticles”, and the “theor y of everythin g”) have remain ed obscu re. The aim of thi s article is to show that a new framework, the epistemologically different worlds (EDWs), seems to be a better alternative to the mind-brain problem for philosophy and cognitive neuroscience. The Mind-Bod y Pr o bl em in Cog nitiv e Neuroscience Analyzing the mind-body problem there are three elements that need to be taken, epistemologically, into account: the sub- ject, as an observer of both the external world and of internal world; the conditions of observation or conditions of “having something” that include certain external and internal tools of observation; and the observed object or entity. These elements constitute a framework that is not new. Descartes emphasizes the role of perception in identifying two different substances, the mental and the physical. Nevertheless, I would replace the notion of perception with “conditions of observation” for ex- ternal entities and “conditions of having” for internal entities. In this case regarding the relationship between the subject and the object (external or internal), these notions are equivalent. Usu- ally, when the notion of “perception” is used, we think, imme- diately, of the sensorial system. However, from my viewpoint, the term “conditions of observation for human beings” stands for conceptual and/or sensorial mechanisms. From one side, with different conditions of observation (that involve different tools of observation), a human being can observe external enti- ties with different structures. The external tools of observation are those instruments or devices that enhance or expand our perceptual mechanis ms and help us to percei ve ext ernal objects. For instance, through perceptual mechanisms, it is possible to observe different parts of a dissected brain. Moreover, expand- ing th ese p ercept ual mechani s ms th rough different devi ces such as PET or fMRI, certain aspects of neural activation patterns can be observed. From the other side, from my viewpoint, the subject does not perceive any mental states, as Descartes thought (in our days, a remarkable case is Kosslyn (1992) with his mental i magery). Instead , each human “has” cert ain i nternal entities like mental representations and processes1. The fatal 1As we will see below (the principle of knowledge), it is better to conside that the mental representations/processes are the “I”. The “I” has no spatial dimension; each mental representation involves the entire “I”. So, in this case, even the whole- arts relationship is meaningless; we cannot claim that the “I” has a particular mental representation ecause it is impossible to make a clear difference between the “I” and its mental re esentations.
G. VACARIU 27 consequence for Descartes was that he allocated the mind and body (two ontologically different substances) to the same entity, a human subject or a person2. As can be seen below, it is not possible to locate two epistemologically different ontological substances within the same world (as Descartes wanted). In this case, the partition of elements must be preserved: new condi- tions of observation require new entities within the new worlds, but what kind of worlds? It is not about ontological, many, multiverse or possible worlds, but about “epistemologically different worlds” (EDWs). So, the first principle is this: “Under different conditions of observation, the human subject observes episte mo logicall y di f ferent worlds ”. If this principle is adopted, it can be assumed that mind and brain (or micro- and macro-particles) belong to epistemologi- cally different worlds. Obviously, it does not mean that chang- ing any condition of observation (or tool of observation), we observe a new EW3. For instance, using different tools of ob- servation (the eyes, fMRI and PET vs. introspection and mem- ory), we can either observe external entities like parts of the brain, patterns of neurons, and neurons or we have internal mental rep resentations and processes. These intern al and exter- nal entities belong to EDWs. The main mistake for the mind- body (brain) problem has been the placement of the mind and the brain (body) within the same world, the “unicorn-world” 4. The existence of one unique “world” has never been in doubt (even within the multiverse or many worlds approach). Phi- losophers and scientists have tried since antiquity to discover the foundations (its structure or its fundamental constituents) of this unicorn-world. However, within this framework, funda- mental notions such as “levels”, “fundamental particles”, the relationships between “microparticles and macroparticles”, between “brain and mind”, the “theory of everything”, and the “essence of things” or “fundamental particles” have remained obscure. At this point, I would like to bring the ontological dimension into the discussion. “Conditions of observation” have an epis- temological dimension, but the idea needs to be extended to the ontological dimension. In order to address the ontological di- mension, we replace “conditions of observation” with “condi- tions of interaction”. These notions are equivalent in the sense that every epistemological entity (micro or macro, neural pat- tern or mental representation, human being or cell) “observes” or interacts with other entities that belong to the same EW. In this sense, it is very important to emphasize that the replace- ment of th e “world” with EDWs ent ails th at we humans are no t the only “observers”. Each epistemological world (EW) has its own epistemological entities with its own properties and its own epistemologically different interactions (or epistemologi- cally different laws). However, with the exception of human beings, there are no other entities that can observe/interact with epistemologically different entities from other epistemologi- cally different worlds. Each member of an EW exists only for those entities that belong to that EW alone. I can now introduce the principle of objective reality: “The determining epistemo- logically different entities and their corresponding constitutive epistemologically different interactions represent the episte- mologically different worlds. Each epistemologically different world has the same object ive reality.” Mental representation and neural patterns of activation are not the same entity described at different “levels” of descrip- tion1. Without any ontological ground, such “levels” are empty notions, while mental states and neural patterns of activation are epistemologically different entities that belong to EDWs5. I emphasize h ere that the notion of “levels” is co mpletel y differ- ent then “EDWs”. Both “ontological levels” and “epistemo- logical”/“description”/“analysis levels” are erroneous concepts when applied to mind and brain or microparticles and macropar- ticles! In the first case, we have dualism, in the second there are empty concepts6. I emphasize here that, with EDWs, we have the conversion of the ontology into hyperontology that is given by the “constitutive epistemologically different entities”. The world or the universe does not exist, it is just created by human imagination. Instead of the “universe”, we have the “hyper- verse”. Nevertheless, hyperverse is an abstract notion; it pre- supposes a hyperbeing able to observe simultaneously the all EDWs! For actual living beings, this perception is not possible. Under a single set of observational conditions, a subject can observe the constituents of only one EW. Following Bohr, and considering that a subject cannot use two or more tools of ob- servation at the same time, I can postulate the next principle – the principle of complementarity: “As human attention is a serial process, the human subject cannot simultaneously ob- serve EDWs.” Regarding the “correlation” (that is, from the EDWs perspec- tive, “correspondence”) between a mental state and a neural state there have been several stages in the development of the cognitive neuroscience. I will try to grasp this evolution by analyzing a particular case such as a human subject conscious of seeing, for in stance, a red ob ject. If we know that this act ion produ ces a mental state t o the subj ect (percept ion), the qu estion is which is its correspondence within the brain of this subject? In cognitive (neuro) science, three elements have been taken into account for this problem during the last decades. (a) The activation of a limited number of neural patterns In th e beginni ng, usi ng fMRI an d PET, p eople from th e cog- nitive neuroscience believed that a perceptual mental state stimulated by an external object was identical with a quite small 2Fowler emphasizes that Descartes, preserving a traditional relation betwee doctrine and philosophy, rejects Regius’ alternative of the “double-truth option”, i.e., of separating the truth of revelation from the truth of reason. Reaching the stage in which he was aware that the unity between mind and body could not be proved scientifically or philosophically, Descartes pro- nounced, “the union of mind and body is a reality which escapes philoso- phica l discourse.” (Desca rtes to Elisabeth, 21 May 1643 in Fowler, p. 385). 3In order the subject to observe a new EW, it is necessary a new condition o observation to pass an epistemologic-ontological threshold in relationship with the old condition of observation. (About this threshold and organiza- tional threshold, see Vacariu, 2008). 4Another example is the pair table-microparticles. A table (or a planet) is no composed of or is not identical with some microparticles. The table and the microparticles belong to EDWs. The relationship between whole- arts is better underst ood throu gh the EDWs perspecti ve (Vacariu, 2008 ; Vacariu & Vacariu, 201 0). 5The EDWs perspective is beyond any kind of relativism. The distinction etween the epistemological and ontological dimensions offers me the possibility of avoiding the classic dilemma of relativism. This smooth dis- tinction shows that the EDWs perspective is not based on a circular argu- ment. Ep istemologi cally, th e human subject obs erves and defin es the EDWs and its entities in terms of observation but, ontologically, they exist without these processes of observati on. 6Explaining the difference between objective validity and objective reality i Kant’s philosophy, Hanna comments on A239/B298-9 and A248/B305, writing that “empty concepts cannot be meaningfully applied by us either to noumenal objects or to objects of our sensory intuition, and in that sense they are ‘impossible’—that is, impossible to use (Hanna, 2001: pp. 90-91).”
