Saved by Charlie Gedeon and
Your Brain Does Not Process Information and It Is Not a Computer | Aeon Essays
A healthy newborn is also equipped with more than a dozen reflexes – ready-made reactions to certain stimuli that are important for its survival. It turns its head in the direction of something that brushes its cheek and then sucks whatever enters its mouth. It holds its breath when submerged in water. It grasps things placed in its hands so... See more
aeon.co • Your Brain Does Not Process Information and It Is Not a Computer | Aeon Essays
A few cognitive scientists – notably Anthony Chemero of the University of Cincinnati, the author of Radical Embodied Cognitive Science (2009) – now completely reject the view that the human brain works like a computer. The mainstream view is that we, like computers, make sense of the world by performing computations on mental representations of it,... See more
aeon.co • Your Brain Does Not Process Information and It Is Not a Computer | Aeon Essays
This is inspirational, I suppose, because it means that each of us is truly unique, not just in our genetic makeup, but even in the way our brains change over time.
aeon.co • Your Brain Does Not Process Information and It Is Not a Computer | Aeon Essays
Propelled by subsequent advances in both computer technology and brain research, an ambitious multidisciplinary effort to understand human intelligence gradually developed, firmly rooted in the idea that humans are, like computers, information processors. This effort now involves thousands of researchers, consumes billions of dollars in funding,... See more
aeon.co • Your Brain Does Not Process Information and It Is Not a Computer | Aeon Essays
For more than half a century now, psychologists, linguists, neuroscientists and other experts on human behaviour have been asserting that the human brain works like a computer.
aeon.co • Your Brain Does Not Process Information and It Is Not a Computer | Aeon Essays
No matter how hard they try, brain scientists and cognitive psychologists will never find a copy of Beethoven’s 5th Symphony in the brain – or copies of words, pictures, grammatical rules or any other kinds of environmental stimuli. The human brain isn’t really empty, of course. But it does not contain most of the things people think it does – not... See more
aeon.co • Your Brain Does Not Process Information and It Is Not a Computer | Aeon Essays
The idea that memories are stored in individual neurons is preposterous: how and where is the memory stored in the cell?
aeon.co • Your Brain Does Not Process Information and It Is Not a Computer | Aeon Essays
As we navigate through the world, we are changed by a variety of experiences. Of special note are experiences of three types: (1) we observe what is happening around us (other people behaving, sounds of music, instructions directed at us, words on pages, images on screens); (2) we are exposed to the pairing of unimportant stimuli (such as sirens)... See more
aeon.co • Your Brain Does Not Process Information and It Is Not a Computer | Aeon Essays
The difference between the two diagrams reminds us that visualising something (that is, seeing something in its absence) is far less accurate than seeing something in its presence. This is why we’re much better at recognising than recalling. When we re-member something (from the Latin re , ‘again’, and memorari , ‘be mindful of’), we have to try to... See more