登陆注册
19860900000005

第5章

The Automaton-Theory In describing the functions of the hemispheres a short way back, we used language derived from both the bodily and the mental life, saying now that the animal made indeterminate and unforeseeable reactions, and anon that he was swayed by considerations of future good and evil; treating his hemispheres sometimes as the seat of memory and ideas in the psychic sense, and sometimes talking of them as simply a complicated addition to his reflex machinery.This sort of vacillation in the point of view is a fatal incident of all ordinary talk about these questions; but I must now settle my scores with those readers to whom I already dropped a word in passing (see page 24, note) and who have probably been dissatisfied with my conduct ever since.

Suppose we restrict our view to facts of one and the same plane, and let that be the bodily plane: cannot all the outward phenomena of intelligence still be exhaustively described? Those mental images, those 'considerations,'

whereof we spoke, - presumably they do not arise without neural processes arising simultaneously with them, and presumably each consideration corresponds to a process sui generis , and unlike all the rest.In other words, however numerous and delicately differentiated the train of ideas may be, the train of brain-events that runs alongside of it must in both respects be exactly its match, and we must postulate a neural machinery that offers a living counterpart for every shading, however fine, of the history of its owner's mind.Whatever degree of complication the latter may reach, the complication of the machinery must be quite as extreme, otherwise we should have to admit that there may be mental events to which no brain-events correspond. But such an admission as this the physiologist is reluctant to make.It would violate all his beliefs.'No psychosis without neurosis,'

is one form which the principle of continuity takes in his mind.

But this principle forces the physiologist to make still another step.

If neural action is as complicated as mind; and if in the sympathetic system and lower spinal cord we see what, so far as we know, is unconscious neural action executing deeds that to all outward intent may be called intelligent;

what is there to hinder us from supposing that even where we know consciousness to be there, the still more complicated neural action which we believe to be its inseparable companion is alone and of itself the real agent of whatever intelligent deeds may appear? "As actions of a certain degree of complexity are brought about by mere mechanism, why may not actions of a still greater degree of complexity be the result of a more refined mechanism?" The conception of reflex action is surely one of the best conquests of physiological theory; why not be radical with it? Why not say that just as the spinal cord is a machine with few reflexes, so the hemispheres are a machine with many, and that that is all the difference? The principle of continuity would press us to accept this view.

But what on this view could be the function of the consciousness itself? Mechanical function it would have none.The sense-organs would awaken the brain-cells; these would awaken each other in rational and orderly sequence, until the time for action came; and then the last brain-vibration would discharge downward into the motor tracts.But this would be a quite autonomous chain of occurrences, and whatever mind went with it would be there only as an 'epiphenomenon,' an inert spectator, a sort of 'foam, aura, or melody' as Mr.Hodgson says, whose opposition or whose furtherance would be alike powerless over the occurrences themselves.When talking, some time ago, we ought not, accordingly, as physiologists , to have said anything about 'considerations' as guiding the animal.We ought to have said 'paths left in the hemispherical cortex by former currents,'

and nothing more.

Now so simple and attractive is this conception from the consistently physiological point of view, that it is quite wonderful to see how late it was stumbled on in philosophy, and how few people, even when it has been explained to them, fully and easily realize its import.Much of the polemic writing against it is by men who have as yet failed to take it into their imaginations.Since this has been the case, it seems worth while to devote a few more words to making it plausible, before criticising it ourselves.

To Descartes belongs the credit of having first been bold enough to conceive of a completely self-sufficing nervous mechanism which should be able to perform complicated and apparently intelligent acts.By a singularly arbitrary restriction, however, Descartes stopped short at man, and while contending that in beasts the nervous machinery was all, he held that the higher acts of man were the result of the agency of his rational soul.