G. VACARIU 28 neural pattern. They could localized a neural state responsible for a perception of that red object. For instance, Georgopolous shows that we can predict the direction of a monkey’s arm movement just before grasping an object by observing the neu- ral patterns activated at that moment. Each neuron “votes” for certain direction and the resulting vector of the neuronal popu- lation determines the direction of the arm’s movement (Geor- gopolous, 1988). Rolls points out that “if we know the average firing rate o f each cell i n a popu lation to each stimulu s, then on any single trial we can guess the stimulus that was present by taking in to accoun t the response of all the cel ls” (Rolls, 20 01: p. 157). However, in humans even the perceptual awareness is a complex process that implies feed-forward and feedback pro- jections between early visual processing and higher-level neu- rons. Moreover, probable there are other neural pattern acti- vated in such processes, but actual apparatus of scanning (fMRI, PET, MEG) are not able to grasp them. In the next stage of the evolution of cognitive neuroscience, one could notice that the red object (with red color, particular texture, etc.) generated the activation of certain neural patterns from different brain areas. The problem (still unsolved) has been the “binding problem”: the “correlation” between a red object with several features and the activation of some neural patterns from different areas of the brain. What physical ele- ments and processes correspond to the mental unity of those features? Obviously, the scientific binding problem has mir- rored the philosophical mind-body problem. Among the most important approaches for this problem, we recall only two: the “feature in tegrati on theo ry” elaborat ed b y Treis man in th e ‘80 s7 (and later developed) (Treisman, 1998, 1999) and the “bind- ing-by-synchrony”. I shall only analyze the latter. Milner (1974) and Von Der Malsburg (1981) proposed this alternative to the binding problem, while Singer (2007) elabo- rated certain experimental researches for supporting this ap- proach. Singer considers that the brain is a system with many operations in parallel, without any center of coordination, as the computationalists claim (Fodor, Pylyshyn). Although this al- ternative is accepted, it still raises some questions. How is it possible for such computations/processes to take place simul- taneously in different brain areas in relationship with the co- herent perception and action of the human subject? How the signals from sensorial structures are selected and coordinated with the execu tive ones and how is the i nformation on features binding encoded? The proponents of the binding-by-synchrony think that the coordination mechanism is represented by the synchronized activity of different neural patterns (usually the frequency is 40 Hz). This synchronization is correlated with the unity of mental features in a single entity, the object. Certain internal interactions between the neurons produce this synchro- nization. Neither Singer nor other author s offer an answer to th e question “what do these interactions mean?” It seems that this synchronization is a selective reply for attention and con- sciousness. Singer believes that recent empirical researches prove that synchronization at a large cortical scale (through beta/gamma frequency) is necessary for the sensorial informa- tion to reach perceptual consciousness8 (Singer, 2007). How- ever, according to Yi Dong et al. (based o n very recent experi- ments on visual mechanism of monkeys) the synchronization does not depend on the binding problem but only on the selec- tivity of finding the “border-ownership” of an object (Yi et al., 2008). In other words, the synchronization process takes place for the detection of an object’s border and not for the binding of the object’s features. Evidently, at the time being, we cannot have a final answer to the binding problem. However, more and more experiments using fMRI and PET run in the last years show that a pyramid of neural patterns corresponds even to a simple mental function. (b) The pyramid of neural pattern with “different grades of activation” Here we need to introduce some notions from psychology that will be useful in the following chapters. We shall take all these notions from Mandler (1998). She synthesizes these di- chotomies in pair-notions: declarative-procedural, accessible- inaccessible, conscious-unconscious, conceptual-sensorimotor, symbolic-subsymbolic, and explicit-implicit (Mandler, 1998: p. 265). These dichotomies are interconnected and partially over- lap without being identical (Mandler, 1998: p. 265). The de- clarative-procedural distinction is based on whether or not the knowled ge in q uestion is accessibl e or inacces sible to co nscious - ness. Procedural knowledge remains inaccessible to conscious- ness, sin ce we have access on ly to the effects o f pro cedur es, not to pr oced ur es th emsel ve s. Th e fac t t hat we use d e clar ati ve kn ow- ledge for gaining proced ural knowled ge do e s not entail our hav- ing accessibility to procedural knowledge. We are never aware of the details of procedural knowledge by means of which our habituation can increase the performance of our body for some actions . Mandler main ta i ns that w e c an no t c o nc eptualize and t hi nk explicitly about sensorimotor information. This, of course, does not mean that a person is not aware of sensations (qualia) in- Volved in pe rc e ptua l a nd motor lear ning (Ma ndle r , 1998: p. 2 66). In this context, what does it mean that mental representations and processes belong to the same subject? From my viewpoint, the answer is th at the con scious states are “correlated” with the “most activated” neural patterns, while the unconscious states correspond to less activate neural patterns. Baars was among the firsts who initiated the research on the relationship between conscious and unconscious states, and he proposed the concept of the “global workspace theory”9 (Baars, 2002, 2007). This global workspace represents in fact the consciousness. There are different mental/psychological functions acting in this workspace. Thus, consciousness is an integrative function meaning that it is a “global workspace of integration”. (Baars, 2002) These mental functions are correlated with the “inde- 8Another alternative to the binding problem is that “the perceptual unity is an illusion, with only coordinated behavioral output being in need of an explanation” (Sevush,2006) However, both approaches have problems. “The evidence for temporal synchrony as a basis for binding has been criti- cized on both technical and conceptual grounds, while the argument that perceptual unity is an illusion has been challenged both empirically and philosophically.” (Sevush,2006) From my viewpoint, the question is this “perceptual unity” is an illusion for whom? For the “I” that is an illusion, too? Then, we have to return Hume’s idea: the self does not exist, it is just an ama lgam of b i ologic al e nti ties . In searc hin g for th e fund amenta l p arti cles we have extended this idea to all entities that we know in the “universe”. So, the conclusion of such Humean framework could be: “Everything that we know (including us) is appearan ce !” Could we live in such fram ework? 9Baars specifies other important people from the cognitive science who adopted this “global workspace” theory proposed by him. 7“For expe rimental psycholog y resear chers, two papers on bind ing by Anne Treisman in the 1980s set the course for nearly two decades. Treisman’s ‘feature integration theory’ (FIT) became not only the most influential theory of binding, but also the most influential theory of attention (Hol- combe, 2009).”
