Friday, October 2, 2009

God and Neuroscience


Originally written November, 2008

 
 
 
Consciousness stands alone today as a topic that often leaves even the most sophisticated thinkers tongue-tied and confused. And, as with all of the earlier mysteries, there are many who insist -- and hope -- that there will never be a demystification of consciousness. –Daniel Dennett


It is no surprise that many theists are not fans of evolutionary theory, and it is not hard to understand why. If the scientific view of earth's history is correct, the entire basis of Christianity, and reason that Jesus had to die on the cross (sin), is rendered as nothing more than mythology.

However, many theists are able to square the circle of biology with Christian theology. Many point out (and I would agree) that evolution does not disprove the existence of God. In my mind, it just disproves the traditional monotheistic religions.

As someone who is interested in cognitive science, philosophy of the mind and consciousness, I have always found it odd that such topics are met with resistance from theists. I have never understood why this was. What is so scary about the brain?

Upon reflection of this issue, I recently came to realize what the threat of cognitive science was to theology. God is defined as an immaterial mind. Christianity teaches that each person has an immaterial mind -- a soul that will survive death. That is, our mind, our awareness, and our consciousness survive after our bodies have perished.

The threat from cognitive science is this: If the mind and consciousness are found to just be products of a physical brain, that means that not only does our mind/consciousness not survive bodily death, but that God (an immaterial mind) does not exist either. If everything mental requires something physical, an immaterial God (who is a mind) cannot exist.

In this blog post, I will attempt to show you that theism has no hope of surviving modern cognitive science. I will not be attempting to explain consciousness in general. But I will argue that what we already know about the brain does not leave any room for the immaterial or the supernatural. There is no soul which can survive our bodily death, and the idea of God being an immaterial, disembodied mind is completely impossible.


Split-Brain Patients
Many people suffer from epilepsy. A select few of these people suffer from seizures that are so severe, that the only thing that will relieve them is to have the neural pathway that connects the left and right hemisphere, the corpus callosum, cut. When this pathway is severed, electricity from each hemisphere can no longer be passed back and forth, and the seizures stop. However, the pathway is also the only way to get information from one hemisphere to the other. Because of this, there are very strange effects that occur as a result.

For example, if you were to whisper into the left ear of one of these people, and say "my favorite fruit is an apple" and then whisper into the right ear, asking "what is my favorite fruit?" the person will have no idea! But if you return to the left ear and quietly ask "what is my favorite fruit?" the person will answer "apple."

Now this comes as no surprise, since information cannot be passed between the two hemispheres. However, it also turns out that both hemispheres do not always agree with each other. If you ask one side "do you prefer chocolate or vanilla?" one side may say chocolate, and the other might say vanilla. One side might prefer blondes, the other brunettes. And interestingly enough, in one case, one side believed in God, and the other did not!

The point is that when you cut the brain in half, you then have someone who has two spheres of consciousness—two minds, separate from each other. So if someone has two spheres of consciousness as a result of their brain being cut in half, we have to ask: is this something we would expect to see if the mind was a result of the physical brain, or if the mind was immaterial? Obviously, this only makes sense in light of the fact that the brain is not controlled by an immaterial mind. If it were, then there is no reason for there to be two spheres of consciousness, or two minds, when the brain is cut in half. Physically changing the brain should have no effect on something immaterial.

This, in my opinion, is the nail in the coffin for theism. Looking at this evidence, there is no doubt that the mind is completely a product of the physical brain. But to drive the point home, let's go through some more examples, and then counter the one (and only) argument theists have against this.

Brain Damage
There is a certain part of the brain that control your ability to recognize faces. If this part is damaged, your ability to recognize faces no longer exists. This disorder is called prosopagnosia. Recognizing faces is definitely part of our consciousness, and losing that ability undoubtedly renders one aspect of our consciousness inoperative.

So are we to believe that when part of the brain is damaged, we can't recognize faces, but if the brain is completely destroyed, we float through a bright tunnel, and are able to recognize grandma?

