https://nitter.1d4.us/MKBHD/status/1668048839675092992

  • wheresmysurplusvalue [comrade/them]
    ·
    1 year ago

    I read an article somewhere a looong time ago which made the point that the way brains are viewed basically corresponds to the current state of technological development in society.

    Found it

    In his book In Our Own Image (2015), the artificial intelligence expert George Zarkadakis describes six different metaphors people have employed over the past 2,000 years to try to explain human intelligence.

    In the earliest one, eventually preserved in the Bible, humans were formed from clay or dirt, which an intelligent god then infused with its spirit. That spirit ‘explained’ our intelligence – grammatically, at least.

    The invention of hydraulic engineering in the 3rd century BCE led to the popularity of a hydraulic model of human intelligence, the idea that the flow of different fluids in the body – the ‘humours’ – accounted for both our physical and mental functioning. The hydraulic metaphor persisted for more than 1,600 years, handicapping medical practice all the while.

    By the 1500s, automata powered by springs and gears had been devised, eventually inspiring leading thinkers such as René Descartes to assert that humans are complex machines. In the 1600s, the British philosopher Thomas Hobbes suggested that thinking arose from small mechanical motions in the brain. By the 1700s, discoveries about electricity and chemistry led to new theories of human intelligence – again, largely metaphorical in nature. In the mid-1800s, inspired by recent advances in communications, the German physicist Hermann von Helmholtz compared the brain to a telegraph.

    Each metaphor reflected the most advanced thinking of the era that spawned it. Predictably, just a few years after the dawn of computer technology in the 1940s, the brain was said to operate like a computer, with the role of physical hardware played by the brain itself and our thoughts serving as software.

    It reminds me of Marx's comment about Charles Darwin looking at the biological world and only seeing bourgeois categories, but the science spoke for itself

    • Frank [he/him, he/him]
      ·
      1 year ago

      Turns out that mental illnesses aren't due to "chemical imbalance", that's just something drug marketers made up because it's more reassuring than "we have no idea what this drug does but sixty percent of people feel better when they take it, but one in 200 times your immune system attacks your mucus membranes for no identifiable reason and your skin falls off.