Saturday, April 4, 2009

"I kicked you," he agreed…

A boy is seated on a doctor's medical examination bed, his shoeless feet dangling over the edge. His doctor approaches and gives him a perfunctory greeting. He then removes a small rubber hammer from his white coat pocket. The boy is in a frisky mood. Just as the doctor crouches to examine the man's joint reflexes, he gives him a small kick in the chest.

"HiiiYA!" he screams, in his best Bruce Lee.

"Hey! You kicked me!" snaps the doctor, amicably.

"Just don't tell my mom," the boy replies, with a giggle.

"Fair enough, Mr. Kung Fu," says the doctor.

The doctor then takes his seat on the black foam stool, raises the boy's thigh a little off the mattress, and gives his knee a good thump with the hammer, whereupon the boy's kung fu foot snaps up and kicks the doctor's stethoscope.

"Why, you did it again!" softly roars the doctor.

"Nuh-uh, Doc, not this time," retorts the boy. "You kicked yourself with my leg!"

***

A woman is prone on an operating table under bright lights. Her upper skull is completely numb, and good thing too, for the entire dome of her skull has been opened for a minor surgery. The surgeon enters the room and greets his team.

"Mrs. Weatherby, my name is Dr. Lanfeld. Our head nurse today is Nurse Mesham." He then walks over to his equipment tray to verify everything is in order and to get in synch with his assistant nurses. Meanwhile, Mrs. Weatherby glances at the head nurse, who is smiling back at her. She notices Nurse Mesham's first name is June. Her eyes well up with tears. Her mother, June, passed away only a month earlier.

"Oh, dear, Mrs. Weatherby, is something wrong?" asks Nurse Mesham.

"No, I just thought of my mother," explains Mrs. Weatherby. "Her name is also June–– I'm sorry, it just reminded me how much I miss her. She passed away in April."

Nurse Mesham strokes Mrs. Weatherby's cheek and reassures her Dr. Lanfeld is a highly qualified and considerate surgeon. She is in good hands.

As the operation begins, Dr. Lanfeld explains that he wants to do a brief "diagnostic" of Mrs. Weatherby's brain. "It will help me rule out any possible distractions during the surgery," Dr. Lanfeld explains, "and it should help you feel more comfortable with your brain. It can be kind of, well, heady for people to be awake while their brain is being operated on, so it usually helps them to get some reassurance that everything is okay."

"Well, all right," says Mrs. Weatherby, "I trust you, Doctor. I'm actually pretty curious to see how my brain works naked!"

"That's the spirit!" replies the good doctor. "Now, you see this little instrument? I'm just going use it to stimulate a few areas of your brain and I want you to tell me what comes to mind. What you feel, or hear, or see, or think of when I say 'On'. It will not hurt, but you should be ready to tell me what each stimulus triggers in your mind, okay?"

"Wow… wow, okay," answers Mrs. Weatherby.

Dr. Lanfeld gently probes Mrs. Weatherby and says "On." "Anything?" he asks.

Mrs. Weatherby is silent. Her eyes well up with tears and she glances at Nurse Mesham, who gives her a sympathetic, doe-eyed frown. "Did you think of your mother, Mrs. Weatherby?" asks Nurse Mesham.

"My mother," says Mrs. Weatherby, "No, I didn't think of her this time. Dr. Lanfeld made me think of her. She passed away in April."

***

A man tightens his patellar tendon every time he takes a step or kicks a sock out of the way on his bedroom floor. A man also gives a small kick, as if at an invisible sock in midair, every time a doctor strikes his patellar tendon. The same mechanical occurrence happens, but the actions in question are vastly different. In the first case, a man kicks something by means of his patellar tendon. In the latter case, a man's patellar tendon causes him to kick. The mechanical necessity of the latter action in no way compromises the intentional autonomy of the former. The same efficient causes are at work in the man's sock-kicking and his involuntary kicking motion, but that does not mean he cannot freely kick a sock for some purpose, however trivial it might be. Just because I can be made to do something with my body, does not entail that I cannot do something with my body. To put it bluntly, a man has basically two ways of getting a woman's body to produce a child. He can love her and be loved by her in the sexual bond, or, if that's too much trouble, he can rape her in an alley. In either case, the exact same physiological occurrences take place, although radically different events caused them. In the first case, we say a woman wanted to have a child so she had sex, and her body began the process of childbearing. In the second case, by contrast, we say her body was forced to become the vessel of a man's physiological wantonness, and her body began the process of childbearing. Biologically, these are effectively indiscernible, but in reality, they could not be more different forms of causation (of the same effect, no less). So it is with an induced kick and a freely kicked kick.

