• 0Shopping Cart
  • Home
  • About
  • Articles
  • Courses
    • Live Courses
    • Online Courses
  • Store
  • Contact
  • Course Login
  • Search
  • Menu Menu
  • Facebook
  • Twitter
  • LinkedIn
  • Instagram
Course Login
does the brain think

Does The Brain Think?

August 17, 2021/in Massage, Massage Clinic, Massage Therapist, Massage Therapy/by Todd Hargrove

I have discussed in previous posts how scientists often use intentional or psychological metaphors to describe the functions of different body parts. For example, autoimmune disease happens because the immune system for some reason “thinks” that body parts are foreigners; perception depends on how higher levels of the nervous system “predict” incoming sense data from lower levels; visual illusions happen when the brain makes a “mistake” about the meaning of sense data from the eyes. And pain is understood as the product of a system that “wants” to protect you from what it “thinks” is a physical threat to the body. This metaphorical thinking, which Dan Dennett calls the “intentional stance” is ubiquitous in biology, and plays a role in helping scientists to imagine and describe the awesomely complex workings of the body. Of course, metaphors have limits, and therefore using them presents a risk of overreach. Thus, like scientific models, metaphors are always in some sense “wrong” but may be useful.

However, it has been claimed that psychological metaphors in the context of cognitive science are never useful, and represent a fatal flaw called the “mereological fallacy,” which occurs when a part is confused with the whole. Under this view, it is wrong to say that a brain thinks, because only a person can think, and brains by themselves are just gobs of neural goo. This is true in a literal sense, but don’t scientists already know this? When world-renowned neuroscientist VS Ramachandran says that “pain is an opinion” is he confused? It doesn’t seem like it – Ramachandran advanced our understanding of phantom limb pain, which is quite a puzzle without proposing that some unconscious parts of the brain have the wrong “opinions” about the state of the body. But I recently saw arguments on social media that Ramachandran is committing some fundamental philosophical errors that undermine his theories, as well as popular models of pain. I disagree and here’s why.

Some googling reveals that the term “mereological fallacy” does not generate many hits, and most relate more to philosophy than science. Further, nearly all references trace back to a single source of authority – arguments made by Max Bennett and P.M.S. Hacker, who takes the radical view that the entire field of cognitive science is plagued by misunderstandings about the difference between persons and parts of persons. Their arguments are highly technical, and perhaps have some merit in particular contexts, but they do not seem to be widely accepted and have been severely criticized by John Searle and Dan Dennett, two absolute giants in the field of philosophy of mind and cognitive science.

Below is an extended set of quotes from Dennett, explaining why there is nothing inherently wrong with making statements like “the brain thinks.” In fact, the “poetic license” afforded by this language may be “precisely the enabling move that lets us see how on earth to get whole wonderful persons out of brute mechanical parts.” Here’s Dennett:

“The use of psychological predicates in the theorizing of cognitive scientists is indeed a particular patois of English, quite unlike the way of speaking of Oxford philosophy dons…

When I began to spend my time talking with researchers in computer science and cognitive neuroscience, what struck me was that they unselfconsciously, without any nudges or raised eyebrows, spoke of computers (and programs and subroutines and brain parts and so forth) wanting and thinking and concluding and deciding and so forth.

….

It is an empirical fact, and a surprising one, that our brains – more particularly, parts of our brains – engage in processes that are strikingly like guessing, deciding, believing, jumping to conclusions, etc. And it is enough like these personal level behaviors to warrant stretching ordinary usage to cover it. If you don’t study the excellent scientific work that this adoption of the intentional stance has accomplished, you’ll think it’s just crazy to talk this way. It isn’t. … it pays off handsomely, generating hypotheses to test, articulating theories, analyzing distressingly complex phenomena into their more comprehensible parts, and so forth.

…

It is not just neuroscientists; it is computer scientists (and not just in AI), cognitive ethologists, cell biologists, evolutionary theorists all … teaching their students to think and talk this way … If you asked the average electrical engineer to explain how half the electronic gadgets in your house worked, you’d get an answer bristling with intentional terms that commit the mereological fallacy – if it is a fallacy.

It is not a fallacy. We don’t attribute fully fledged belief (or decision or desire-or pain, heaven knows) to the brain parts – that would be a fallacy. No, we attribute an attenuated sort of belief and desire to these parts, belief and desire stripped of many of their everyday connotations (about responsibility and comprehension, for instance).