If you have damage to the language part of the brain, often times you will suffer from what is called aphasia. People who have suffered such brain damage have all sorts of strange problems regarding speech and language. In some cases, people are unable to comprehend language. In others, they are unable to name certain objects, other times they can no longer read, sometimes they cannot write. In some cases, when trying to speak, instead of saying "the dog needs to go out, so I will take him for a walk" they might say "You know that smoodle pinkered and that I want to get him round and take care of him like you want before." These people have no idea that they are engaging in such a thing, and become frustrated when no one can understand what they are trying to say.

Language is an enormous part of our conscious experience. It is how we communicate, and it is how we think. People who have not been exposed to language have very limited abilities in regards to abstract thinking. So language is a hugely important aspect to our consciousness, and suffering from aphasias wipes that aspect of ourselves out.

Another part of the brain controls your body image. I don't mean how you feel about yourself, but the model of your body that your brain uses to figure out where your body stops, and everything else begins. If this area is damaged, the person feels disconnected from their body (stimulation on parts of the brain can also induce out of body experiences). People have suffered damage to this part of the brain, which then causes very strange results to occur. One patient went as far to state that his own leg was actually a severed leg that someone had put in his bed, and was not his own! Your body image, the ability to recognize that your hand is your own hand, and control it, is obviously part of your conscious experience-- part of your mental world. And if damage to that part of the brain occurs, part of your consciousness is destroyed.

Other parts of the brain, if damaged, render you unable to process things on the left (or right) field of vision. This is simply called hemispatial neglect. With neglect, not only do you not see anything to the left side of the field of vision, but you become completely unaware that it even exists. People have this problem won't eat food on the left side of the plate, won't shave the left side of their face, are unable to turn left, etc. The entire left (or right) side of the universe is no longer exists for them.

Of course, your ability to recognize and comprehend the world (not just the left or right side), is part of your conscious experience-- part of your mental world. And if damage to that part of the brain occurs, part of your conscious awareness is gone forever.

Most people know that there are specific parts of the brain that store certain types of memories (visual, auditory, etc). Likewise, there is an area in the back of the brain, the visual cortex, which processes all of the information that is received through the eyes.

In one case, a man had damage to both the visual cortex, as well as the part of the brain that stored his visual memories. So not only did he lose his vision, he lost his visual memories—memory of anything he had ever seen. So he went blind, and had no idea! As a result, he no longer understood what was meant by "light" or "color". He couldn't comprehend it, since, as far as he was concerned, he had never had any experience vision in the first place.

Your perception of the world is made up mostly from your experience with it (your memories). All of these past memories help create the conscious experience that you currently have. But if such memories, as well as the ability to see are taken away, you lose a very large part of your conscious experience in the world.

There are many other examples of this sort, but with these few, a pattern has started to emerge. The people that have suffered such brain damage have lost part of their consciousness. But why? If we have a soul or immaterial mind that is responsible for these things, like consciousness and memories, then there should be no problem. But if consciousness is a result of the brain, then isn't this exactly what we would expect? Absolutely!


Anesthesia
Now, if we were to anesthetize you with halothane (a form of general anesthesia), you wouldn't be able to move. You wouldn't even be able to wiggle a finger. Why not? If your brain is responsible for moving your limbs, this makes sense. But if your immaterial mind is responsible, then why is your arm unable to be moved? Why is your immaterial soul/mind being affected by something physical--anesthesia?

If immaterial minds are all that are needed for consciousness, and immaterial minds able to affect physical objects (like brains), then what is the point of a brain to begin with? Our brains are big, heavy, and biologically expensive. They are delicate, take a lot of energy to run properly, and are easily damaged. If it weren't for modern medical science, many women would die giving birth to babies with enormous heads.

If the brain was only around to run things like the heart and lungs, that would be a good argument for the existence of an immaterial mind. If there was no evidence that our brains stored memory, or ran all the programs necessary for us to perceive and understand the world around us, theism might have a chance. But modern brain imaging techniques have tied literally every thought and emotion to neural activity. Literally everything your mind does has a neural correlate.

