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  • On September 13, 1848, a freak accident caused an explosion

  • that drove an iron rod straight into the skull of a worker named Phineas Gage.

  • A metal rod almost as tall as he was went through his skulland he didn’t die.

  • But, the Phineas from before the accident, and the one who lived after it, didn’t seem to have a lot in common, personality-wise.

  • The Phineas with no hole in his brain was a proper, hard-working gentleman.

  • And the Phineas with the injured brain was, uh, sort of a belligerent jerk.

  • Phineasbrain was changedand his personality changed too.

  • This misfortune has provided lots of fodder for researchers of psychology and neurology.

  • But the case of Phineas Gage holds lessons for philosophers too.

  • It provides us with some rare, hard evidence that a part of us that's historically been thought of as non-physical

  • our personalityis actually, directly affected by what happens to us physically.

  • Which raises the question: Where does our mind reside?

  • [Theme Music]

  • Now, not a lot of contemporary scientists would be all that surprised that an injury like the one Gage suffered could cause such a radical change.

  • That's because the dominant view held in much of Western science is what we call reductive physicalism.

  • This is the view that the world is made only of physical stuff, including us.

  • By this logic, everything about me, and you, can be explained in terms of our bodies

  • our brains, hormones, and neurotransmitters.

  • So if everything about Phineas’s personality could be explained in terms of his brain,

  • it’s no shock that a radical change in his brain would bring about a radical change in his personality.

  • This same belief is at work when a psychiatrist prescribes antidepressants to a patient.

  • Change the patient's brain chemistry, change the patient's mood.

  • Now, physicalism may be the default scientific position, but remember, way back in episode 5,

  • our old friend Rene Descartes introduced us to cogito ergo sum – I think, therefore, I am.

  • Descartes believed that he could cast doubt on the existence of his body, but not the existence of his mind.

  • The fact that he could doubt one but not the other told him that he must be made of two different kinds of stuff.

  • This view, known as Substance Dualism, says that the world is made of both physical stuff and mental stuff.

  • Substance dualists say that minds are a separate, nonphysical substance that cannot be reduced to,

  • or explained in terms of, physical stuff, like brains.

  • And in this view, some thingslike Godare pure mind, and other thingslike rocksare pure matter.

  • But humans, well, were kinda special.

  • Were the only kind of thing that combines both stuffs in one beingboth body and mind.

  • What’s more, these two substances appear to interact with each other inside of us.

  • This is called interactionism.

  • When I “make up my mindto do something,

  • I have the power to compel my body to do as I please

  • to get up off the couch and make myself a nice pb and j, for example.

  • What’s more, my mental states seem to have the ability to affect my physical states even against my will.

  • You ever notice how many people who are grieving or under a lot of stress, for example, often get physically sick?

  • Likewise, our bodies also appear to be able to affect our minds.

  • Like when youre so hungry you just can’t focus on what your teacher is saying at all.

  • Or how a pure physical pleasurelike having a good cuddle with your catcan pull you out of a bad mood.

  • Interactionists say that what's going on is that our two substancesminds and bodiesare interacting with each other.

  • But, if you think about it, this is actually a pretty puzzling proposition.

  • How can a purely mental thing have any affect on a purely physical thing?

  • The puzzle of how minds and bodies can interact with each other is known as the Mind-Body Problem.

  • This is the problem that makes us wonder:

  • How can my body have a separate entity called a mind lurking inside of it

  • controlling it, and being controlled by it?

  • What would tether my mind to this body in particular

  • why couldn’t my mind just go running off on its own, or take a dip into other bodies to see what it’s like in there?

  • Descartesanswer, frankly, wasn’t all that satisfying.

  • He said that the mind is tethered to the body at the pineal glandlocated at the base of the brain

  • and that all mind-body interactions are filtered through that portal, if you will, between the mind and the body.

  • But that really only pushes the problem back, without solving it,

  • since the pineal gland is part of the physical body.

  • Many modern philosophers of mind, seeing no way to solve the mind-body problem,

  • have felt compelled to abandon substance dualism altogether.

  • Some are happy to be physicalists, but others are convinced that there are some parts of

  • human experience that simply can’t be boiled down to brains.

  • To see what they think is being left out, let’s head over to the Thought Bubble for some Flash Philosophy.