The opinion that beasts have no consciousness at all was of course too paradoxical to maintain itself long as anything more than a curious item in the history of philosophy.And with its abandonment the very notion that the nervous system per se might work the work of intelligence, which was an integral, though detachable part of the whole theory, seemed also to slip out of men's conception, until, in this century, the elaboration of the doctrine of reflex action made it possible and natural that it should again arise.But it was not till 1870, I believe, that Mr.Hodgson made the decisive step, by saying that feelings, no matter how intensely they may be present, can have no causal efficacy whatever, and comparing them to the colors laid on the surface of a mosaic, of which the events in the nervous system are represented by the stones. Obviously the stones are held in place by each other and not by the several colors which they support.

同类推荐
热门推荐
  • 一线天机

    一线天机

    误走洪荒,引发惊天杀机。妖灵附骨,造就不世妖孽。四象审仙,瓦解三界之局。逃出生天,长生触手可及。道、佛、药、器、阵、武。修仙之路,步步传说,
  • 金石为开:沈家二爷求放过

    金石为开:沈家二爷求放过

    做了十四年的掌上明珠,却在朝夕间失去父母。父亲视赌石为命,也因赌石丧命。潜心五年,她终于走进赌石场,想要争回属于父亲的声誉。可是,仇家出现了。他带她回家,给她房子,教她赌石,娶她进门,治好她的眼睛。然后,他爷爷死的那年,他说,你已经没用了,可以走了。原来他接近她,仅仅是为了一己私仇。时隔几年,她再一次体会到了被遗弃的窒息感……情节虚构,请勿模仿
  • 诙谐笑话

    诙谐笑话

    本书收集了大量的幽默故事,一则笑话能够让我们感到快乐喜悦,再则笑话可以使我们获得轻松解压。只有在一个轻松幽默的环境下,我们才能笑口常开,才能笑对人生。
  • 悲催系统

    悲催系统

    人生都有悲催的时候,而我的存在就是将悲催改为成功!
  • 三国之小乔外传

    三国之小乔外传

    词曰:大江东去,浪淘尽,千古风流人物。故垒西边,人道是,三国周郎赤壁。乱石穿空,惊涛拍岸,卷起千堆雪。江山如画,一时多少豪杰。遥想公瑾当年,小乔初嫁了,雄姿英发。羽扇纶巾,谈笑间,樯橹灰飞烟灭。故国神游,多情应笑我,早生华发。人生如梦,一樽还酹江月。又有词曰:滚滚长江东逝水,浪花淘尽英雄。是非成败转头空。青山依旧在,几度斜阳红。白发渔樵江渚上,惯看秋月春风。一壶浊酒喜相逢。古今多少事,都付笑谈中。常言道,乱世出英雄,其实,乱世更出美女;浪花淘尽了英雄,剩下的,都是美女;《三国之小乔外传》,一部三国美女们的虐恋情缘……
  • 孪生姐妹莵丝花

    孪生姐妹莵丝花

    天不怕地不怕就怕没架打的风小月,当她扮起姐姐冯小兔进入贵族学校,会擦出怎样的火花?
  • 猎人之有你我未曾孤独

    猎人之有你我未曾孤独

    富奸的九页连黑,弄哭多少人?梅路艾姆与小麦在死后又将经历些什么?希望在猎人的世界也存在着灵界与魔界,希望死后的人可以在那里重新找到归宿。
  • 六月霜

    六月霜

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。
  • 恶魔校草别靠近我

    恶魔校草别靠近我

    不知是什么时候她开始喜欢霸道的他了,他会不让别人欺负笨笨的她,他会无时无刻保护傻傻的她,他早就对她动了情,他自己却以为这不会是真的。面对她对他一而再再而三的误会,他会怎样解释呢。
  • 回到古代当剑仙

    回到古代当剑仙

    我叫朱机策,江湖人称富二代。我爹是个煤老板,我的前途原本一片光明。但万万没有想到,就在我憧憬着美好未来的时候,尼玛的我竟然穿越了!!!这个大屌丝才会YY的俗套剧情,竟然发生在我这个高富帅的身上,欲哭无泪!没错,我穿到了异世古代,有个新名字叫独孤无策……