THE USE OF THE BRAIN.
REASONING OR THOUGHT. An exceedingly interesting contribution to the eternal problem, “What is the use of the brain?” is made to the January number of Chambers’* Journal by Professor George Forbes. It seems to him to be hardly credible that the brain, or any part of the body, can preform an act of thought. Yet it is clearly correct to say that reasoning or conscious thought depends on the brain. In what sense, then? he asks. That our natural instinctive true thinking be too comprehensive in practice, and the brain is used as a valuable help for concentration upon reasoned thought much in the same way as pen, ink, and paper may serve the purpose. For illustration, he takes the case of a judge taking notes of evidence and a mathematician working out a piece of symbolic reasoning upon paper. The judge might be able to form a sound conclusion, even if the notes were destroyed. But often the mathematician would be unable to complete his reasoned argument if his symbolic writing was not available, any more than a man with a fractured skull and injured brain can carry on any kind of reasoned thought. “Perhaps we shall find,” Professor Forbes says “that the brain which is made lrr a totally different purpose maj oe used to furnish symbols quite as effective as the written words, and almost as effective as the mathematician’s written equations.” , The operations both of our muscles and of our organs of sense, the two sole means of communication that the mind of man or any animal has with the outer world, are accompanied by a stimulation of nerve centres in the brain. We think in a certain way about our will to act, and simultaneously certain nerves centres in the brain are stimulated, and they set in action certain muscles. All these distinct thoughts, relative to the action of different nerve centres in the brain, are, he suggests, used by us as symbols, or letters of the. alphabet, for making and representing ideas, in a natural language. But using these symbols, instead of spoken or written words, we are enabled to conduct a course of reasonable thought. Words or other symbols are absolutely necessary for converting what. may be some of our instinctive subconscious vague thoughts of knowledge into rational thoughts that can
be expressed to ourselves or to others. “These are what we mean by reasonable thought,” he continued. “It means that if like an infant or deaf mute, we had no language, and if we felt the necessity for symbols to reason with, we should almost inevitably choose those nerve centres in the brain that are continually in our thought. For they alone give us contact with the material world. Thus would thoughts of nerve centres become the alphabet for our natural reasoning language. This language would be used before we learned to speak, and would always be used afterwards for thinking out in argument before expressing in words.” As an experiment to learn what kind of feeling or thinking goes with the working of a muscle he trained an unused muscle. He tried to raise the second toe of his foot without moving the others. In a week he was successful. This experiment was tried by others, and some interesting information is given. Professor Forbes quotes from the late Dr Francis Warner, senior physician at the London Hospital, that from the examination of a baby only “three days old he could tell whether It would be of normal intellect or an imbecile. A baby of that age when caught awake may be seen holding up its hand and actually such nerve centres as its brain contains to bermd the ' finguree. Dr Warner found that if the baby’s body contained a good brain each finger was moved independently. If it had the brain of an imbecile it moved all the fingers to gether. The baby with a good brain the imbecile these are not physically differentiated. The healthy baby has 10 d.fferent bendings, accompanied by 10 different kinds of thought. 'The article concludes with the writer’s conviction that the thought we use for working our muscles are the symbols we use in a language of reasoned thought prior to expression in words.
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Putaruru Press, Volume VII, Issue 278, 7 March 1929, Page 3
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714THE USE OF THE BRAIN. Putaruru Press, Volume VII, Issue 278, 7 March 1929, Page 3
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