G. VACARIU 29 pendent” functions of the brain10 Baars emphasizes that the conscious processes are the product of unconscious processes (Baars & Franklin, 2007). Thus, cognition is the result of the actions of unconscious processes. For instance, the working memory is achieved through special distributed systems (lan- guage components, long term memory, space and temporal framework, etc.) selected by the consciousness. These compo- nents are correlated with the widely distributed cortical and subcortical structures (Baars & Franklin, 2007). The conscious contents are guided or constrained by unconscious contents: the contents of goals, perceptions, conceptual or cultural. For in- stance, the sentences of words that we think or pronounce are the results of the unconscious processes that form them. Kanwisher proposes a similar approach (if neural representa- tion is more active then the mental representation correlated with it is consciously active). Kanwisher takes up an idea in- troduced by Green and Swets according to which perceptual awareness is not “an all-or-none affair, but a graded phenome- non which admits many shades of grey” (Kanwisher, 2001: p. 103). Treisman goes further and claims that attention, i.e. the feed-back projections from high levels to low level of vision, is inVol ved even for bindin g processes11 (Treisman, 1998, 1999). For Edelman and Tononi, consciousness is a process that in- Volves groups that are widely distributed in the brain (Edelman & Tononi, 2000). Consciousness mainly presupposes the re-entrant interactions among these groups which are the most important feature of the brain: “reentry leads to the synchroni- zation of the activity of neural groups in different brain maps, binding them into circuits capable of temporally coherent out- put” (p. 85). Every consciousness state “requires the activation and deactivation of many regions of the brain” (Edelman & Tononi, 2000: p. 140). Crick and Koch argue that the neural correlates of consciousness at one time engage one part of the cells but their firing influences other neurons, the so-called “penumbra”, which makes a contribution to the process of un- derstanding (Crick & Koch, 2003). In their turn, Llinás and Parre indicate that the “fact that all frequencies are not equal probably determines that certain resonant frequencies will be observed preferentially” (Llinás & Parre, 1996). In the same line, “The selective property of attention is presumed to be expressed by a positive difference between the activity levels in columns that code for the target and the activity levels in neighboring columns that code for other (distracting) objects (LaBerge, 2002).” To grasp the mind-brain relationship, Mer- zenich and deCharms introduce the notion of representational perceptual constancy. Constant perceptual representations emerge from the neural level where the pattern of activity of the ensemble of neurons is permanently changing and moving (Merzenich & deCharms, 1996). Nevertheless, the authors do not explain the origin of this constancy. The research made with fMRI, PET and MEG in the last years seems to support Baars’s approach. For instance, Bartels confirms that large parts of the brain interact for mental proc- esses like attention, binding and segmentation (Bartels, 2009). In other words, a neuronal pyramid is required for the accom- plishment of relatively simple mental processes. It seems more and more obvious that any cognitive function activates an entire “neuronal pyramid” but it remains unclear the production of this mechanism and the correlation between a mental function and a neuronal pyramid. The progress of research on this direc- tion suggests that the brain activity is much more complex than we thought in the past. Fodor’s modularity, supported by the experiments made by his collaborator Pylyshyn (1999, 2003, 2006), combats Baars’ global work space. Modularity means that certai n mental parts are spec ialized in certai n mental proc- esses: cogni tion, p erception, motor, et c. Some researchers from the cognitive neuroscience believe that these modules are cor- related with certain specialized neural areas. There are not many empirical experiments that support the modularity. How- ever, we mention a recent research on modularity. Using the transmagentic stimulation, Downing tries to prove the visual modular system. Three areas of the visual cortex would play a causal role in the perception of human face, body and various objects (Downing, 2009). But, to understand how a human subject perceives a human face or an object, we have to solve the binding problem. Moreover, such processes involve the consciousness. Thus, the problem becomes more and more complicated: there are complex relationships between the low level (primary visual areas) and the high level (cognition). There are many experiments against the modularity. For in- stance, there are no constant “correlations” with a particular neuronal area (Haynes, 2009) for a specific feature—the color of an ob ject. The rol e of the co n text of colo r an d th e exp erience of human subject in the perception of colors has been ac- knowledged long time ago. Robertson indicates that a parietal area is essential for the conjunction of certain surface features of an object (Robertson, 2003). But he emphasizes that the binding problem requires other brain areas and processes. (For instance, the high level areas correlated with the attention and the synchronization process.) (c) The counterpa rt: the brain and the body Llinas and Pare write that perception at a given moment is represented by a small percentage of coherently oscillating cellular elements over the whole thalamocortical system. The rest of the thalamocortical system, being silent to such coher- ence, may in fact represent the necessary counterpart to the temporal pattern of neuronal activity that we recognise indi- vidually as cognition (Llinás & Pare, 1996). According to these two researchers, we have to add the whole neuronal pyramid with different grades of activation and the rest of the brain to the most activated neural pattern of ac- tivation, in order to explain the cognition through the neural areas,. In Baars’ paradigm of thinking, I may claim that this “rest of the brain” would correspond to the unconscious/im- plicit knowledge. The great majority of researchers from the cognitive science try to explain the cognition (and human behavior) only through the brain processes. However, there are researchers who con- sider th e brain and the body as a uni tary system, especiall y, the proponents of the dynamical system approach, situated cogni- tion, and of the complexity theory. They introduced notions like “embodied” cognition: cognition is the result of the continuous interactions between brain, body and environment. There is 10The notion of “independence” means that different areas of the brain are resp onsible for ce rtain menta l functions. 11The binding problem would correspond—from one viewpoint—to the Kantian notion of synthesis. From EDWs perspective, it is meaningless to search for the binding problem of neural patterns of activation or what the self means from a neural or third-view point. Again, it is like an electro interacts with the table that composed it, i.e., a mixture between EDWs. We have to be aware that the pair “electron-table” is external to a subject, while the pai r mind-body involves one ext ernal and one “internal” ele ment.
