Csaba
Pléh
Budapest
University of Technomolg and Economics;
Hungarian
Academy of Sciences
epigenetic theories of the human brain and the issue of
the organisation
of the mind
Tuesday,
21 November, 2006, 5 PM
CEU
Department of Philosophy, 1051 Budapest, Zrínyi u. 14, 4th floor, rm.
412.
Abstract
I shall
start from the general claims of (now)
traditional cognitive science regarding the structure of the mind and its unfolding. Two key conceptual
cornerstones of this attitude are the idea of mental modules and their
innate
organization. Since the mid 80s, several rival proposals have emerged
regarding
these assumptions. In my talk I shall argue for a biologically tenable
structure of the mind where task and domain specific systems are
assumed but
they are still unfolding through an interaction with the environment.
Three
types of arguments will support the proposed view. First, general
selectionist
theories of development and brain organization, like that of Edelman
and
Changeux, will be presented that claim a role for self organization in
structuring the brain and mind, and
a stabilizing (selective) role for role
the environment. Second, data from studies on language processing will
be
analyzed to illuminate certain aspects of brain organization. A
combination of
the high temporal resolution of electrophysiological methods and the
high
spatial resolution of imaging methods allows us to decompose the
complex
process of understandings and reveal some of its brain modules, while
at those
time indicate the constrained flexibility of the architecture. Finally,
I shall
present some data on the unfolding of mental architecture based on
observation
in atypical development – in particular, Williams syndrome. This rare
disorder
has been regarded by many cognitive researchers as one of the clear
cases of
simple dissociation: good language and week spatial skill, and within
language,
good grammar and trouble with exceptions. Genetic disorders, according
to this
view, have a modular impact on the mind, impairing spatial cognition,
wile
leaving language intact for example. Our data imply a more subtle
image. There
are domains, like visual integration,
spatial memory, where there is clear dissociation, while in other areas
there
are only slow downs connected to overall learning difficulties of a
less
modular nature. On the basis of these data I shall argue for a less
compartmentalized and less dissociative image of development and mental
organization, that implies a type of genetic determination where
epigenesis is
directed by the genes but not in a one to one correspondence. The
genetic
program for behavior is a program for the unfolding of that behavior.
This has
interesting implications for the way the philosophical claims for
modularity
have to be reformulated.