Schaal David W
Stanford University, USA.
J Exp Anal Behav. 2005 Nov;84(3):683-92. doi: 10.1901/jeab.2005.83-05.
Bennett and Hacker use conceptual analysis to appraise the theoretical language of modern cognitive neuroscientists, and conclude that neuroscientific theory is largely dualistic despite the fact that neuroscientists equate mind with the operations of the brain. The central error of cognitive neuroscientists is to commit the mereological fallacy, the tendency to ascribe to the brain psychological concepts that only make sense when ascribed to whole animals. The authors review how the mereological fallacy is committed in theories of memory, perception, thinking, imagery, belief, consciousness, and other psychological processes studied by neuroscientists, and the consequences that fallacious reasoning have for our understanding of how the brain participates in cognition and behavior. Several behavior-analytic concepts may themselves be nonsense based on thorough conceptual analyses in which the criteria for sense and nonsense are found in the ways the concepts are used in ordinary language. Nevertheless, the authors' nondualistic approach and their consistent focus on behavioral criteria for the application of psychological concepts make Philosophical Foundations of Neuroscience an important contribution to cognitive neuroscience.
贝内特和哈克运用概念分析来评估现代认知神经科学家的理论语言,并得出结论:尽管神经科学家将心智等同于大脑的运作,但神经科学理论在很大程度上仍是二元论的。认知神经科学家的核心错误在于犯了部分与整体的谬误,即将那些只有归属于整个动物才有意义的心理概念归属于大脑的倾向。作者回顾了在记忆、感知、思维、意象、信念、意识以及神经科学家研究的其他心理过程的理论中,部分与整体的谬误是如何产生的,以及错误推理对我们理解大脑如何参与认知和行为所产生的后果。基于深入的概念分析,一些行为分析概念本身可能是无意义的,在这些分析中,有意义和无意义的标准源自这些概念在日常语言中的使用方式。然而,作者的非二元论方法以及他们始终关注心理概念应用的行为标准,使得《神经科学的哲学基础》对认知神经科学做出了重要贡献。