G. VACARIU 30 more or less a theoretical direction of research. Lungarella and Sporns (2006) made an experiment on robotics trying to corre- late the intelligence (artificial) with the sensormotor ability and the environment. Sporn was very surprised by these results12. It follows that a particular part—the activated pyramidal patterns of neurons—has a counterpart that is the rest of the brain and body. From this perspective, a particular understanding on hu- man subjectivity or human experience is given by the part- counterpart principle: “In physical terms, the part-counterpart relation corresponds to the “I” or the human subjectiv- ity/experience.” We can explain the “I” or the hu man subj ectiv- ity/experience (or “What is it like to see a red object”) in physical terms only through the part-counterpart relation. Using external tools it is practically impossible to grasp human sub- jectivity as a whole. Human subjectivity is a universal property of the human species, that is, every human has the feeling of her self, as an individual. However, we cannot perceive this property using external tools. In this context, I emphasize that we cannot make a real difference between the mind and the subjectivity. Perceptions and computations are considered as functions of the mind. Obviously, such functions belong to the “I”. In fact, there is no function of the mind that does not be- long to the “I”. From my viewpoint, the distinction between the mind and the “I” is a pseudo-distinction. As we will see below, the “I” (or the mind) is an EW, and this is the main reason we cannot make a distinction between the “I” and the mind. Therefore, the mind an d the “I” are equival ent in this article. The Human Subjectivity (The “I”) In our days the notion of human subjectivity (the mind) is very problematic. The question “Does the ‘I’ exist?” still has no definitive answer. In contradiction with the EDWs perspective, there is the framework of cognitive (neuro) science in which the researchers try to find the “correlations” between the self and certain neural patterns of activation. For instance, Damasio and Damasio define t he sel f in neural terms: “W e see the sel f as the neural structure and neurobiological states that help us know, without the help of inferences based on language, that the im- ages we perceive are ours rather then somebody else’s”.) (Damasio & Damasio, 1996: p. 22) The subjective state of per- ceiving an object presupposes different neural structures that represent th e image o f that ob ject , t he image of the sel f, and th e connection between the self and the image of that object, i.e., the convergen ce zone (p . 25). The “self” means “a co llectio n of images about the most invariant aspects of our organism and its interactions” (p. 23). Offering various experiments from cogni- tive neuroscience, Macrae et al. try to explain self-knowledge from a neuroscientific viewpoint. They suggest that the medial prefrontal cortex seems to be essential in self-referential and mentalizing processing and social-cognitive functioning (simu- lation of other minds, the use and representation of social knowledge, and moral reasoning) (Macrae, 2004: p. 1073). Klein mentions various papers written by different authors that support the idea that “self-descriptiveness produced activation of cortical area asso ciated with semantic memory retri eval (left frontal regions) but not those associated with episodic memory retrieval (right frontal regions)” (Klein, 2004: p. 1080). How- ever, he has a footnote in which he mentions that, even if there are various studies that support the conclusion that the self can be located in the left cerebral hemisphere (that presupposes the doctrine of modularity embraced by cognitive science), neuro- logical l y, declarative knowledge is distribu ted widely across the cortex (p. 1086). This footnote cautions against the location of the self or even self-knowledge in an isolated neural area. From the EDWs perspective, it is meaningless to check for the correlation between the self and certain neural patterns. If we define the existence of all other epistemologically different entities with the help of their interactions, we can say that the “I” does not interact with anything else. The “I” cannot “ob- serve” itself as a complete entity (in Cartesian terms13). More- over, nobody can observe an “I” (in psychological form or the first-person ontology). Does this means that the “I” does not exist? In order to define the existence of human subjectivity, we have to change the notion of the existence. Through the interac- tion of the brain and the body with the environment, certain patterns of neurons are activated. These brain-body-environ- ment reciprocal causal interactions correspond to sensations and perceptions. Certain implicit knowledge is the “I” or to the mind-EW. Ho wever, the mind has no place in t he “world ”, it is just an internal EW or the “I”. Because brain, body and envi- ronment are in a continuous reciprocal interaction, the neural states and processes are undergoing continuous change. I men- tion that the implicit knowledge is the results of the develop- ment and learning processes throughout the life of each indi- vidual. This knowledge corresponds to biological mechanisms that are the results of the evolution of our species and the de- velopment of each organism in the continuous reciprocal inter- actions between brain, body and environment. Such physical interactions correspond to certain mental states and processes. Due to the evolution of species14 and development of each in- dividual, the “I” is feelings, desires, etc., I consider the feelings and desire to be knowledge as well. The mental representations and processes (that only correspond to parts of the brain and body) are the “I”. Now we can introduce the last principle. Human subjectivity or the self in psychological terms is given by the principle of knowledge: “The “I” is knowledge.” I em- phasize that, in this case, the content of knowledge has at least four elemen ts that overlap: 1) All kno wledge (d eclarati ve and procedu ral, accessib le and inaccessible, conscious and unconscious, conceptual and sen- sorimotor, symbolic and subsymbolic, and explicit and implicit knowledge). 2) All kinds of memory. 3) Descartes’ fun ctions. For him, the “I”, as a thinki ng thing, has different functions (or properties) such as doubting, under- standing, denying, willing, sensing and imagining (Descartes, 1974: p. 82) . 12“Really, this study has opened my eyes. I’m a neuroscientist so much o my work is primarily concerned with how the brain works. But brain and ody are never really separate, and clearly they have evolved together. The rain and th e body sh ould not be looke d at as separa te thin gs when one talks about information processing, learning and cognition—they form a unit. This holds a lot of meaning to me bi ologically (Sporns, 2006).” Mor eover, i his book from 2 008, Fodor rec ognizes th at his m istake was he d id not app ly the LOT to perception and action (Fod or, 2008). 4) Self-knowledge and the capacity (possibility) of knowl- 13About Descartes’ clear, distinct, and complete perceptions, see Vacariu, 2008. 14We have to remember Konrad Lorenz who extends Kant’s view in ex- laining that the fit between an organism and its environment is due to evolution (Lorenz, 1941).
