Department of Biosciences, Physiology and Neuroscience, University of Helsinki, P.O. Box 65, FI-00014 University of Helsinki, Finland.
Rev Neurosci. 2011;22(5):483-507. doi: 10.1515/RNS.2011.043.
The most fundamental issue of the neurosciences is the question of how or whether the mind and the body can interact with each other. It has recently been suggested in several studies that current neuroimaging evidence supports a view where the mind can have a well-documented causal influence on various brain processes. These arguments are critically analyzed here. First, the metaphysical commitments of the current neurosciences are reviewed. According to both the philosophical and neuroscientific received views, mental states are necessarily neurally based. It is argued that this leaves no room for a genuine interaction of the mental and the neural. Second, it is shown how conclusions drawn from recent imaging studies are in fact compatible with the fully physicalistic notion of mental causation and how they can thus be easily accommodated to the received view. The fallacious conclusions are argued to be a result of an overly vague grasping of the conceptual issues involved. The question of whether the fundamental physical principles exclude outright the ability of mental states to have causal influence on the physical world is also addressed and the reaction of appealing to the apparent loophole provided by quantum physics is assessed. It is argued that linking psychology to quantum physics contradicts many basic tenets of the current neurosciences and is thus not a promising line of study. It is concluded that the interactionist hypothesis benefits from neither conceptual nor empirical support.
神经科学中最根本的问题是心灵和身体是否能够相互作用的问题。最近的几项研究表明,当前的神经影像学证据支持一种观点,即心灵可以对各种大脑过程产生有据可查的因果影响。本文批判性地分析了这些论点。首先,回顾了当前神经科学的形而上学承诺。根据哲学和神经科学的公认观点,心理状态必然是基于神经的。这就使得心灵与神经之间的真正相互作用没有空间。其次,表明了如何从最近的成像研究中得出的结论实际上与心理因果关系的完全物理主义概念是一致的,以及它们如何能够很容易地适应公认的观点。错误的结论是由于对所涉及的概念问题的理解过于模糊造成的。还讨论了基本物理原理是否完全排除了心理状态对物理世界产生因果影响的能力的问题,并评估了诉诸量子物理学提供的明显漏洞的反应。有人认为,将心理学与量子物理学联系起来与当前神经科学的许多基本原则相矛盾,因此不是一个有前途的研究方向。结论是,交互作用假说既没有得到概念上的支持,也没有得到经验上的支持。