When analyzing the different viewpoints of the brain and the mind, it is easy to see that the brain is a pretty strong organ. The cognition of the power of our own brain may even be too hard to fully understand. The three episodes that we watched in this module may have given us a little bit of a clue of the power that the brain has when considering it through different perspectives.
Futurama
In the episode, “The Day the Earth Stood Stupid,” we see, “The Brain in a Vat,” example throughout the episode. Since the brains and Big Brain have the power to not only exist on their own outside of a human body, but also make the humans in the episode stupid, it shows the power of the brain and how the brain is the mind and can survive on its own. This is shown when Big Brain says to Fry, “We have long since evolved beyond the need for asses.” Big Brain doesn’t have an ass or anything other part of the body for Fry to kick. Just like, “The Brain in a Vat,” example, the organ can survive, have its own mind, and live its own life without the need of a human body. In this scenario, it seems that the episode is suggesting that the mind is actually stronger than the brain. If the brain has the power to make other humans stupid, then it must be stronger than the human body itself, right? 4E Cognition wouldn’t agree though considering the brain is only part of cognition. I agree because I doubt we would be able to think the same without our brain in our body lol.
Altered Carbon
The next episode that I watched was, “Out of the Past,” which represented the idea of Cybernetics and how the mind is like a computer. It was interesting to see how the episode used the cortical stacks to represent one’s mind, and how although one’s body can die, if the cortical stack is ok, or the mind, then it can just be placed in another sleeve, or body, and still work the same way it used to. It’s kinda like if a car were to crash, but the engine remained in tact, then you could essentially take that engine and put it into another car, and the car would be able to drive as the old one did. This analogy shows that the mind and body can be viewed as separate. It also correlates with Cybernetics because the cortical stacks (mind) is like the hard drive of a computer, and if the hard drive of a computer remains in tact, you could take the hard drive from one computer and use it in another. At the beginning of the episode, the woman says, “your body is not who you are.” Basically she’s referring to one’s mind and cognition as a person’s identity. Therefore, you could pass your mind from one body to the other, and you would still be you–just like a computer’s hard drive. The body in, “Out of the Past,” are just referred to as sleeves or something that holds your mind.
Star Trek: The Original Series
In the episode, “Return to Tomorrow,” we are able to see an example of Embodied Cognition. Part of the Embodied Cognition idea is that, “cognition depends upon the kinds of experience that come from having a body with various sensorimotor capacities.” Sargon, Thalassa, and Henoch, which are basically minds that were left without a body and are being held in spheres, need the bodies of Kirk, Mulhall, and Spock in order for them to basically construct their own bodies for their minds. Through the experiences of Sargon, Thalassa, and Henoch while they were using the other’s bodies, we can see the idea that Embodied Cognition has in regards to how, “bodies and emotions are integrated into our cognitive systems, not separate from it.” While Thalassa was in Mulhall’s body, she states that she forgot, “what it felt like to even breathe again.” Simply put, these minds that were inside of these spheres without a body were not actually living without bodies, as they had forgotten what it felt like to be alive inside of a body. So, our bodies help our minds have cognition.
All of these ideas and theories were pretty crazy to consider when watching these episodes. Can’t wait for the rest of the course.
4 thoughts on “Analysis #1 – Brain Power”
Hi Anthony,
I really like the metaphor the car metaphor that you use to describe the cybernetic approach to the mind that we see in Altered Carbon—especially because it connects to the phrase “the ghost in the machine, ” which was coined to explain a Cartesian approach to mind and body. The body is viewed as a machine that the abstracted mind pilots and controls (much in the same way that you control a car).
You also make a great observation about the role of the body in Star Trek, which highlight the importance of feeling. Part of the reason why the living human body is show as superior to the mechanical body (a literal machine for the “ghost” of Sargon’s, Thalassa’s, and Henoch’s consciousness). We might think about Sargon and Thalassa’s relationship in these terms. What does it mean to feel love if we don’t have a body to feel with?
Glad to read that you are excited for the rest of the course. I am too!
Jessica Hautsch
Hey Anthony! I like how you mentioned that the minds “living” without a body were not alive in the star trek episode, at the beginning of the episode one thing I noticed that Sargon had said to Captain Kirk is that “I am as dead as my planet” I had initially presumed that it was saying that it appeared dead but there was life buried deep within, however – I realized by the end that he wasn’t “Alive” until they were integrated with a body and could feel and breathe again.
I think this also ties into your comment at the end of your futurama analysis – I agree that we wouldn’t think the same if we didn’t have our bodies. I believe so much of how we think is tied to the way we perceive the world through our senses and our bodies, it makes up who we are.
nperalta
Hi Anthony!
I liked your comparison to the car engine to ones mind and body in Altered Carbon. Takeshi was the engine being put into another car. Yes he had a different look, but on the inside, he was still the same person he once was.
I also liked the you found a connecting point between all 3 episodes we watched.
Nice Job 🙂
Brianna
Hey Anthony ! You really changed my “mind” on this one haha. This whole time I’ve been thinking about the brain and the mind as the same thing, but they’re totally separate and “The Day The Earth Stood Stupid” was a perfect example of that. While the brain was separated from the body, the brain itself became the new body for that consciousness, despite the body simply being a brain. This makes me wonder if a different kind of body, different from the bodies we’re used to at least, can still be considered a body. The same would go for the orb that housed Sargon and his friends. While they were physically unfeeling, mentally they still could understand emotions. Does this make those orbs less of a body ?
arbuonaiuto