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As mind/brain and spirit/body dualism have slowly broken down over the past century, puzzling consequences have been left in its wake. Nowhere are these consequences more evident than in psychology and neurology. We take seriously the charge to heal the mind and the brain. We research it, learn about it, ponder over it, all in the hope that someday we will be able to cure illnesses that are currently untouchable.
Dementia, Schizophrenia, Stroke, Traumatic Brain injury, to name just a few all have permanent and dire consequences for the individuals involved. The individual’s very mind, consciousness, personhood, spirit, whatever you choose to call it–their very essence or being is changed, irreversibly at present, by the disease. To have a sick brain is to become less human in a very real sense. Read the rest of this entry »
More and more lately, I hear from those who would reduce man to a machine. Certain outspoken scientists proclaim life as random, the result of chemical interactions and natural processes, and free will as an illusion. As I have stated before many neuroscientists are seeking to unlock the mystery of the brain and explain away consciousness. Others are convinced that we have evolved logic and can now leave primitive emotion behind. Occasionally this logic is overpowered by the primitive structures labeled by Arthur Koestler as the Ghost in the machine, a derogative term for mind-body dualism. Apparently, the Vulcan race is what these fellows aspire too. We could solve all the problems of the world if we could just be strictly logical, and lose emotion. It seems simple enough doesn’t it? Read the rest of this entry »
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