Limping Lizards, Eric!

 

Still in transit so won’t write long.  I think my point was more dumb EVEN than 
if you break my leg and I limp the behavior (limp) did not arise  from my 
brain.  I only mean to say that that all behavior is mediated through the 
brain.  So when people say that some behavior was caused by circumstances and 
other behavior is caused by drugs, or locutions like that, they are not sorting 
into brain and non-brain.  The sort is of another type.  And I am hoping that 
(1) people will stop talking about non=brain-mediated behaviors and (2) tell 
me, because I really don’t know, what the implied dualism actually refers to.  
All therapy, all drugs, all behavior-change operations are mediated through the 
brain, almost by definition, no?

 

Gotta go!

 

N

 

Nicholas S. Thompson

Emeritus Professor of Psychology and Biology

Clark University

 <http://home.earthlink.net/~nickthompson/naturaldesigns/> 
http://home.earthlink.net/~nickthompson/naturaldesigns/

 

From: Friam [mailto:[email protected]] On Behalf Of Eric Charles
Sent: Wednesday, March 13, 2019 8:58 AM
To: The Friday Morning Applied Complexity Coffee Group <[email protected]>
Subject: Re: [FRIAM] is this true?

 

Nick, et al,

Reinforcing Steve's message: This conversation is hard because, in humans, 
doing humaney things, it is the case, factually, that most changes in behavior 
that we are wont to discusses entail changes in the brain. However, as a good 
student of animal behavior, you (Nick) are of course aware that behavioral 
changes can result from bodily changes in non-brain areas. This is especially 
obvious when we generate behavioral change in organisms without brains at all 
:- P Even if we stick with humans, the recent explosion of research on the 
importance of gut bacteria in mental health speaks to this. In many of the 
human cases we are wont to discuss there are "interactions" between "body" and 
"brain" changes (ugh, a false dualism if ever there was one), for example, we 
might discuss the numerous changes in the brain that occur after removal of 
testes or ovaries, due to the changes in circulating hormones and hormone 
responsivity. Or take the leg injury Steve mentions: To some extent, I limp 
because my leg is injured. However, if you track my limp from the moment of the 
break forward, you will find that the particular limp I display a month out is, 
in a large part, the result of some optimization problem for 
walking-with-such-and-such-injuries that certainly involves adjustments 
somewhere in my brain. (Not all animals do this mind you, but most people do. 
I've seen no detectable change in the limps of injured lizards, for example, 
after very long stretches of time.)  

 

Back to the very beginning of this thread... there has been research for a long 
time about therapy and neurochemistry. Let's examine 3 research findings: 1) 
Depressed people (as a group) have lower dopamine, on average, than 
non-depressed people. 2) Depressed people (as a group) who are given dopamine 
are, on average, less depressed later. 3)  Depressed people (as a group) who 
undergo behaviorist therapy to replace the 
behaviors-patterns-that-are-depression with other behavior patterns (with no 
mind-diving involved) are later found (on average) to have higher dopamine than 
when they started the therapy. Ditto those that are successful (as a group) 
with mind-oriented therapeutic approaches. 

 

So, do drugs cause the same changes in the brain as therapy? I'm not sure. 
However, successful therapy seems to causes the same changes in the brain that 
the drugs are intended to produce. Note the implications of this for causal 
attributions regarding neurotransmitter levels and mental illness. 

 

Best,

Eric

 

 


-----------
Eric P. Charles, Ph.D.
Personnel Psychologist

Drug Enforcement Administration

 

 

On Sat, Mar 9, 2019 at 12:33 PM Steven A Smith <[email protected] 
<mailto:[email protected]> > wrote:

Nick - 

A) Autonomic bodily function.  Biomechanical body changes.   We can walk with a 
limp (or choose not to walk) because our leg is damaged without any change to 
the brain.  Perhaps our brain WILL change in response to our constant limping 
(or not leaving our chair/bed), but it isn't a brain change that changes our 
behaviour.  IN the small, the signals to the brain that something is wrong 
might not even get there, or be scrambled, trusting/deferring to the autonomic 
system to "do the right thing" and at best "keep the brain informed of changes".

B) Bio/Neurochemistry.  Changes in blood glucose, hormones, introduced 
mood-altering substances.  Misbehaving glands (thyroid, pancreas, etc.) can 
trigger all kinds of mood/behaviour changes.  Glen reminds us that our 
microbiome can change our behaviour/mind/mood as well... people have had huge 
shifts in mood/behaviour after overzealous use of antibiotics or a failure of 
the GI tract. You can call these brain (chemistry) changes, but the change in 
mind/mood/behaviour is more the way the brain function changes in response to 
the changed chemical milieu than changes *to* the brain.

B) Plastic vs elastic changes.  A shot of coffee or juice (or mood-altering 
substance of choice) can shift the *brain metabolism* in ways that radically 
and quickly change behavior.  As the neurochemistry returns to "normal" 
(alcohol leaves the system (sober up) and we rehydrate (recover from 
hangover)), the enduring changes to the brain are minimal (thought they can 
endure/accrue over time).   Similarly a therapy session, some deep prayer, or a 
new years resolution can lead us to a "change of heart/mind" but it is unlikely 
to LAST unless there are attendant changes in habits and relationships.   It is 
those changes in behaviour, related to the "habits and relationships" that I 
contend *change the brain* and that a great deal of the long-lasting change 
doesn't even happen IN the brain, though it may be that the brain's interaction 
with/response to changes in biochemistry (and biomechanics?) lead to changes in 
brain (and mind) function.  Put the weight back on, crash your gut bacteria, go 
off your meds, and by golly you may end up right back where you were before you 
made those bodily/environmental changes in the first place.  If your *brain 
changed* when you made those other changes in habit/behaviour, why did it 
change back so precisely?   Had it ever really *changed* at all?  Or was it 
just responding differently to a different milieu/stimulus?

- Steve

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