Counter Argument
The only argument that exists in response to this type of argument follows as such: The brain is like a television, whereas the mind/soul is the signal. Sure, you can fiddle with the knobs on the TV, which will change the color, brightness, etc. But that doesn't change the signal that the TV receives. And if you unplug the TV, that doesn't mean that the signal still isn't out there.

Likewise, the brain can be fiddled with, changing our perception of the world. You can even turn off the brain, but that doesn't mean that the mind/soul does not continue to exist. While this argument is clever, it fails on multiple counts.

First of all, it completely ignores the first line of evidence I presented. Sure, tweaking with TV knobs will change the picture, but will cutting the TV in half create two separate signals? Not a chance. So already, that example takes care of the attempted counter argument.

Secondly, it doesn't explain what the purpose of a giant brain would be. If the immaterial mind can somehow control the physical brain, which then controls the body, why not skip the middle man and leave the brain out of it?

Thirdly, it presumes that an immaterial entity has causal power in the material world. This has been a problem for theists for centuries. And to this day, there is absolutely no explanation on how such an event could possibly occur.

There are many other objections to this counter argument, and many other examples of consciousness being eclipsed by damage to certain areas of the brain. But I think it is safe to say, that while consciousness on a whole may still be a mystery, it is no mystery that it is purely a result of our brains. When we die, our brains decompose, and all of our memories and experiences, everything that made us who we are, die as well.

And since immaterial minds cannot exist independent of a physical brain, it is safe to say that the immaterial mind in the heavens, God, cannot exist either.
  1. God is a conscious, immaterial mind.
  2. Conscious, immaterial minds exist independently of physical brains.
  3. A change in a physical brain will change the conscious mind.
  4. Therefore, conscious minds are not immaterial or independent of physical brains, and an immaterial mind (such as a soul or God) cannot exist.

To wrap things up, here are a few quotes by some of the very top neuroscientists and philosophers of the mind around...


It never ceases to amaze me that all the richness of our mental life, all our feelings, our emotions, our thoughts, our ambitions, our love life, our religious sentiments, and even what each of us regards as our own intimate, private self, is simply the activity of these little specks of jelly in our head, our brain. There is nothing else. –V.S. Ramacahndran

All mental processes, even the most complex psychological processes, derive from operations of the brain. –Eric Kandel

Modern neuroscience has shown that there is no user. "The soul" is, in fact, the information-processing activity of the brain. New imaging techniques have tied every thought and emotion to neural activity. And any change to the brain—from strokes, drugs, electricity or surgery—will literally change your mind. –Steven Pinker

There's a scientific consensus that hard-core dualism, which says that people can think without using their brain or that memories will survive the death of your body, is just flat mistaken. Your mental life is a product of your brain. –Paul Bloom

There is something approaching a consensus among philosophers and cognitive scientists: no immaterial mind/soul makes any sense at all. –Daniel Dennett
 
No dualist has ever been able to give an account of how a brain can affect a mind, or how a mind can affect a brain. Dualism, for most philosophers today, is not a real option. –John Searle

All conscious states are caused by brain processes. There aren’t any exceptions. Every single conscious state is caused by brain processes. –John Searle

7 comments:

  1. I'm sorry you make too many hasty generalization fallacies and special generalization fallacies.

    Evolutionary theory doesn't have any conflict with God's existence, not even monotheistic religions. Darwin himself remained a Christian 13 years after his discovery of natural selection theory in 1838. He deconverted in 1851 due to his daughter's death not evolutionary theory. Furthermore you equated Christianity with mind-body dualism, a special pleading fallacy. Many Christians, notably people liek Thomas Aquinas, did not hold mind-body dualism and many people do not hold God as an immaterial mind as Christians.

