[FRIAM] intgegration
Prof David West
profwest at fastmail.fm
Tue Mar 25 14:39:26 EDT 2025
glen noted: *"I've also accused Dave of the composition fallacy in arguing for high order psychological phenomena as an effect of low order brain lateralization."*
My perception of the "accusation," such as it was, was nothing more than gentle chiding for stating my position poorly.
Please indulge a second attempt; beginning with a metaphor. Imagine an orchestra playing. Some instruments produce low toned sounds, others of higher pitch. Normally this variety of sounds meshes well and produces an harmonious output.
Enter our sound engineer who, for as yet unknown reasons, decides to select and amplify the bass notes over the treble. This changes the output significantly; eventually to the point where the treble, while still there, is indiscernible.
Now imagine that the sound engineer's motives are nothing more than the fact bass can be used to affect the world around the orchestra: introducing paranoia in the audience, shaking the foundations of the orchestra hall, etc.
The musicians in the orchestra are, independently, paying attention to different parts of the score.
Substitute "reality" for the score, the "mind/brain" for the orchestra, and 'cultural [I.e., not biological] evolution' for the sound engineer. The 'bass' part of the orchestra 'pays-attention-to' reality using 'instruments" like logic, math, and algorithms, the "treble" using instruments like empathy, connection, and whole-ness.
The 'bass' part increases in "volume" for the simple fact that its means for attending to the world provide such culturally valuable outputs; such as nuclear weapons and ChatGPT. The 'treble' remains, but is simply overwhelmed.
Then, of course, too many assert the claim that the "treble" is irrelevant, blind to the fact that it is still there and is still contributing to the whole. the most vocal advocates of AI are exemplars.
Given the preceding, it might be interesting, or perhaps just foolish, to ask if we can 'map' our perceptions, our modes of thinking, our means of attending to the world, to the physiological substrate—the body. We can make some gross correlations: if I am blind, my attending to visual stimuli is altered.
In the case of the brain itself we can find some, perhaps interesting, correlations as well. There is a particular locus that does not become 'active', i.e., show brainwave activity, until several months after birth and that correlates with the first time an infant appears to recognize it is separate from its mother (and the rest of the world). Perhaps coincidentally, Zen meditation suppresses activity in that same location and the monk feels "as One with the Universe."
Brain lateralization is nothing more than a collection of such correlations. And it is just a 'coincidence' that, collectively, those correlations are mostly found (in humans, a lot of mammals, and birds) in the left-brain. This is true even in 'right-handed' individuals. Octopi (most cephalopods) exhibit the two modes of 'attending to the world' as humans and birds, but they lack lateralizaion—most neurons are in the body, only a small amount in the central brain. an interesting network of specialized "lobes."
davew
On Tue, Mar 25, 2025, at 9:06 AM, glen wrote:
> Secret Life of Matthew Allison
> https://www.propublica.org/article/matthew-allison-dj-terrogram-collective-boise-dallas-humber
>
> Frank and I had several arguments a long while back about the
> ontological status of the "integrated self" (e.g.
> https://psycnet.apa.org/record/2015-10217-002). Meanwhile, many of us
> have gone 'round and 'round about the extent to which we can take
> behaviorism seriously. While Allison may be an extreme case, I maintain
> that each of us compartmentalizes, not merely as a coping or defense
> mechanism, but as a fundamental part of what it means to be an animal.
> I've also accused Dave of the composition fallacy in arguing for high
> order psychological phenomena as an effect of low order brain
> lateralization. But I also find "we are multitudes" a convenient if not
> entirely true rhetorical frame for talking about our (most of us) lack
> of psychological integration.
>
> Given all that, I am almost never surprised when one of someone's
> secret selves peeks through whatever veneer they've presented to me.
> The default assumption should be epistemic humility. Each time you
> catch yourself thinking you understand someone, pull out your
> discipline whip and use it.
>
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