For some years now, I have not owned a television set; nor
seen the daily comic strips, since letting lapse my subscription to the
sorrowfully diminished Washington Post.
(I still take the Times, but they have never featured funny-papers.) So what do I do for soap opera, or the
like low entertainment?
For the past half-century, the NYRB has had great success in luring
well-known scholars out of their lairs, for a public display of the polemical
equivalent of shirts-off selfies. A
recent instance -- rhetorically at any rate -- does not disappoint. A verbally (though not intellectually)
vibrant slangfest between Patricia Churchland and Colin McGinn appeared here:
For those of you who, likewise, possess no goggle-box, yet who, needing a break from your labors in post-Kantian metaphysics or the subtleties of the Hodge Conjecture,
have wearied of YouTube kute kittehs or (to be more up-to-date -- the reference to kittehs shows how
far behind I am in current trends)
random hands unwrapping knick-knacks (just learned about this one this morning,
from Le Point of all places), here is a selection of the juiciest bits.
First, Churchland berates a dull pupil indeed, it would
appear:
In Neurophilosophy I made the point that if you want to understand the
mind, you need to understand the brain. In his review of my recent book Touching a Nerve: The Self as Brain, Colin McGinn gibbles up this simple message [NYR, April 24]. Here is the thing: there
is a difference between a necessary
condition and a sufficient condition.
In Neurophilosophy I made the point that if you want to understand the mind,
you need to understand the brain.1 In his review of my recent book Touching a
Nerve: The Self as Brain, Colin McGinn gibbles up this simple message [NYR,
April 24]. Here is the thing: there is a difference between a necessary
condition and a sufficient condition.
(Is “gibbles up” a word? Okay, it’s a word. -- Thus, updating the Duke of Gloucester’s
celebrated gibe against Gibbon: “Gibble,
gibble, gibble, Mr. McGinn!”)
And the little fellow had jolly well better heed her words,
since, unlike him, she is famous:
In fact, I have famously argued for the coevolution of
sciences at many levels. This explicitly includes the coevolution of the
neurosciences and psychological sciences. To my delight but not surprise, the
coevolution is now well underway …
And ramming the point home:
Nobody in neuroscience needs McGinn
to tell us that structural correlates of a function do not ipso facto explain
that function. His sermonizing is just so much spit in the wind. What he fails
to get is that sussing out structure is often a major step forward in sorting
out mechanism.
She concludes with a feisty variant on the “We’re here, we’re
queer” slogan:
And brains do sleep, remember
spatial locations, and learn to navigate their social and physical worlds. Get
used to it.
Unaccountably, McGinn fails to slink off like a whipp’t cur:
It is just possible to discern some
points beneath the heated rhetoric in which Patricia Churchland indulges. But
none of these points is right. If you hold that “mental processes are actually
processes in the brain,” to quote Churchland, then you are committed to the
thesis that it is sufficient to understand the mind that one understands the
brain, and not merely necessary. This is just the well-known “identity theory”
of mind and brain.
(You can picture her fingers twitching on the quirt over this bit of insolence.)
For our own contribution to sound and fury on this issue,
try these:
No comments:
Post a Comment