G. VACARIU 31 edge for manipulating itself. This capacity inVolves, among other features, Fodor’s characteristics of the mind: composi- tionality, systematicity and productivity (Fodor & Pylyshyn, 1988). All these elements of knowledge correspond to the biological elements of a human subject. For each self, the elements of knowledge superimpose during the process of development and the adu lt period to create an d change the “I”. As a paradox, t he “I” is both indivisible and formed by mental states and proc- esses. This indivisibility is equal to the self unity and it repre- sents th e possibi lity of the “I” to acces s directly (in p arallel and not in serial) any parts of it, i.e., any parts of the knowledge. The “I” is the knowledge, i.e., all its mental states and proc- esses, havin g this ab ility to access p arts of itself. The “I” is the knowledge that can access itself. It is the knowledge acquired by any human subject during the whole life. We are able to survive in a “standard environment” because of this implicit knowledge furnishes the stable status of the “I” that inVolves the “representational perceptual constancy” (Merzenich & deCharms, 1996; Vacariu, 2005, 2008). Libet, Llinas and Frith’s Approaches and the EDWs Perspective In our days, some alternatives from cognitive neuroscience are constructed within an anti-reductionism framework. Many people accep t the identity theory15 even if some of them use the notion of “correlation” which indicates not a “strict identity” between the mental states and the neural patterns of activity. I would like to analyze three approaches of cognitive (neuro) science (Libet, Llinas, & Frith) that are, in some aspects, quite close to the EDWs perspective. In fact, I want to show that some assumptions of these approaches would fit better within the EDWs framework than the unicorn-world framework, other assumptions being necessary to be discarded. I started with Libet’s “delay” problem presented by Frith (here, in a short form) and then I analyze Libet’s recen t notion, the “cerebral mental field” (Libet, 2006). Libet’s experiment is related to Helmholtz’s “unconscious inferences” (Frith, 2007: pp. 66-68). The subject had to lift her finger whenever she “felt doing so” but at the same time she had to tell Libet “when they ‘had the urge’ to lift their finger” (Frith, 2007: p. 66). The brain activity was measured with EEG devices in both actions. The urge to lift occurs about 200 msec before the finger is lifted. However, the most important thing is that the changes in the brain activity occur about 500 msec before the finger is lifted. So brain activity indicating that the volunteer was about to lift a finger occurred about 300 msec before that volunteer re- ported having the urge to lift his or her finger. The implication of this observation is that, by measuring your brain activity, I can know that you’re going to have the urge to lift your finger before you know it yourself (Frith, 2007: p. 66). Frith comprehends that “by measuring your brain activity, I can know that you’re going to have the urge to lift your finger before you know it yourself” (p. 66) and thus we believe “we are making a choice when, in fact, our brain has already made the choice. Our experience of making a choice at that moment is therefore an illusion. (p. 67)” The conclusion is that mental events do not take place at the same time with the brain proc- esses. How can we interpret Libet’s experiment from an EDWs perspective? Firstly, it confirms the EDWs principle: the mind and the brain belong to EDWs. Moreover, the will of a human subject is a mental process that involves the entire subjectivity of the subj ect t hat is the “I”. So, we have to fol lo w the princip le of knowledge: the “I” is the knowledge. Even when we follow Libet’s indication (the subject has to tell Libet when she feels to move her finger), there are other brain areas that become more or less active. Probably, the subject needs large parts of the brain to feel the urge to lift her finger even if the activation of these areas can not be recorded by the actual devices. Obviously, using such measuring instruments for the brain activity, we can- not detect all parts just because the entire “I” is involved. Ac- cording to the principle of part-counterpart, the “I” corresponds to the brain and body, so we have to insert the whole brain and body into the equation. I believe that we should use the EDWs framework for a better interpretation of Libet’s experiment. Few years ago, Libet introduces another concept, the “cere- bral mental field” (CMF), to solve his “delay problem” (Libet, 2006). The CMF is produced by the activity of many neurons. He believes that certain experiments can prove the existence of the CMF. In the analysis of Libet’s approach from our perspec- tive, we want to show that it misses the framework of the EDWs. When analyzing the delay n ecessary to pro duce certain cerebral neuronal events in relationship with some sensory awareness, Libet concludes that “unconscious cerebral proc- esses precede a subjective sensory experience” (Libet, 2006). This means that all mental states and processes “begin uncon- sciously”, even if these states become conscious or not. Libet strongly underlines that the “features of the CMF can be corre- lated with brain events, even though the CMF is non-physical, by study of subjective reports from the human subject.” In his terms, the “subjective experience (the conscious mind) appears to be a non-physical phenomenon” (Libet, 2006: p. 322)! I be- lieve that, in his attempt to avoid Descartes’ dualism16, Libet adopts a position very similar to Searle (1992)17. Only within this framework, the unicorn-world, they can build their ap- proach and reject all the other approaches18. When rejecting 15A leader on this trend is Bechtel with his mental mechanisms, decomposi- tion and localization (philosophy of cognitive neuroscience) (Becthel,2009, 2008). He cla ims that , usin g th re e method s (neur oima ges with fMRI, br ain’ s lesions and cell’s recording), people from cognitive neuroscience can de- compose the mental mechanisms into components parts and functions and then each function is localized within the brain. A leader on the anti- reduc- tionism position (or localization) is Uttal (cognitive neuroscience). Using lesions and image techniques, Uttal considers that we cannot decompose a cognitive system in its components (which cannot be localized) because o the intrinsic inaccessibility of mental processes (Uttal, 2003; Becthel, 2002). (For the debate between these two positions, see Vacariu, 2011) (Against Bechtel’s mechanisms and localization, see also Chemero and Silbernstein 2007.) I mention that , in philos ophy of mind, the main trend for the last 20 - 30 years has been an anti-reductionism, some philosophers or even re- searchers from cognitive scien ce sustain a di fference between the mind and the brain, even if both elements are physical matter. For instance, Searle believes that the mind is produced by the brain (Searle, 1992) and Grush (with his emulator theory of representation) assumes certain Cartesian as- sumptions. (Grush, 2003, 2004). 16“The CMF is not a Cartesian dualistic phenomenon; it is not separable from the brain.” ( Libe t, 2 0 06: p. 32 4). 17Mainly, S earle consid ers that th e brain produces the mind (Searle , 1992). 18The title of Libet’s paper is “Reflections on the interaction of the mind and rain”. Obviously, he rejects the identity theory: “Simply stating that some (unknown) configuration of neuronal activities equals consciousness (sub- ective exp erience) avoids or be gs the problem (Libet, 2006 : p. 322).” Nev- ertheless, only within the unicorn-world, we can presuppose the interactions betw e en the m i nd an d t he brain!