… For years I have defended such uses of the intentional stance in characterizing complex systems ranging from chess-playing computers to thermostats and in characterizing the brain’s subsystems at many levels.

The idea is that, when we engineer a complex system (or reverse engineer a biological system like a person or a person’s brain), we can make progress by breaking down the whole wonderful person into subpersons of sorts – agentlike systems that have part of the prowess of a person, and then these homunculi can be broken down further into still simpler, less personlike agents, and so forth – a finite, not infinite, regress that bottoms out when we reach agents so stupid that they can be replaced by a machine.

…

Far from it being a mistake to attribute hemi, semi, demi, proto, quasi, pseudo intentionality to the mereological parts of persons, it is precisely the enabling move that lets us see how on earth to get whole wonderful persons out of brute mechanical parts. That is a devilishly hard thing to imagine, and the poetic license granted by the intentional stance eases the task substantially.

…

When [Francis] Crick asserts that “what you see is not what is really there; it is what your brain believes is there,” …[this] is intended by Crick to be understood at the sub-personal level. The interpretation in question is not of (personal level) experience but of, say, data from the ventral stream, and the process of interpretation is of course supposed to be a subpersonal process. …

There are also plenty of times when theorists’ enthusiasm for their intentional interpretations of their models misleads them. For instance, in the imagery debate, there have been missteps of overinterpretation – by Stephen Kosslyn, for instance that need correction. It is not that map talk or image talk is utterly forlorn in neuroscience, but that it has to be very carefully introduced, and it sometimes isn’t. …

In conclusion, what I am telling my colleagues in the neurosciences is that there is no case to answer here. The authors claim that just about everybody in cognitive neuroscience is committing a rather simple conceptual howler. I say dismiss all the charges until the authors come through with some details worth considering.”

Here is a link to the full Dennett paper.

Here is a link to a previous post on Dennett’s intentional stance.

Here is a link to a post on the idea that all models are wrong but some are useful.

Here is a post on the hierarchy of different systems in the body (e.g. organelles, cells, organs, brains, people), all of which have some degree of agency and decision-making ability.

Todd Hargrove

Todd Hargrove is a Certified Feldenkrais Practitioner and a Certified Rolfer living and practicing in Seattle. He became interested in movement and pain twenty years ago, when as a lawyer, he was trying to treat his own chronic pain and win more squash matches. He got some great results, and eventually changed careers to help others make similar improvements. In 2008 he started writing a blog at bettermovement.org to share knowledge with a wider audience. His writing seeks to explain why pain science and neuroscience is relevant to manual and exercise therapists. He recently published a book called “A Guide to Better Movement: The Science and Practice of Moving with More Skill and Less Pain”.

  • Author
  • Recent Posts
Todd Hargrove
Follow Him
Todd Hargrove
Todd Hargrove is a Certified Feldenkrais Practitioner and a Certified Rolfer living and practicing in Seattle. He became interested in movement and pain twenty years ago, when as a lawyer, he was trying to treat his own chronic pain and win more squash matches. He got some great results, and eventually changed careers to help others make similar improvements. In 2008 he started writing a blog at bettermovement.org to share knowledge with a wider audience. His writing seeks to explain why pain science and neuroscience is relevant to manual and exercise therapists. He recently published a book called “A Guide to Better Movement: The Science and Practice of Moving with More Skill and Less Pain”.
Todd Hargrove
Follow Him
Latest posts by Todd Hargrove (see all)
  • Exercise Induced Analgesia - November 2, 2021
  • Does The Brain Think? - August 17, 2021
  • Why Some Movements are Incredibly Fun - June 7, 2021
Tags: Massage, Massage Clinic, Massage Therapist
Share this entry
  • Share on Twitter
https://themtdc.com/wp-content/uploads/can-the-brain-think.jpg 687 1037 Todd Hargrove http://themtdc.com/wp-content/uploads/logo.svg Todd Hargrove2021-08-17 07:44:502021-08-17 07:45:40Does The Brain Think?
You might also like
Everything You Need to Know to Get Awesome Referrals From Personal Trainers
Articles Of The Week March 4, 2018
Why Do Muscles Feel Tight?
Are You All About The Exercise Or The Person Doing It? Making Movement Meaningful
https://flic.kr/p/dQojDMA Massage Therapist Guide To Dealing With A Stroke
Three Reasons It Matters Why A Treatment Works
Articles Of The Week May 30, 2021
Myofasical Release And Massage Therapists

