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Sperry,
Roger Science and Moral Priority [abstract
310 words]
Sperrys
central theme is that mind and consciousness are dynamic,
emergent properties of the living brain in action and
they exert overall control of the brain. Individual
neural brain cells have no more control of the brain
than the spokes of a wheel have of its rotation or direction.
The rotation and direction involve a different order
or level of interaction.
The
flow and the timing of impulses through any brain cell
are governed by the overall properties of the cerebral
circuit system they are in and by the relationship of
that circuit system to other circuit systems.
The
brain has sets (shifting patterns of central
excitation) that will open one group of circuit pathways
while at the same time closing, repressing, or inhibiting
other circuit potentialities that might otherwise be
open and available for impulse traffic. These changes
of set are responsible, for example, for
such things as a shift of attention, a turn of thought,
a change of feeling, or a new insight.
Brain
states like perception, emotion, reason, belief, insight,
judgment, cognition, and others can trigger each other
and they govern the inner impulse traffic, including
its electrochemical and biophysical aspects. An idea
is just as real as a molecule, a cell, or a nerve impulse.
Ideas cause ideas and help evolve new ideas.
Conscious
phenomena are emergent functional properties of brain
processing. They exert an active control role in shaping
the flow patterns of cerebral excitation. These higher
order mental patterns have their own subjective qualities
and operate by their own causal laws and principles
which are different from, and cannot be reduced to those
of neurophysiology.
Sperry
believes that reductionism is a valid and important
method of obtaining knowledge but only studying the
parts destroys the very interrelationships by which
complex systems, like the brain, function.
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