MarkD
Keeper of the Hounds & Garden
- Location
- San Francisco Bay Area
Whenever we have discussions here on what really matters to us, especially religion and spirituality, it seems we often reach an impasse based on the mindset we bring to it. I've also spent some time on a philosophy forum (gad, I do not recommend it) and I find the same conflict arising.
Iain McGilchrist is someone who started off studying art and literature at Oxford but became interested in the mind/body problem from sitting in on philosophy sessions. His bent toward science inclined him to want to know more about what neuroscience can contribute to the problem. Against all the advice he received he ended up revisiting brain lateralization research which had become popularized in the 70's in the most simplistic and distorted manner. There is a real question though about why the brain is so deeply divided and much more research has been done. Several brain and neurology researchers have commented that his summaries of that research in his books The Master and His Emissary (2009) and more recently, The Matter With Things (2021), is the best of which they are aware.
To answer the question of why the brain is structured the way it is he gave up teaching literature at Oxford where he has written and published Against Criticism in 1982. He later trained in medicine and has been a neuroimaging researcher at Johns Hopkins University in Baltimore and a Consultant Psychiatrist at the Maudsley Hospital in south London. I just watched this video of a conversation he has with a young man with a Youtube channel and probably a podcast called "heretics". It is a genuine conversation, not a debate. I've pulled out a short one minute segment that I think pertains to two dominant mindsets we bring to our challenging deeper conversations. If you like it the whole thing is good and could serve as good introduction to McGilchrist's ideas:
My own introduction was from the much cruder video made from a speech he gave (perhaps for TED) and then illustrated by RSA which is at least pretty amusing as well as thought provoking;
If you look at either and have a reaction I'd enjoy hearing about it and am happy to offer my own.
Iain McGilchrist is someone who started off studying art and literature at Oxford but became interested in the mind/body problem from sitting in on philosophy sessions. His bent toward science inclined him to want to know more about what neuroscience can contribute to the problem. Against all the advice he received he ended up revisiting brain lateralization research which had become popularized in the 70's in the most simplistic and distorted manner. There is a real question though about why the brain is so deeply divided and much more research has been done. Several brain and neurology researchers have commented that his summaries of that research in his books The Master and His Emissary (2009) and more recently, The Matter With Things (2021), is the best of which they are aware.
To answer the question of why the brain is structured the way it is he gave up teaching literature at Oxford where he has written and published Against Criticism in 1982. He later trained in medicine and has been a neuroimaging researcher at Johns Hopkins University in Baltimore and a Consultant Psychiatrist at the Maudsley Hospital in south London. I just watched this video of a conversation he has with a young man with a Youtube channel and probably a podcast called "heretics". It is a genuine conversation, not a debate. I've pulled out a short one minute segment that I think pertains to two dominant mindsets we bring to our challenging deeper conversations. If you like it the whole thing is good and could serve as good introduction to McGilchrist's ideas:
My own introduction was from the much cruder video made from a speech he gave (perhaps for TED) and then illustrated by RSA which is at least pretty amusing as well as thought provoking;
If you look at either and have a reaction I'd enjoy hearing about it and am happy to offer my own.