Analogously, a woman activates a cluster of neurons every time she recalls her late mother. A woman also recalls her late mother, as if seeing her while driving past an advertisement, every time a specific region of her brain is electrically stimulated. The same neurochemical occurrence happens, but the actions in question are vastly different. In the first case, a woman remembers her mother with love by means of certain amounts of her brain tissue. In the latter case, a woman's brain tissue causes her to reminisce over her late mother. The physico-chemical necessity of the latter action in no way compromises the intentional autonomy of the former. The same physiological efficient causes are at work in the woman's daughterly nostalgia and her involuntary recall of her mother, but that does not mean she cannot freely recall something for some purpose, however fleeting it might be. Just because my brain can be made to make me do something, does not entail that I cannot make my brain do something. If it is denied that it is the same matrix of neurons and synaptic weights that trigger, and indeed constitute, the woman's memory of her mother, then the whole quest of pinpointing the contents of human consciousness goes out the window. For if the woman's so-called free recall of her mother is not identical with the purely physical stimulation of her brain qua the involuntary recall of her mother, then, in at least one case (which is all that is needed), the woman‘s brain is not identical with her mind, and, in turn, the human brain is not identical with the human mind. If, on the other hand, one insists the mental events really are identical with the same patch of neural tissue, then one must still clarify how two distinct mental events can be identical with one patch of brain tissue. In other words, even if the forced recall and free reminiscence did share exactly the same physical basis, a claim for the identity of the mind and brain would still be unvindicated, insofar as the formally diverse actions (call them R and Rf) are numerically different from the oneness of the identity of their neural substrates (call them Nr and Nrf). Identity is a extremely demanding claim to support, such that even the slightest divergence between the proposed identicals renders their identity totally non-identical. Suffice to say that "two things" (viz., the disparate mental actions) are, by definition, glaringly not identical with "one thing" (viz., the same neural event).

Sometimes the most elemental mistakes lead to the grossest edifices of error. Such is the case with physicalism and mind-brain identity theory. As Mario Beauregard, author of The Spiritual Brain, notes (via Denyse O'Leary's blog, Mindful Hack):

"It is important to bear in mind… that neural correlates do not yield an explanation of mental functions and events, i.e., they cannot explain how neural processes become mental events. Indeed correlation does not entail causation. Therefore, the results of neuroscience studies performed using either imaging, lesion, stimulation, pharmacological or recording techniques should not be presented as leading to, or validating, physicalism/materialism.

Just because a man, call him Henry Parm, has lost all his friends in an airplane crash, and consequently "all the friends of Henry Parm died" is a true statement, it does not follow that Henry was the cause of all his friends dying. So while this or that neural phenomenon may be correlated in every instance with that or this mental phenomenon, it does not therefore follow that the former is the cause of the latter. Indeed, as my examples above indicate, an induced cause for some mental state is empirically distinct from a genuine activation of that mental state by subjects of Penfield-Ramachandran-Persinger style experiments. To repeat: Correlation is not causation.

Beauregard places the errors of materialism in the larger perspective of the history of science by saying:

"The physicalist/materialist ontology is based mainly on principles of classical physics that have been known to be fundamentally false for over three quarters of a century. According to the classical physical conception of the world, all physical behavior is explainable in principle solely in terms of local mechanical interactions between material entities. This conception was rejected by the founders of quantum mechanics, who introduced into the basic equations choices that are not determined by local mechanical processes, but are attributed rather to human agents (2)."

Moreover, Beauregard adds, "there is mounting evidence that the intentional content of mental events (e.g., thoughts, feelings, beliefs, volition) significantly influence the functioning and plasticity of the brain (3). This implies that mentalistic variables have to be seriously taken into account to reach a correct understanding of human behavior (as in the case of the placebo effect)."

No man can walk without the proper function of his patellar tendon, but this does not equate to saying a man walks with his patellar tendon. On the contrary, the tendon walks with the man as he goes. Similarly, while no human can think (in the manifold ways that characterize normal cognition) without the proper function of his brain, this does mean that the human person thinks with his brain. On the contrary, the brain thinks with us as we navigate both inner and outer reality. Just as no one walks by virtue of (i.e., by the power of) his tendons, yet cannot walk without them, so no one thinks by virtue of (i.e., by the power of) his brain, yet cannot think without it. (Or at least, in most cases, cannot think without a brain!)

As far back as 1975 (and earlier) Wilder Penfield saw this for himself, after decades of study as a neurosurgeon. In his book, The Mystery of the Mind (Princeton University Press, 1975), Penfield notes:

"When I have caused a patient to move his hand by applying an electrode to the motor cortex of one hemisphere, I have often asked him about it. Invariably his response was: 'I didn't do that. You did.' When I caused him to vocalize, he said: 'I didn't make that sound. You pulled it out of me.'" (p. 76)

As Robert Augros and George Stanciu put it in The New Story of Science, "These involuntary motions are like a patient's leg jumping in response to the tap of a physician's hammer. Everyone recognizes that such movements are not acts of the will" (Lake Bluff, IL: Regnery Gateway, Inc., 1984, p. 28).

