I Feel, Therefore I Am
New York Times
By EMILY EAKIN
Published:
In the middle of the 17th century, Spinoza took on Descartes and lost.
According to Descartes' famous dualist theory,
human beings were composed of physical bodies and immaterial minds. Spinoza disagreed. In ''The Ethics,'' his masterwork,
published after his death in 1677, he argued that body and mind are not two
separate entities but one continuous substance.
As for Descartes' view of the mind as a reasoning
machine, Spinoza thought that was dead wrong. Reason,
he insisted, is shot through with emotion. More radical still, he claimed that
thoughts and feelings are not primarily reactions to external events but first
and foremost about the body. In fact, he suggested, the mind exists purely for
the body's sake, to ensure its survival.
For his beliefs, Spinoza
was vilified and -- for extended periods -- ignored. Descartes, on the other
hand, was immortalized as a visionary. His rationalist doctrine shaped the
course of modern philosophy and became part of the cultural bedrock.
But it seems history may have sided with the
wrong man. For more than a decade, neuroscientists armed with brain scans have
been chipping away at the Cartesian façade. Gone is Descartes' lofty Cogito, reasoning
in pristine detachment from the physical world. Fading fast are its
sophisticated modern incarnations, including the once-popular ''computational
model,'' according to which the mind is like a software program and the brain
like a hard drive.
Lately, scientists have begun to approach
consciousness in more Spinozist terms: as a complex
and indivisible mind-brain-body system. And now Dr. Antonio Damasio,
the head of neurology at the University of Iowa
Medical Center in
''Science is proving Spinoza
more current,'' Dr. Damasio said over tea at his
hotel during a recent visit to
A slight, fine-featured man with elegant manners
and a shock of white hair, Dr. Damasio, 58, exudes
old-world charm. His conversation is a velvet murmur that hints at his
Portuguese roots; his passion is in his hands, which slice the air in quick,
graceful movements as he speaks.
And these days, his pronouncements carry
considerable weight. His theories are technical (he distinguishes between
feelings and emotions and talks of an elaborate ''body loop''). And in their
details they are sometimes controversial. But his general emphasis on affect --
or feelings -- strikes most experts as beyond dispute. ''His contributions at
the human level have been remarkable,'' said Jaak Panksepp, a neuroscientist and director of Affective
Neuroscience at the
In short, Dr. Damasio
is at the forefront of what neuroscientists are calling an ''affect
revolution'' that is turning decades of scientific wisdom on its head and
reverberating through other fields as well.
''Academics are throwing themselves into the
study of emotion with the rapturous intensity of a love affair,'' The Chronicle
of Higher Education reported in February, in an article that included a list of
25 recent scholarly books, from philosophy and history to literature and
political science, all devoted to affect in one way or another.
And while Dr. Damasio
hardly deserves all the credit for this trend, thanks to his breakthrough
research and two previous, surprisingly accessible books -- ''Descartes' Error:
Emotion, Reason and the Human Brain'' (1994) and ''The Feeling of What Happens,
Body and Emotion in the Making of Consciousness'' (1999) -- he can take a good
deal. He is required reading in literature seminars. Writers like Ian McEwan and David Lodge have acknowledged his work in their
novels. He's even inspired a piano concerto, ''Body Loops,'' and a quintet that
was given its premiere at
''For students of the humanities, the key neurophysiological insight of our time is that which has
been so eloquently expressed by Antonio Damasio,''
declared Jonathan Bate, a Shakespeare scholar at the
Dr. Damasio and other
researchers, he added, ''have brought us close to the possibility of a
scientifically verifiable investigation of the hypothesis -- which in various
forms has a very long history -- that literature may have been genetically
evolved to do cognitive work precisely by stimulating the emotions.''
All the talk about affect marks the demise of a
long-upheld scholarly taboo. In the late 19th century, science's leading lights
regarded feelings as a natural subject for exploration.
But by the early 20th century, science had fallen
sway to behaviorism and affect was off limits. Human beings, it was thought,
could be understood purely by observing what they did. Internal mental states
were dismissed as irrelevant. As Dr. Damasio put it,
''Neuroscience gave the cold shoulder to emotion.'' Feelings, he said, were
considered ''elusive, indescribable, too subjective.''
When Dr. Damasio began
to study affect in the late 1980's, it was by accident, not design. He had
moved to the
''I was forced to think about emotions because of
those patients with frontal lobe damage,'' Dr. Damasio
said. ''They had incredible problems with social behavior that had normally
been attributed only to cognitive disturbances. I was very struck by the fact
that they had clear disturbances of emotion. I started thinking that emotions
might play a role in making decisions and choices in a normal way.''
Typical of his patients was Elliot, a man in his
30's who had suffered frontal lobe damage as a result of a brain tumor. Elliot
performed normally on intelligence tests but could no longer make choices,
prioritize tasks, manage his time or -- as a consequence -- hold down a job. To
make a living, he embarked on hare-brained business schemes with shady partners
that ended in bankruptcy.
Then Dr. Damasio
discovered that Elliot was unable to feel. He spoke of the tragic events of his
life without emotion. Shown pictures of gruesome accidents and natural
disasters, he registered no reaction. When Dr. Damasio
tested other patients with similar brain damage he found the same striking
combination of impaired reason and impaired affect.
When Dr. Damasio
presented his findings in ''Descartes' Error,'' the book was greeted as a
breakthrough. (An international best seller, it has been translated into 24
languages.) ''It's one thing to have a speculative theory about the role of
reason and the role of emotions,'' said Patricia Churchland,
a neurophilosopher at the
Neuroscience has since converged around the idea
that emotions are central to cognition -- and thus survival. But just why and
how remain more open questions. In his second book, ''The Feeling of What
Happens,'' Dr. Damasio speculated that emotions and
feelings were crucial to the evolution of consciousness and, along with it, a
sense of self. In ''Looking for Spinoza,'' he tackles
the mystery of how affect works.
His theory is both elaborate and
counterintuitive, involving a chain reaction that begins when an emotion
(defined as a change in body state in response to an external stimulus)
triggers a feeling (the representation of that change in the brain as well as
specific mental images). In other words, feelings do not cause bodily symptoms
but are caused by them: we do not tremble because we feel afraid; we feel
afraid because we tremble.
Still more provocative is his Spinozist
conclusion, that the mind's primary focus is the body: ''The mind exists for
the body, is engaged in telling the story of the body's multifarious events,
and uses that story to optimize the life of the organism.''
Such a notion, he concedes, ''departs radically
from traditional wisdom and may sound implausible at first glance.'' After all,
he points out, ''we usually regard our mind as
populated by images or thoughts of objects, actions and abstract relations,
mostly related to the outside world rather than to our bodies.''
And despite Dr. Damasio's
assurances that he has neurobiology on his side, not every expert is willing to
endorse the notion yet. Writing in The New York Times Book Review in February,
Colin McGinn, a philosopher at
Scientists, however, have been less dismissive.
''Damasio's data is very important and very robust,''
Mr. Panksepp said. ''His theory is more
controversial. But his approach, by focusing on the nature of body
representations of the brain, is essential to make progress on how affective
experience emerges in the mind.''
Most delighted, perhaps, are Spinoza
scholars. Heidi M. Ravven, a professor of the
philosophy of religion at