Andy,
One common pattern of thinking that I observe among people in my experience is the idea that scientific research is only valid through objective observation. This idea that the investigator must remain purely neutral and uninvolved in the interpretation of the data. When "reasoning" through problems in their own experience where they may be subjectively involved or biased, they often defer to the judgment of someone more "clinical" more professional, more knowledgeable, or in many cases with students, rather than use their own opinion they will against their better judgment use "what's in the book" because it is considered established knowledge. Is this cultural attitude the hold over required logic training in school that leads back to Aristotle? Is this the reverence for the scientific method and rationality carried over from the Enlightenment and modernity?
-----Original Message-----
From: xmca-bounces@weber.ucsd.edu [mailto:xmca-bounces@weber.ucsd.edu] On Behalf Of Andy Blunden
Sent: Tuesday, June 26, 2012 12:00 AM
To: eXtended Mind, Culture, Activity
Subject: Re: [xmca] Plasticity and Physiotherapy
The article by Tobias Rees which Elizabeth forwarded is very interesting. It looks at the proposition that adhering to a theory of neuroscience implies adherence to an ethic. Presumably any science.
Einstein spent more time advocating for World Government than he did advocating for a Unified Theory of Physics. But I am still not satisfied that I understand where this blindness to alternative theories came from and I think Activity Theory is an approach which can help us here. Rees tell us:
"the various imaging techniques at the core of cognitive
neuroscience—essentially a fusion of cognitive psychology and
neurobiology—are all grounded in the assumption that the brain is
divided into discrete, function-specific regions that are made up of
function-specific synaptic circuits. For this focus to be
meaningful, one has to presuppose what all of neuroscience
presupposed throughout the 20th century: (1) that the brain is a
fully developed and, hence, fixed and immutable structure; (2) that
this structure is organized in (of course, equally immutable)
function-specific circuits; (3) that synapses—given that the rest of
the structure does not change its form—are its main functional
elements; and (4) that the language of the brain—be it chemical,
electrical, or genetic—is machinelike." (p. 155)
So the implication is that the idea of an unchanging brain was necessary to make sense of a whole set of practices by means of which the brain was investigated. Mmebership of that project entailed accepting the division of labour entailed by the idea of brain-as-machine. With the contrary hypothesis, an investigator would not know where to file their results, so to speak. I am still not sure that this explains the hypothesis.
The second question though is: why and how could those studying the brain be so blind to well-known facts that made it obvious that the brain was a changing, growing, self-healing, learning developing organism just like the thinking human being whose functioning it underlay?
I credit Yrjo Engestrom for reminding us that what he calls a "system of activity" or what I call a project entails not only a common object, but also norms and rules, norms of belief, semantic norms and practical norms. Being part of a project evidently makes one utterly immune to any proposition calling the raison d'etre and modus operandi ('csure the
Latin) of your project, just as it rules out behaving "inappropriately"
or using words in ways that do not fit into the semantic norms of the project.
It is just that it can be quite startling how strong these taboos are:
witness the holocaust, mass death through asbestos, all the wars of history, ...
Andy
Elizabeth Fein wrote:
Tobias Rees has a wonderful article in American Ethnologist ("Being
Neurologically Human Today: Life and Science and Adult Cerebral
Plasticity - An Ethical Analysis" Volume 37, Issue 1, pages 150–166)
that talks about the "regime of fixity" in neuroscience, and the way
this story of the brain has been maintained over the years and is now
being challenged.
Elizabeth Fein, Ph.D.
University of Chicago
Department of Comparative Human Development Postdoctoral Fellow,
SociAbility
(847)559-3240
efein@sociabilitychicago.org
---- Original message ----
Date: Mon, 25 Jun 2012 12:44:10 +1000
From: xmca-bounces@weber.ucsd.edu (on behalf of Andy Blunden
<ablunden@mira.net>)
Subject: [xmca] Plasticity and Physiotherapy
To: "eXtended Mind, Culture, Activity" <xmca@weber.ucsd.edu>
On the theme of empirical evidence and the latest discoveries
of
neuroscience, this is one which has intrigued me, especially
since it
became personal. So far as I know, physiotherpists have known
for at
least two generations that brain damage can be repaired by
physical
exercise. But this scientific, empirical knowledge,
coexisted, at least
in some countries, with a dogma taught in school biology
classes, that
"no new brain cells are created after age X," making a total
mystery
(SFAICS) of all manner of learning processes which everyone
knows about
>from daily experience. Then we hear from the tribunes of
advanced
neuroscience, armed with all sorts of advanced brain imaging
equipment,
about "brain plasiticity" and what lowly physiotherpists know
about with
their own hands and patients knew about with their own
experience of
rehabilitation, became a new scientific discovery solely
because
(SAFAICS) it was expressed in the language of "the latest
discoveries of
neuroscience." On the plus side Norman Doigue's campaign has
had a
psychological impact on people undergoing rehabilitation, by
giving the
stamp of neuroscientific approval to the physiotherapists'
work and
giving renewed hope.
Is there anyone who knows about the history of science in
this area that
can explain how this fiction was maintained?
Andy
--
-------------------------------------------------------------
-----------
*Andy Blunden*
Joint Editor MCA: http://www.tandfonline.com/toc/hmca20/18/1
Home Page: http://home.mira.net/~andy/
Book: http://www.brill.nl/concepts
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*Andy Blunden*
Joint Editor MCA: http://www.tandfonline.com/toc/hmca20/18/1
Home Page: http://home.mira.net/~andy/
Book: http://www.brill.nl/concepts
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