How to Create a Mind: The Secret of Human Thought Revealed
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their more interesting implication is that we each appear to have two brains, not one, and we can do pretty well with either. If we lose one, we do lose the cortical patterns that are uniquely stored there, but each brain is in itself fairly complete. So does each hemisphere have its own consciousness? There is an argument to be made that such is the case.
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This implies that each of the two hemispheres in a split-brain patient has its own consciousness. The hemispheres appear not to be aware that their body is effectively controlled by two brains, because they learn to coordinate with each other, and their decisions are sufficiently aligned and consistent that each thinks that the decisions of the other are its own.
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Consider the case of a ten-year-old female epileptic patient. Neurosurgeon Itzhak Fried was performing brain surgery while she was awake (which is feasible because there are no pain receptors in the brain).14 Whenever he stimulated a particular spot on her neocortex, she would laugh. At first the surgical team thought that they might be triggering some sort of laugh reflex, but they quickly realized that they were triggering the actual perception of humor. They had apparently found a point in her neocortex—there is obviously more than one—that recognizes the perception of humor. She was not ...more
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We are apparently very eager to explain and rationalize our actions, even when we didn’t actually make the decisions that led to them.
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That means that the motor cortex was preparing to carry out the task about a third of a second before the subject was even aware that she had made a decision to do so.
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Libet himself concluded that our awareness of decision making appears to be an illusion, that “consciousness is out of the loop.” Philosopher Daniel Dennett commented, “The action is originally precipitated in some part of the brain, and off fly the signals to muscles, pausing en route to tell you, the conscious agent, what is going on (but like all good officials letting you, the bumbling president, maintain the illusion that you started it all).”
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Indian American neuroscientist Vilayanur Subramanian “Rama” Ramachandran (born in 1951) explains the situation a little differently. Given that we have on the order of 30 billion neurons in the neocortex, there is always a lot going on there, and we are consciously aware of very little of it. Decisions, big and little, are constantly being processed by the neocortex, and proposed solutions bubble up to our conscious awareness. Rather than free will, Ramachandran suggests we should talk about “free won’t”—that is, the power to reject solutions proposed by the nonconscious parts of our ...more
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