Categories

  • Business
  • Cardiopulmonary Resuscitation
  • Continuing Education
  • CPR
  • Emergencies
  • First Aid
  • First Responder
  • Massage
  • Massage Clinic
  • Massage Therapist
  • Massage Therapy
  • Mental Health
  • Myofascial Release
  • Nutrition
  • Pain
  • Pain Science
  • podcast
  • Posture
  • PTSD
  • Social Media
  • Sport Massage
  • Success
  • Therapeutic Exercise
  • Uncategorized

Join and stay up-to-date!

Email Marketing by AWeber

Have a solution to a problem within our industry? We want to hear about it!

Learn More

© 2020 – 2026  James Johnston RMT • All Rights Reserved

Todd Hargrove

Todd Hargrove is a Certified Feldenkrais Practitioner and a Certified Rolfer living and practicing in Seattle. He became interested in movement and pain twenty years ago, when as a lawyer, he was trying to treat his own chronic pain and win more squash matches. He got some great results, and eventually changed careers to help others make similar improvements. In 2008 he started writing a blog at bettermovement.org to share knowledge with a wider audience. His writing seeks to explain why pain science and neuroscience is relevant to manual and exercise therapists. He recently published a book called “A Guide to Better Movement: The Science and Practice of Moving with More Skill and Less Pain”.

  • Author
  • Recent Posts
Todd Hargrove
Follow Him
Todd Hargrove
Todd Hargrove is a Certified Feldenkrais Practitioner and a Certified Rolfer living and practicing in Seattle. He became interested in movement and pain twenty years ago, when as a lawyer, he was trying to treat his own chronic pain and win more squash matches. He got some great results, and eventually changed careers to help others make similar improvements. In 2008 he started writing a blog at bettermovement.org to share knowledge with a wider audience. His writing seeks to explain why pain science and neuroscience is relevant to manual and exercise therapists. He recently published a book called “A Guide to Better Movement: The Science and Practice of Moving with More Skill and Less Pain”.
Todd Hargrove
Follow Him
Latest posts by Todd Hargrove (see all)
  • Exercise Induced Analgesia - November 2, 2021
  • Does The Brain Think? - August 17, 2021
  • Why Some Movements are Incredibly Fun - June 7, 2021
Scroll to top

This site uses cookies. By continuing to browse the site, you are agreeing to our use of cookies.

OK

Cookie and Privacy Settings



How we use cookies

We may request cookies to be set on your device. We use cookies to let us know when you visit our websites, how you interact with us, to enrich your user experience, and to customize your relationship with our website.

Click on the different category headings to find out more. You can also change some of your preferences. Note that blocking some types of cookies may impact your experience on our websites and the services we are able to offer.

Essential Website Cookies

These cookies are strictly necessary to provide you with services available through our website and to use some of its features.

Because these cookies are strictly necessary to deliver the website, refusing them will have impact how our site functions. You always can block or delete cookies by changing your browser settings and force blocking all cookies on this website. But this will always prompt you to accept/refuse cookies when revisiting our site.

We fully respect if you want to refuse cookies but to avoid asking you again and again kindly allow us to store a cookie for that. You are free to opt out any time or opt in for other cookies to get a better experience. If you refuse cookies we will remove all set cookies in our domain.

We provide you with a list of stored cookies on your computer in our domain so you can check what we stored. Due to security reasons we are not able to show or modify cookies from other domains. You can check these in your browser security settings.

Other external services

We also use different external services like Google Webfonts, Google Maps, and external Video providers. Since these providers may collect personal data like your IP address we allow you to block them here. Please be aware that this might heavily reduce the functionality and appearance of our site. Changes will take effect once you reload the page.

Google Webfont Settings:

Google Map Settings:

Google reCaptcha Settings:

Vimeo and Youtube video embeds:

Privacy Policy

You can read about our cookies and privacy settings in detail on our Privacy Policy Page.

Privacy Policy
Accept settingsHide notification only

Clinical Pain Science For The Low Back, Pelvis And Hips

This course will be presented over a zoom meeting.  Details will be sent after you register.

Clinical Pain Science For The Low Back, Pelvis And Hips Remote