    Furthermore, I have not ready any theology on Christianity believing consciousness survived, rather only an afterlife. The afterlife only consists of eternal happiness, which only mentions the presence fo the divine creator. Other than that is folk and cultural myth, not actual Christian theology.

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  2. Continued...

    On the idea of two consciousness of brain splitting, you're dead wrong. I'm no mind-body dualist, but it's easy to poitn out your fallacy. You're makign a correlation/causation fallacy, furthermore it can be in support of the mind-body dualist. The left hemisphere of the brain is responsible for linguistic and rhetoric recognition. The right brain is responsible for other things, but a person who only had his right hemisphere was able to comprehend? This produced a consciousness independent of the brain.

    Furthermore you make too many moot points throughout, you equate Theism (especially Christianity) with dualism (which is not true, look at Aquinas), and you ignore the implications of monistic materialism on free-will and ignore other positions like monistic idealism. This was just a whole bunch of facts that have no relevancy to the point, red herring fallacy in all. I ask everyone to be very careful in reading this article, his ideas are dangerous (literally).

    He does not understand that his position eliminates the existence of free-will and ethics, meaning human beings are not responsible for their actions.

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  3. Anon, you stated that "Evolutionary theory doesn't have any conflict with God's existence, not even monotheistic religions." I agree, that's why I said that "Many point out (and I would agree) that evolution does not disprove the existence of God."

    However, evolution does show that the Biblical account of history is false. There was no garden of Eden, no Adam and Eve, no forbidden fruit, etc. Therefore, the entire premise of Christianity (Jesus had to die for sin that Eve brought into the world) is false.

    Name one modern Christian theologian or philosopher who doesn't think God is an immaterial mind. And if he isn't then what IS God?

    I agree that the idea of consciousness surviving death is new. It was originally thought that your body would be in the afterlife. Christians know better now, so they claim it is the mind that survives.

    I am absolutely not making a correlation/causation fallacy. That is specifically why I used that example. Are you seriously arguing that when you cut a brain in half, and two separate spheres of consciousness come about, that that is NOT a result of cutting the brain in half? C'mon.

    Left hemisphere is responsible for language in 90% of right handed people. 10% of right handed people have their language centers on the right hemisphere. It just depends on the individual and their brain lateralization. Also, brain plasticity allows certain functions of the brain to be taken over by other parts, if the original part was damaged. The earlier in life the damage happens, the better the chance the person has of the brain delegating that task elsewhere (this is called brain plasticity). It is well known of, and it has nothing to do with some sort of independent consciousness.

    Christians are dualists... at least modern ones like William Lane Craig, Alvin Plantinga and even CS Lewis all defend the idea of a mind existing without brain. And science laughs.

    I completely understand that free will (as it is traditionally defined) is impossible... but as my other post (The Incredible God Stopper) points out, rational thought is completely impossible given dualism, and is only possible if materialism is true.

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  4. 'evolution does show that the Biblical account of history is false'

    This is untrue. It only disproves the YEC view, which is not proven. Thousands of christians are scientists who are not YEC, along with biblical scholars. A well respected hebraist by the name of John 'Jack' Collins has written several books on both creation and the bible, along with the Adam/Eve question. Well worth looking into before assumptions are made.
    Dualism is still quite possible, as The Spiritual Brain: A Neuroscientist's Case for the Existence of the Soul by Mario Beauregard (a neurologist) shows. Even without dualism, that doesn't prove or disprove christianity. For example, if God can create ex nihilo, there's no reason he couldn't recall your 'data', so to speak. So dualism is a side issue.

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  5. YEC is not just "unproven", it is flat out disproven. Literally every area of science contradicts it.

    From the reviews of Collins' book, "Did Adam And Eve Really Exist?", it seems he defends the idea that they were actual, historical people. If that is the case, that helps my argument, and I am not sure how that helps you.

    Regardless, there are always going to be Christians who defend very liberal views of every aspect of Christianity. Heck, there are scholars who call themselves Christian who don't think Jesus actually rose from the dead (bodily). And I am very aware that there are Christians (especially scientists) who don't think A&E were literal. Ken Miller and Francis Collins come to mind.