  • Contemporary Australian philosopher Frank Jackson presents us with the thought experiment of Mary,

  • a woman who has spent her entire life in a black and white room, learning everything via a black and white television.

  • While locked in this room, Mary becomes a neurophysicist specializing in the science of color.

  • She learns everything there is to know about light, optics, the physics of color,

  • and how it affects our sensory organs, but she has never seen it for herself.

  • So here’s the question:

  • When Mary finally walks out of the room and sees color for the first time, has Mary learned something new?

  • Jackson devised this thought experiment as an argument against reductive physicalism.

  • Because, Jackson says, the qualitative experience of seeing a colorsay, redisn't the same as knowing facts about red.

  • If everything could be explained in terms of the physical, then when Mary finally saw red,

  • it wouldn’t have contributed to her understanding at all.

  • It wouldn’t have told her anything that she didn’t already know.

  • Thanks, Thought Bubble!

  • What’s missing from a physicalist account, many argue, is what are known as qualia

  • instances of subjective, first-person experience.

  • Qualia are what it feels like to stub your toe,

  • or take the first bite out of a slice of pizza,

  • or to learn that you have been deeply betrayed by a trusted friend.

  • It’s what Mary is said to gain when she steps out of the room and sees color for the first time.

  • Physicalists respond to thought experiments like Jackson’s by arguing that they beg the question.

  • Begging the question, you'll recall, is a philosophical fallacy in which the premises

  • assume the conclusion theyre supposed to be proving.

  • Jackson’s thought experiment assumes that Mary learns something new when she steps out of the room.

  • But, if physicalism is true, and if she really knows everything physical about color,

  • then of course seeing it for herself isn’t going to add to her understanding of it in any way.

  • Now, physicalists argue that their case is making progress,

  • as we learn more and more about the physical processes of the mind.

  • Well that’s not really satisfying, because we want an answer, not a promissory note.

  • But, to be fair, physicalists have only been at work for a few decades,

  • while dualists have been bashing their heads against the mind-body problem for centuries.

  • But not everybody falls cleanly into either the physicalist or the dualist camp.

  • The Mary case, and other arguments like it, convince some people that they have to maintain their commitment to dualism,

  • even though they can’t see a solution to the mind-body problem.

  • Some of those people adopt a view called epiphenomenalism.

  • This view says that physical states can give rise to mental states, but mental states can’t affect physical states.

  • So by this thinking, your beliefs, desires, and temperaments do exist,

  • but they have no power over anything physical about you.

  • Which might sound kind of weird and unconvincing.

  • But then there’s contemporary British philosopher Colin McGinn, who advocates a view called mysterianism.

  • This says that the question of consciousness is unsolvable by human minds.

  • It’s not that McGinn thinks were dummies.

  • He thinks humans are natural knowersjust give us a problem and we can figure it out.

  • But not this.

  • The reason, he says, is that our brains are compartmentalized.

  • The way we understand our mind is through reflection.

  • It’s deeply personal and subjective.

  • But the way we understand our brains and bodies is objective, and verifiable.

  • And those two modes of understanding just don’t mix.

  • No amount of reflection could lead to any claims about neurons firing,

  • and no amount of empirical research is going to give rise to what it’s like to see color through someone else’s eyes.

  • Our brains just don’t have a compartment that can piece together those different modes of evidence.

  • The mind-body problem hasn’t been solved, and physicalism hasn’t been proven, because

  • both of those things require our brains to do something they can’t do.

  • So what do you think?

  • Is your mind a separate substance, riding around in your body until it dies?

  • Can the complicated thing that is youthat thinks and feels and desires and hurtsbe

  • reduced to a purely physical thing?

  • Did Mary learn something new? Is it possible to know?

  • Well that is up to your mind to figure out.

  • Today we talked about theories about where the mind resides.

  • We learned about reductive physicalism, substance dualism, and mysterianism.

  • And next time, were going to think about these issues some more,

  • with the help of some of my favorite kinds of potential personsrobots!

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  • Crash Course Philosophy is produced in association with PBS Digital Studios.

  • You can head over to their channel and check out a playlist of the latest episodes from shows like

  • Shanks FX, PBS Space Time, and BBQ with Franklin.

  • This episode of Crash Course was filmed in the Doctor Cheryl C. Kinney Crash Course Studio

  • with the help of these awesome people and our equally fantastic graphics team is Thought Cafe.

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