G. VACARIU 32 Umezawa’s “mental field model” that is related to the quantum mechanics (with Bohr and Bohm), Libet asks: “But this does not solve the problem of how the neuronal ac- tivity aspect can also be directly related to the subjective, non-physical aspect of mind. If subjective experience is a non-physical phenomenon, what is it? It should be added that subjective experience also involves an integrative property. That is, although billions of individual nerve cell actions give rise to conscious awareness, the actual experience is a unified one. For example, if you look at any object in your external visual field, it appears as a smoothly organized structure, even though we know that several separate areas in the cerebral vis- ual system are contributing colors, spatial configurations, mo- tion, and meaning (interpretation) to it. This has been termed the ‘‘binding’’ phenomenon (Libet, 2006: pp. 323-324).” Evidently, within the same world, we cannot explain the re- lationship between mind, “billions of individual nerve cells”, the unity of “consciousness awareness” and the binding prob- lem. Based on his experiments, Libet mentions a “strange ex- perimentally demonstrated” feature of the CMF: “Awareness of a sensory event does not appear until up to 0.5 s after the initial response of the sensory cortex to the arri- val of the fastest projection to the cerebral cortex (Libet et al., 1991). (…) But, in spite of the actual delay, the individual per- ceives the normal sensory stimulus without any appreciable delay beyond that for conduction time of the sensory projection from periphery to sensory cortex (Libet et al., 1979). A further experiment showed that up to 0.5 s of neural activity had to occur for the actual awareness to appear (Libet et al., 1979). Somehow, the subjective time of the actually delayed aware- ness appears without delay.” I believe that this famous “delay” co uld be easier interpreted through the EDWs perspective. The individual perceives the sensory stimulus without delay because of the “I”‘s unity. The changes in the brain activity occur about 500 msec before the action of the b ody and th e awareness o f the su bject just b ecau se the “I” is an EW and t he b ody (brain) an d mind are EDWs. Th e “referral in sp ace” gra sp s ex actl y th e exist en ce of th e t wo EDWs. The CMR is nothing else but the “I” (an EW) that corresponds to (but not produced by) the brain-body-EW. We may conclude that Libet constructs his approach by unifying the enti- ties/processes that belong to the two EDWs. From a EDWs perspective, we, the human beings (as living entities, in general) could not survive in any environment without this continuity. However, this continuity is just the “I” that is the implicit knowledge and has a unity. Without these two elements, we would be like a sophisticated computer without sentience. The implicit knowledge is the “mortar of higher intelligence”. Each thought is part of the “I”, so the “I” (or its implicit knowledge) is the “foundation of interconnected ideas and concepts”; the “I” is the transcendental fra mework of our thoughts.19 Within the context of the EDWs perspective, let me analyze Llinás’s approach to the relationship between the brain, body and the external world. More precisely, how corporeal move- ments take place and what is the relation between movement and thinking in Llinás’ opinion (Llinás, 2001). As a monist (“mind and brain are inseparable”), Llinás defines the mind as one of the “global functional state generated by brain” (Llinás 2001, p. 1). In these expressions, the words “inseparable” and “generated” create problems. “Generated” is quite similar to Searle’s notion that reflects the relationship between the mind and the brain (Searle, 1992). However, this framework repre- sents a confusion between two EWDs. From the EDWs per- spective, t he mind and the br ain are not “in separab le”, as Llin as claims, but they correspond to one another. Therefore, brain does not “generate” mind at all! It is interesting for me that Llinás incl udes all “sensorimoto r images” and “sel f-awarenes s” inside the mind (Llinás, 2001: p. 1). In his book, Llinás argues that the mind “has eVolved as a goal-oriented device that im- plements predictive/intentional interactions between a living organism and its environment”, considering the prediction as the most important mental function (p. 3). Even more interest- ing it is Llinás’ assertion that the mind and the movement of body are strongly related being in fact different parts of the same process. From my viewpoint, Llinás is almost saying that the mind and the body are EDWs! We have to remember, however, that he works within the unicorn world. Only the brain moves the body. Evidently, the mind incorporates all the sensorial and motor images because they simply correspond to the real interactions between the brain, body and the external world. For Llinás, due to the evolution, the multicellular organisms develop brains necessary for the property of “motricity (p. 15).” Motricity presupposes prediction, and this is one of the most important characteristic of the brain. Prediction and motricity are essential to survive, being the result of an evolution based on trials and errors (Llinás, 2001). Moreover, predictions need to be centralized: “self is the centralization of prediction (p. 23).” From the EDWs perspective, predictions are possible only because of the existence of the self that is knowledge (more exactly, the implicit knowledge) acquired by a person during the entire life. According to Llinas, the “external world and the internal world have different coordinate system reference frames”, even if the properties of those two worlds have to be “homomorphic” (Llinás, 2001: p. 64). In the unicorn-world, he is obviously aware of “the differences in coordinate system reference frames between the external and internal worlds and how continuity between perception and execution may/must exist (p. 65).” Interestingly, we can notice that Llinás is aware about the compulsory unity between “disparate” sensorial inputs, memo- ries and thoughts (that involves the binding problem). For this unity, Llinás bets o n t he “temporal coherence”, the synchronous binding of the activity of individual cells, the neurons (for in- stance, Llinás, 2001: p. 121). Based on different experimental studies, Llinás indicates the 40-Hz coherent neuronal activity for the temporal coherence. The synchronization makes the transfer from the microscopic to the macroscopic landscape. Nevertheless, we saw above that synchronization is a problem- atic alternative. In the last paragraph, we have again the prob- lematic notions like “generate” or “binding”. These notions presuppose both types of entity (brain and cognition) within the same world. It seems that th is is again a mistake. Llinás e mpha- sizes that the self is just the “temporally coherent event that binds, in the time domain, the fractured components of external 19From Kant’s transcendentalism philosophy, the framework of our thought is the transcendental apperception that is a priori to any thought. From a EDWs perspective, the “I” is an EW and our thoughts are entities and proc- esses of this EW. Therefore, the “I” is transcendental in relationship with the thoughts. (F o r more deta il, see Vacar i u, 200 8) .