    However, in this case, the traditional view that A&E were actual people (and is what seems John Collins defends) MUST be true. If it isn't, and the whole thing is metaphorical, then Jesus died for a metaphorical sin, and the whole story goes out the window.

    But it's not just A&E that are the problem. The whole account of creation is incoherent when looked at scientifically. Trying to pull the "Day doesn't mean day, but millions of years" card just makes things worse, cause then you have plants existing without the sun for millions of years, Adam existing without eve for millions of years, etc. Anyway you slice it, it fails.

    Dualism is not possible at all. If you think it is, you just don't know enough neuroscience. I suggest reading some Pinker, Ramachandran and Gazzaniga if you want to know what the best minds in the business have to say. And the scientists who reviewed the Spiritual Brain trashed it for how sloppy it was. Heck, even Bryan Appleyard (an intelligent design advocate) said that it's "conclusions are speculative" and "evidence is patchy" and that the religious experiences described are not "demonstrably different in kind from anything encountered in material science." Regardless, Beauregard is in the VERY small minority in regards to the dualism/physicalism idea. The idea has all been but completely abandoned. Though, people who aren't familiar with current neuro and philo of mind aren't aware of this.

    Regardless, dualism is not a side issue, it is the main issue (of this blog post, at least). The side issue is the Adam and Eve thing. And saying God can just "recall data" is shamelessly ad hoc. And I am not sure what recalling data even means, in this case. Where would he put it? You have to have a physical brain if you want to store memories, personalities, etc.

    Anyway, thanks for the comment though. Always nice to know that someone is reading what I write, even if they disagree!

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  6. I suppose you're right on that. Christians are under the idea that the existence of sin comes from Eve and that Jesus was meant to redeem that.

    And it's true that if the earth was not created in a literal 7 days, then there was no literal Tree of Knowledge, and no original sin.

    There is no original sin. People are imperfect and make mistakes; they need to better themselves.

    The scriptures make clear that Jesus came not to free people from the consequences of the Tree of Knowledge. It is the Tree of Knowledge! It is what we all take with us into this world. We are all Adam and Eve (human and soul) leaving the womb and facing a world of opposites and good and evil.

    Jesus came to restore the temple. That was what the prophecy said. The modern doctrine of Jesus saving us from original sin itself is even more irrational when you consider the prophecies that Christians believe in. He talked about people coming after Him. Why would there need to be another if He was enough for all time?


    To comment on the main issue, I suppose people can talk their heads off over whether or not our minds are in our brains or not. You quote a lot of people who think like you do. I guess I'll give a quote here.

    "The rational soul—that is to say, the human spirit—has neither entered this body nor existed through it; so 240 after the disintegration of the composition of the body, how should it be in need of a substance through which it may exist? On the contrary, the rational soul is the substance through which the body exists. The personality of the rational soul is from its beginning; it is not due to the instrumentality of the body, but the state and the personality of the rational soul may be strengthened in this world; it will make progress and will attain to the degrees of perfection, or it will remain in the lowest abyss of ignorance, veiled and deprived from beholding the signs of God." -'Abdu'l-Baha

    I suppose the "data recall" idea is the idea of God making a copy of one's mind some place.

    But I suppose put forth in the above is that our bodies are the copy.

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    Replies
    1. The difference between quoting "my" people and quoting Abu'l-Baha is that people like Ramachandran, Pinker and Gazzaniga are considered as experts in their fields. The scientific opinions they hold are also the opinions of basically everyone else in those fields (because the evidence is clear, unambiguous and overwhelming). They aren't just some fringe figures who just so happen to agree with me.

      Abu'l-Baha, on the other hand, has absolutely no training in modern neuroscience (or any science). Not only that, even if he was, he is almost 100 years behind on the science.

      It would be similar to us talking about airplanes, me quoting a few respected scientists, and then you quoting some Indian guru from 100 year ago.

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