Artículos de revistas
What the cognitive neurosciences mean to me
Fecha
2007-01-01Registro en:
Mens Sana Monographs, v. 5, n. 1, p. 158-168, 2007.
0973-1229
10.4103%2F0973-1229.32160
2-s2.0-34547253816
2-s2.0-34547253816.pdf
0000-0002-5960-041X
Autor
Universidade Estadual Paulista (Unesp)
Instituto Biociências
Institución
Resumen
Cognitive Neuroscience is an interdisciplinary area of research that combines measurement of brain activity (mostly by means of neuroimaging) with a simultaneous performance of cognitive tasks by human subjects. These investigations have been successful in the task of connecting the sciences of the brain (Neurosciences) and the sciences of the mind (Cognitive Sciences). Advances on this kind of research provide a map of localization of cognitive functions in the human brain. Do these results help us to understand how mind relates to the brain? In my view, the results obtained by the Cognitive Neurosciences lead to new investigations in the domain of Molecular Neurobiology, aimed at discovering biophysical mechanisms that generate the activity measured by neuroimaging instruments. In this context, I argue that the understanding of how ionic/molecular processes support cognition and consciousness cannot be made by means of the standard reductionist explanations. Knowledge of ionic/molecular meclianisms can contribute to our understanding of the human mind as long as we assume an alternative form of explanation, based on psycho-physical similarities, together with an ontological view of mentality and spirituality as embedded in physical nature (and not outside nature, as frequently assumed in western culture).