Sir Julian Huxley, a British biologist during the early part of the 1900s and author of several writings relating to evolution, must have foreseen the question, “Is the brain a good enough explanation for describing the mind?” His answer is paramount in the history of biology. “The brain alone is not responsible for mind,” he said, “even though it is a necessary organ for its manifestation. Indeed, an isolated brain is a piece of biological nonsense as meaningless as an isolated individual.”17 He knew that there must be another component to the mind.

