On this site I have
advanced the claim that brains do not make minds. One question that
is raised by such a claim is: if brains do not create minds, what is it
that brains do? I believe the best answer we can give to this
question is: the brain is an organ that helps other parts of the body outside of
the skull do their jobs.
Let's
consider how the brain helps other parts of the body do their jobs.
By controlling autonomic functions, the brain helps keep the heart
and the lungs doing their jobs. By being a terminus point and
coordinator for nerves throughout the body, the brain helps those
nerves do their job. So, for example, the brain helps the touch-sensitive
nerves at the tip of your fingers do their jobs.
The brain also helps
the senses do their jobs. Much of the brain is involved in helping
eyes do their job, by helping sensory inputs form into an image you
see in your mind's eye. Some of the brain is involved in helping
ears do their job, by helping you decipher auditory inputs that would
be unintelligible without a brain. Some of the brain is involved in
helping your lips and tongue do the job that they do in speaking.
Because of all of the subtle requirements of speech, speaking
requires quite a bit of brain involvement. If humans had full-blast
telepathic powers as good as speech, we might require a much
smaller brain.
The brain also helps
muscles and bones do their job, by helping to provide the
coordination needed for complex muscular movements such as walking.
It could be that the brain is a kind of storehouse for learned
complex muscle movements. Accounting for such a kind of “muscle
memory” is much easier than accounting for episodic memory.
The brain also has
some involvement in sexual function, things such as erections and
orgasms. The brain also has some involvement in the endocrine system, maintaining balance and maintaining body temperature and homeostasis. So in all these things we have a large variety of jobs that
the brain does. We can combine these examples to form a “lean and
mean” concept of what the brain does, by saying: the brain is an
organ that helps other parts of the body outside the brain do their
jobs.
This
is the core of what we know about what brains do. Our scientists
should have stuck with such a empirically well-founded core, and been
extremely wary about adding a great mass of other unwarranted ideas,
such as the idea that the brain stores episodic memories or conceptual learning, or that brains creates abstract ideas, or that the brain creates your self or consciousness.
Given all the
different roles the brain has for helping other parts of the body, we
have no problem along the lines of “the brain is bigger than it
should be if it doesn't make your mind.” Neuroscientists estimate that 50% to 80% of the brain's neurons are found in the cerebellum, a part of the brain believed to be involved with muscle movement, rather than complex reasoning. Such a reality is consistent with the idea that the brain is mainly an organ for enabling muscle movements, sensory perceptions and autonomic functions.
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