Jeannerod, Marc Are There Limits to the Naturalization of Mental States?"
In Are There Limits to the
Naturalization of Mental States? Marc Jeannerod brings further
neuropsychological research to bear on the topic of intentional action and its
role in constituting self-awareness. He notes that humans are social beings,
and that communicating with others is a basic feature of human behavior. A
long-standing philosophical question is how it is possible for one person to
recognize the mental states of others. A key insight here comes from
neuroscience: the neural system one uses for detecting intentions of other
agents is part of the neural system that generates ones own intentions.
Evidence for this comes from studies with monkeys showing the existence of neuronal
populations in several brain areas that selectively encode postures and
movements performed by conspecifics. Much of this population of neurons
overlaps with those involved in the generation of the monkeys own movements.
This same sort of overlapping of function is suggested by PET-scan studies in
humans. When subjects were told to watch an action with the purpose of
imitating it, parts of the motor cortex were activated, whereas this was not
the case if subjects were told to watch only for the purpose of later
recognition.
The research summarized here
sheds light on the problem of other minds, but in so doing raises a new
philosophical problem: if the intention of anothers action is represented in my neural system by means of the same
neural activity as my own intention to act, how does this intention get
attributed to the right agent? Jeannerod shows that having a neural
representation of an intention and attributing it to myself are two different
processes, which are not automatically linked. Jeannerod reports further
research that highlights this problem. Experimental situations have been
devised in which it is not obvious to the subjects whether they are seeing an
image of their own hand or that of the experimenter, moving in response to
instructions. When the experimenters hand movement departed from the
instructions, subjects had no difficulty recognizing it was not their own. But
in thirty percent of cases when the experimenters hand followed the
instructions, normal subjects mistook it for their own. Schizophrenic patients
misattributed the experimenters movements to themselves eighty percent of the
time. This is consistent with clinical reports that schizophrenics suffer from
a tendency to incorporate external events into their own experience.
Jeannerod ends his essay
with a reflection on the limits of human abilities to know other minds. A
persons individuality resides in the fact that no two individuals ever share
all of the same experiences. Thus, no two peoples global neural states will ever
be the same. If neuroscientific understanding is based on similar or identical
neural representations, then some aspects of personal identity are beyond the
realm of scientific inquiry.
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