00:00:12 Teeing Up “The Cortical Fallacy” with hydranencephaly, a rare condition in which the brain’s cerebral hemispheres are absent and replaced by sacs filled with cerebrospinal fluid.
In The Hidden Spring, our guest Mark Solms does not dive too deeply into Karl Friston’s mathematics. As you will discover, he summarises its implications, describing Friston’s free energy as a quantifiable measure of how a system models the world and how it behaves. This notion leads to a very different idea of consciousness from Descartes’s reason-centric version that set up the puzzling dualism of “mind” and “matter”, a la Damasio’s Descartes Error. Mark explores the “cortical fallacy,” which refers to his view that neuroscientists who have argued that the “seat of consciousness” is in the cortex are wrong. Recent neuroscience has shed light on where this is.
As Mark points out, damage to just two cubic millimetres of the upper brainstem will “obliterate all consciousness.”
So where does it “Spring” from?
00:00:00 Intro
00:02:37 “The Cortical Fallacy”
00:18:14 The Report-ability Problem of Consciousness
00:31:00 Chemical and Pharmacological Probes
00:37:00 1949 discovery of the Reticular Activating System
00:55:25 The Reticular Activating System: Salience, Filtering, Gratitude, Law of Attraction
00:58:00 The Mr. W joke and The Global Workspace Theory