G. VACARIU 33 and internal reality into a single construct (…) 20 (Lli ná s , 20 01 : p. 120, his italics).” The self is the centralization of prediction and this centralization is an “abstraction we call the ‘self.’ (p. 127)” We really do not understand what “abstraction” means. We can only give a meaning to this word if we equalize “ab- straction” with an EW! Moreover, “qualia must arise from, fundamentally, properties of single cells, (…) amplified by the organization of circuits specialized in sensory functions. Qualia are that part of self that relates (back) to us! It is a fantastic trick! (Llinás, 2001: p. 226, his italics) Qualia are parts of the self, the mind-EW that is indeed a “fantastic trick” due to the mixture of EDWs! Qualia do not “facilitate the operation” of the brain, qualia are parts of the “I” that is an EW. It is not qualia that furnish a “well-defined” framework for the nervous system necessar y for quick decision making, but the “I” that is all qualia and perceptual and cognitive states, i.e., the whole knowledge acquired throughout the life that has the unity abso- lutely necessary for a living entity to survive. Only by intro- duci ng the “I” in such equat ion, we can explai n the human p re- dictions and decisions. For Llinás, there has to be a part of the nervous system that “puts the many segments together into something that beforehand did not exist: a unified whole (Llinás, 2001: p. 226).” We cannot ask about the unity of a table from the vie wpoint o f an electron! The sa me state o f a f fair appl ies to the uni ty of the “I” and we can say: “Don ’t ask abo ut this unity from the brain’s viewpoint”! Frith’s approach (Frith, 2007) is quite close to the EDWs perspective especially in respect of the mind-body problem. At the end of the prologue, Frith underlines the main idea from his book: the distinction between the brain and the mind is false, the mind is created by the brain. Moreover, the brain creates two illusions in us: (1) “we” have a direct contact with the world (2) our mental world is private. In reality, Frith claims that on ly the brain h as contacts with th e external world an d not our mind. Again, the brain creates the mind. From a EDWs perspective, mind and life are not the product of the brain or the organism, respectively; they are both EDWs than certain physical entities. The mental world is “private” only as a par- ticular EW not as the product of the brain. In this case, the no- tion of causality has to be replaced with that of correspondence. Frith strongly believes that the “brain activity is not the same as mental experience” (p. 15) 21. In other terms, the mind is the product of the brain or the mind emerges from the brain. Frith works within the unicorn-world and it is clear that he misses the framework of EDWs. He assumes a materialist position even if he admits that his approach “sounds” like a dualism (Frith, 2007: p. 23, footnote 5). He tries to convince us that we are not consciousness about most of the neural states and processes, and that the self is the product of the brain. The relationship between brain and mind is not one-to-one. Due to his work inside the unicorn-world and the avoidance of the identity the- ory, Frit h is forced to u se such notion s like “causation” or “de- pendence” 22. Obviously, from the EDWs perspective, the brain is different from the mind but they belong to the EDWs. A subtitle in Chapter 5 tells us directly this idea: “My perception is not of the world, but of my brain’s model of the world”! In my viewpoint, the perception is a mental perception so it be- longs to the mind. According to Kant’s transcendental philoso- phy, it is of my “mind’s model of the world”. Frith argues this idea with the “Ames room” picture, Necker’s cube and other visual illusions. The next subtitle, “Perception is a fantasy that coincides with reality”, shows exactly the “correspondences” between th e EDWs! Conclusion I consider that philosophy can still have a major role in cog- nitive (neuro) science in our days just because the philosophical mind-body problem has not been yet solved yet. Any alterna- tive to this problem has created the main framework of working for researchers of cognitive (neuro) science just because major problems of this domain (emergence, reductionism, levels, etc.) are strong related to the mind-brain problem. Working within the unicorn-world, neither the identity theory nor the non- re- ductionism perspective (ontological or epistemological) is a plausible alternative to the mind-body problem. Mental states could only correspond to entities that belong to other EDWs; they are not identical, produced or supervene on states of other hyperontological status. With the EDWs perspective, we have to move from ontological and/or epistemological frameworks in analysing different classes of entities to a hyperontological framework. Thus, the EDWs perspective rejects the Cartesian dualism, the identity theory and all the nonreductionist ap- proaches and pushes much further Fodor’s “special science” framework. If Fodor followed Wittgenstein’s philosophy and Carnap’s linguistic frameworks (today, we have “conceptual frameworks” or “levels”), the EDWs could offer the (hyper) ontological foundations for the mind-body problem and its related problems through replacing the unicorn-world with the EDWs23. References Baars, J. B. (2002). The conscious access hypothesis: Origins and re- cent evidence. Trends in Cognitive Science, 6, 47-52. doi:10.1016/S1364-6613(00)01819-2 Baars, J. B., & Franklin, S. (2007). An architectural model of conscious and unconscious brain functions: Global workspace theory and IDA. Neura l Networ ks, 20, 955-961. doi:10.1016/j.neunet .2007.09.013 Bartels, A. (2009). Visual perception: Converging mechanisms of atten- tion, binding, and segmentation? Current Biology, 19, R300-R302. doi:10.1016/j.cub.2009.02.014 Bechtel, W. (2009). Explanation: Mechanism, modularity, and situated cognition. In P. Robbins, & M. Aydede (Eds.), Cambridge hand book of situated cognition (pp. 155-170). Cambridge: Cambridge University Press. Bechtel, W. (2008). Mental mechanisms, philosophical perspectives of 22Like Libet’s and Llinas’s positions, Frith’s alternative seems to be quite close to Searle’s stance (“The rediscovery of the mind”, 1992). However, Churchland’s critics against Searle’s alternative are available to Frith, too. Interesting, more and more thinkers from cognitive science appeal, directly or indirectly, to Searle’s approach! The main reason is their framework o the unicorn-world and the rejection of the strict identity between the mind and t he br ain. 23I suggest th at , gi vin g up to the p aradi gm of t he “un icor n -world” an d worki n g withi n the hyperver se, we can r ethink s ome prob lems from physi cs (entangle - ment and nonlocality from quantum mechanics or the relationship between Einstein’s general theory of relativity and quantum mechanics, hyperspace, etc.). (For this to p ic, see V acari u, 2 00 8; V acariu & V acari u, 201 0). 20Or “(T)he binding events comprise the substrate of self (Llinas, 2001: p. 126, his italic s) .” 21One of his examp les is when we see a blue objec t, we cann ot find anyth in g blue in the brai n ( Frith, 200 7: p. 15).
