!Kaggen
Illuminator
- Joined
- Jul 12, 2009
- Messages
- 3,874
I don't think so either. However, a phenomenon like receptive aphasia really turns the question around so that we can look at it from a different direction. Certain parts of the brain can be said to be correlated with the ability to comprehend spoken language, but we're still left with all of the same unanswered questions we had before. The one which intrigues me most is the fact that Miss Ruby has Wernicke's aphasia, and yet she can always clearly understand what she herself is saying. Her words are always purposeful, and this shouldn't be possible.
But it gets better (or worse, or... well, I don't know.) I had a traumatic brain injury in a car accident many years ago. I've had PET, CAT, and MRI scans done. I have copies of all of these, and
the MRI scan has some notes on it. Basically, they said that I had general cerebral atrophy and neuronal damage (analagous to what you'd expect to see in something along the lines of, say, late-stage Korsakoff's Syndrome.) As y'all can clearly see, however, I'm typing complete sentences right now.There's definitely no way that I should have been able to get a masters' degree in social work. Now, there are complex neurological reasons why everything may have worked out this way and I'm not going to explore them all now, but the point is that knowing which abilities will be affected by manipulating corresponding portions of the brain can be a little like knowing that we can nudge two atoms together with a sledgehammer.
This is a problem tackled by the neurologist Kurt Goldstein.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Kurt_Goldstein
who suggested a non-localised theory of aphasia
http://www.ling.fju.edu.tw/neurolng/goldstein.htm
I have his book "The Organism"
http://www.amazon.com/Organism-Kurt-Goldstein/dp/0942299973
which I need to get around to reading.
Your posts have motivated me too sooner than later.
This review of the implications of Goldstein's Holism is also interesting.
http://www.natureinstitute.org/pub/ic/ic2/goldstein.htm