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- From: trocklin@news.weeg.uiowa.edu (Tom Rocklin)
- Subject: Physiology & Psychology (Q)
- Message-ID: <1992Nov19.152455.8486@news.weeg.uiowa.edu>
- Followup-To: sci.psychology
- Organization: University of Iowa, Iowa City, IA, USA
- Date: Thu, 19 Nov 1992 15:24:55 GMT
- Lines: 22
-
- There is an argument that says, roughly, that knowing the details of the
- neurophysiology and neuroanatomy of an organism (I'm particularly interested
- in humans) will still leave you ignorant of important details
- of the psychology of that organism.
-
- The argument is sometimes made as an analogy with computers: knowing the
- hardware details of any (or all) of the many computers on which Unix can run
- will tell you some constraints that Unix must deal with, but won't tell you
- much about Unix itself. Similarly, knowing the details of the brain (and
- the rest of the relevant system(s)) will tell you some constraints on the
- psychology of an organism, but not much more.
-
- I'd be happy to hear comments on this argument (which I'm neither endorsing
- nor rejecting), but more importantly, I'd appreciate pointers to published
- versions of the argument (and related arguments). ^^^^^^^^^
-
- Thanks in advance.
- --
- Tom Rocklin 374 Lindquist Center
- 319/335-5570 The University of Iowa
- 319/335-5386 (fax) Iowa City, IA 52242
-
-