To cite Penfield again (op. cit., pp. 76–77):

"The electrode can… cause [a patient] to turn head and eyes, or to move the limbs, or to vocalize and swallow. It may recall vivid re-experience of the past, or present to him an illusion that present experience is familiar, or that the things he sees are growing large and coming near. But he remains aloof. He passes judgment on it all. He says 'things are growing larger' but he does not move for fear of being run over. If the electrode moves his right hand, he does not say 'I wanted to move it.' He may, however, reach over with the left hand and oppose his action."

At this point, the reader may be induced, by the optical and semantic stimuli being emitted by this post, to think he is free; to believe that, while his brain crucially shapes his experience of, and autonomy in, the world, it nevertheless is not simply who and what he is as a person. Induced though the reader may be by these crude physical stimuli impinging on his brain, he is still free to say, "But I don't believe that. You are merely leading me to think that." And he may, like the patient just mentioned above, freely oppose the argument of this post in favor of being a convinced determinist.

But then what does that mean for determinism?

***

"The greatest gift which humanity has received is free choice. It is true that we are limited in our use of free choice. But the little free choice we have is such a great gift and is potentially worth so much that for this itself, life is worthwhile living."

–– Isaac Bashevis Singer, 1968, in an interview with the Paris Review (as cited in The Oxford Handbook of Free Will, 2005, ed. Robert Kane, p. 563).

4 comments:

GarageDragon said...

Oh boy, more demons to slay.

I think you and Feser have a similar style in that you seem to dance around the point and never get right out and say it.

What are you getting at here? Are you saying that there is some disembodied thing that somehow causally acts upon the brain?

Codgitator (Cadgertator) said...

"Are you saying that there is some disembodied thing that somehow causally acts upon the brain?"

No. I am saying that human persons act by virtue of their brains, and in a way that both surpasses the causal efficacy of the brain itself and somehow employs an immaterial power in order to do things incommensurable with any bodily organ. Certain abilities of the intellect are simply not compatible with being the effects of a bodily organ. This is as old as Aristotle's De Anima, III and St. Thomas' ST Ia, qq.78–80. http://www.newadvent.org/summa/1078.htm

One such ability is the will, which is able to judge what the senses report and ratify an action in light of intelligible goods. It is the willing itself, as done by the agent himself, which determines an otherwise indeterminate course of action available to a material object such as the body (i.e., viewed crudely in the abstract). Cf. ST Ia IIae, q9, a1: http://www.newadvent.org/summa/2009.htm

You've got to buckle down and actually read what St. Thomas and Aristotle say here. I won't speak for them anymore at this point.

GarageDragon said...

"somehow employs an immaterial power in order to do things incommensurable with any bodily organ"

Well, that is in principle an empirical claim. Can you formulate an experiment whereby it might be falsified?

Also, can you give an example of immaterial power? I don't know what you mean by that.

Codgitator (Cadgertator) said...

unBe:

Now you're starting to piss me off.

I JUST TOLD YOU to read Aristotle and Aquinas and here you are jabbing back at me within a minute.

I have said it a dozen times, so now I will make it a condition for further dialogue: READ JAMES ROSS'S ESSAY ON IMMATERIAL ASPECTS OF THOUGHT AND DEMONSTRATE A FAIR GRASP OF ITS CONTENT. There are a handful of other essays I have endorsed more than a few times, but I will not put an undue strain on your neurons at this point. One essay is enough for now.

* * * + + +

If you want an empirical test of deploying immaterial power, run through a mundane example of modus tollens, or do a few simple addition problems in your head, or ponder "what an animal is in general", or consider "what zero is", or ask yourself what you will do five seconds from now and then do it. All these operations rely on a power that surpasses, or at least does not and cannot "fit" the nature of physical processes. (While you're at it, give me an empirical test that proves the worth of science, and, to head off that objection, an empirical test to validate the claim that human organisms should do what makes them happy. Oh, and how about an empirical test for the reliability of our senses and/or our memories? Thanks a bunch in advance!)

Let me be blunt: You're about to wear out your welcome here.

Why? Because sometimes my reply is, effectively, one long blockquote of an essay (especially one I've endorsed over and over again). So, if you fail to heed that sort of response, you cease to be a dignified interlocutor. And that'll be the end of you as far as these comboxes go.

(And no, your scattershot tactic of linking me to "some guy's handy rebuttal of X" is not the same as what I'm asking for. It's painfully and gallingly evident you are not prepared to take seriously my primary sources of argumentation on a sustained basis. If you say you want to understand me, and classical natural metaphysics in general, you are OBLIGED to read the works I endorse as my own response/position. I have no obligation to heed your every passing link on any topic.)