G. VACARIU 34 cogni t ive neu roscience. London: Rutledge Taylor & Francis Group. Bech tel, W. (20 02) . Decomp osin g the mi nd-bra in: A long-t erm p ursu it. Bra in and Mind, 3, 229-242. doi:10.1023/A:1019980423053 Chemero, A., & Silberstein, M. (2007). After the Philosophy of Mind: Replacing Scholasticism with Science. URL (last checked 20 August 2010 ) http:/ /philsciarchive.pitt. edu/archiv e/00003200 Crick, F., & Koch, C. (1997). Towards a neurobiological theory of con sci ou sn ess . In N. Bloc k , O. Fla n agan , & G. Gu zeld er e (E d s. ), The natur e of con s ci o us n es s (pp. 277-292). Cambridge, MA: MIT Press. Crick, F., & Koch, C. (2003). A framework for consciousness. Nature, 6, 119-126. Damasio, A. R., & Damasio, H. (1996). Making images and creating subjectivity. In R. Llinas, & P. S. Churchland (Eds.), The mind- brain continuum: Sensory processes (pp. 19-28). Cambridge, MA: MIT Press. Descartes, R. (1994). J. Veitch (Translate) A Discourse on method; medita tions on fi rst phi losophy , princi ples o f phil osophy. Ind ianapo- lis, IN: Hackett Publishing. Downing, P. E. (2009). Vi su al neuroscienc e: A hat-trick for modularity. Current Biology, 19, R160-R162. doi:10.1016/j. cub.2008.12.037 Edelma n , G. M., & Tononi, G. (2000 ). Universe of consciousness: How matter be comes ima gi n ation. New York, NY: Basic Books. Frith, C. (2007). How the brain creates our mental world. Oxford: Blackwell Publishing. Fodor, J. A. (2008). LOT2—The l anguag e of th oug ht r evi site d. Oxford: Oxford University Press. Fodor, J. A., & Pylyshyn, Z. W. (1988). Connectionism and cognitive architecture. Cognition, 28, 3-71. doi:10.1016/0010-0277(88)90031 -5 Fowler, C. F. (1999). Descartes on the human soul: Philosophy and the demands of Christian Doctrine. Dordrecht, Boston, London: Kluwer Academic Publishers. Georgop oulos, A. P. (1988 ). Neural int egration of movemen t: The role of motor cortex in reaching. The FASEB Journal, 2, 2849-2857. Grush, R. (2003). In defense of some ‘Cartesian’ assumptions concern- ing the br ai n and its ope r ation. Biology and Philos ophy, 18, 53-93. doi:10.1023/A:1023344808741 Grush, R. (2004). The emulation theory of representation: Motor con- trol, imagery, and perception. Brain and Behavioral Science, 27, 77-442. Hanna, R. (2001). Kant and the foundations of analytic philosophy. Oxford: Oxford Universit y Press. Haynes, J.-D. (2009). Decoding visual consciousness from human brain signals. Tr ends in Co g ni tiv e Sciences, 13, 194-202. doi:10.1016/j.tics.2009.02.004 Holcombe, A. O. (2009). The Binding problem. In E. Bruce Goldstein (Ed.), The sage encyclopedia of perception (preprint). Thousand Oaks: Sage. Kanwisher, N. (2001). Neural events and perceptual awareness. Cogni- tion, 79, 89-11 3. doi:10.1016/S0010-0277 (00)00125 -6 Klein, S. B. (2004). The c ognitive neur oscience of knowin g one’s self. In M. S. Gazzaniga (Ed.), The cognitive neurosciences (pp. 1077- 1089). Cambridge, MA: MIT Press. Kossylyn, M. S., & Keonig, O. (1992). Wet mind—The new cognitive Neuroscience. Columbu s, OH: The Free Press. LaBerge, D. (2002). Networks of attention. In M. S. Gazzaniga (Ed.), Cognitive neuroscience (2nd ed.) (pp. 711-724). Cambridge, MA: MIT Press. Llinás, R. (2001). I of the vortex: From neurons to self. Cambridge, MA: The MIT Press. Llinás, R., & Pare, D. (1996). The brain as a closed system modulated by the senses. In R. Llinas, & P. S. Churchland (Eds.), The mind-brain continuum: Sensory processes (pp. 1-18). Cambridge, MA: MIT Press. Libet, B. (2006). Reflections on the interaction of the mind and brain. Progre ss in Neur o bi ology , 78 , 32 2- 3 26. doi:10.1016/j.p neurobio.2006 .02.003 Lorenz, K. (1941). Kant’s doctrine of the a priori in the light of con- temporary biology. In H. Plotkin (Ed.), Learning, development and culture (pp. 121-143). Chichester: John Wiley and Sons. Lungarella, M. & Sporns, O. (2006). Mapping information flow in sensorim otor net works. Public Library of Science Computational Bi- ology, 2, 1301-1312. Macrae, N. C., Heatherton, T. F., & Kelley, M. W. (2004). A self less ordinary: The medial prefrontal cortex and you. In M. S. Gazzaniga (Ed.), The Cognitive neurosciences (3rd ed.) (pp. 1067-1076). Cam- bridge, MA: MIT Press. Mandler, J. (1998). Representation. In W. Damon, D. Kuhn, & R. S. Siegler (Eds.), Cognition, perception, and language volume 2, Handb ook of c hild p syc hol og y (5th ed .) (pp. 255-308 ). London : John Wiley. Merzenich, M. M., & De Charms, C. R. (1996). Neural representations, experience and change. In R. Llinas, & P. S. Churchland (Eds.), The mind-brain continuum: Sensory processes (pp. 61-82). Cambridge, MA: MIT Press. Milner, P. M. (1974) A model for visual shape recognition. Psycho- logical Review, 81, 5 21-53 5. Pylysh yn, Z. (1 999). Is vision c ontinuous with cogni tion? The ca se for cognitive impenetrability of visual perception. Behavioral and Brain Scie nce, 22, 341- 36 5. doi:10.1017/S0140525 X9 9002022 Pylysh yn, Z. (2003). Return of the mental image: Are there really pic- tures in the br ain? Trends in Cognitive Sciences, 7 , 113- 1 1 8. doi:10.1016/S1364-6613(03)00003-2 Pylyshyn, Z. (2006). Imagery. In R. L. Gregory (Ed.), The Oxford compan ion to the min d (2nd ed .) (pp . 586-587 ). Oxford: Oxford Un i - versity Press. Robertson, L. C. (2003). Binding, spatial attention, and perceptual awareness. Nature Reviews, Neuroscience, 4, 93-102. doi:10.1038/nrn1030 Rolls, E. T. (2001). Representations in the brain. Synthese, 129, 153- 171. doi:10. 1023/A:1013059525140 Searle, J. R. (1992). The red isc ov ery of th e mi nd . Cambridge, MA: MIT Press. Singer, W. (2007). Binding by synchrony. Scholarpedia, 2, 1657. Sevush, S. (2006). Single-neuron theory of consciousness. Journal of Theoretical Biology, 238, 704-725. doi:10.1016/j.jtbi.2005.06.018 Sporns, O. (2006). Good Information? It’s not all about the Brain. URL (last checked 27 October 2006) http://www.sciencedaily.com/releases/2006/10/061027081145.htm Treisman, A. (1998). Feature binding, attention, and object perception. Philosophical Transactions of the Royal Society B, 353, 1295- 1 30 6. doi:10.1098/rstb.1998 .0284 Treisman, A. (1999). Solutions to the binding problem: Progress through controversy and convergence. Neuron, 24, 105-1 10. doi:10.1016/S0896-6273(00)80826-0 Uttal, W. R. (2002). Response to Bechtel and Lloyd. Brain and Mi nd, 3, 261-273. doi:10.1023/ A:1019944825779 Vacariu, G. (2011). Being and the hyperverse (in English). Bucharest: Universi ty of Bu charest Press. Vacariu, G., & Vacariu, M. (2010). Mind, life and matter in the hyper- verse (in English). Bucharest: University of Bucharest Press. Vacariu, G. (2008). Epistemologically different worlds. Bucharest: Universi ty of Bu charest Press. Vacariu, G. (2005). Mind, brain and epistemologically different worlds. Synthese Review, 147, 515-548. doi:10.1007/s11229-005-8366-4 Vacariu, G., Terhesiu, D., & Vacariu, M. (2001). Towards a very idea of represen tati on. Synthese, 129, 275-295. doi:10.1023/A:1013019621505 Von Der Malsbu rg, C. (1981) The correlation theory of brain function. Internal Report 81-2. Göttingen: Max-Planck-Institute for Biophysi- cal Chemistry. Yi, D., Mihalas, S., Qiu, F., Von Der Heydt, R., & Niebur, E. (2008). Synchrony and the binding problem in macaque. Journal of Vi sion, 8, 1-16, 30.
|