New York Magazine, of all things, offers a fascinating
report on the latest from neuroscience, the notion of “embodied cognition.” It’s
a complicated and difficult topic, one that I discussed at length in The Last Psychoanalyst.
According to New York:
A
burgeoning research area in psychology is the idea of embodied cognition — that
is, not only does your brain tell your body what to do, but it works the
other way around,
too. In other words, the position of your body can influence your thoughts.
Your yoga teacher might call it the mind-body connection; a pair of U.K.
researchers, on the other hand, recently described it in
the journal Frontiers as
"the surprisingly radical hypothesis that the brain is not the sole
cognitive resource we have available to us to solve problems."
[The study from Frontiers is the most interesting and
complete. It is too complicated to summarize on a blog, but, for those who are
interested, it is well worth a read.]
We have been taught that the mind directs the body, that
physical expressions, to say nothing of symptoms, are being commanded and
controlled by a mind… one that Gilbert Ryle called the ghost in the machine.
If this is true, then the only way to change behavior or
mood or attitude is to modify the mind that is controlling it. Many therapies
take their cue from Freud and assert that the insight and awareness will cause
sufficient mind-change to produce lasting symptom relief.
Others want you to get in touch with your deepest feelings, because
once you learn about them you will no longer be expressing them through your
behaviors.
In both cases, changing something about the mind is the
royal road to changing behavior and attitude and mood. Note well that
psychoanalysis, in particular, rejects the idea of changing behavior.
Unfortunately, the approach has never worked, so more savvy
philosophers have suggested that we have gotten in backwards. The mind does not
direct the body; behaviors do not express mental conflict. It’s the other way
around.
By the alternate theory, symptomatic behaviors are bad
habits and bad habits are impervious to understanding. To eliminate them you
need to replace them with good habits. So said Aristotle, and his approach
still works.
It may well be that this notion is new to neuroscience, but
it has been alive and well in philosophy for decades now. As I mentioned in my
book, the great modern thinkers in this field are Ludwig Wittgenstein, Gilbert
Ryle, J. L. Austin and Saul Kripke.
When it comes to examples, New York offers yoga as an
excellent example of changing your mind by adopting different bodily poses and
by controlling your breathing.
Funnily enough, the message seems to have gotten garbled. Today’s paper reports that a lot more people are buying yoga apparel than are doing
yoga. One suspects that wearing the clothing does have an effect on the mind,
but it probably does not have the same effect as doing the exercises.
Now that I have mentioned it… how you dress, how you groom
yourself, how you comport yourself… all of these have an effect on your mind.
Isn’t it one of the principles that define military training?
Also in today’s news, it turns out, as many have suspected,
that when a man retires from his job and spends more time hanging around the
house, his mere presence is so disruptive of household routines that his wife
is very likely to become depressed.
New York offers some pointers for how you can use this new
research to improve yourself.
It reports that if you are having trouble solving a problem,
you should try folding your arms. Apparently, this gesture, performed for no
particular reason will make you more persistent in your pursuit of a solution.
And then, if you want to learn
a new concept, you should move your hands, or, as they say, talk with your
hands.
Very useful.
ReplyDeleteYou can use your body to control your brain.
I saw this TED video on the subject a while ago. I'm not sure what to think besides it being interesting. I can see it worthwhile to be aware of how you're presenting yourself, and sometimes purposely turning up OR down your body language depending on what's needed.
ReplyDeletehttps://www.youtube.com/watch?v=TdU2l0i2Wh0 Empowering through Body Language - Top Tips on Essential Assertiveness
Body language affects how others see us, but it may also change how we see ourselves. Social psychologist Amy Cuddy shows how "power posing" -- standing in a posture of confidence, even when we don't feel confident -- can affect testosterone and cortisol levels in the brain, and might even have an impact on our chances for success.
Amy Cuddy's research on body language reveals that we can change other people's perceptions — and even our own body chemistry — simply by changing body positions
Now that I have mentioned it… how you dress, how you groom yourself, how you comport yourself… all of these have an effect on your mind. Isn’t it one of the principles that define military training?
ReplyDelete"Look Sharp. Be sharp." was the way it was explained to me.
I shave everyday. If I'm ill, I get up, wash and shave and go back to bed. It's life affirming. I've read extraordinary accounts of warriors on the Eastern Front in WWII and in Africa, Korea and Vietnam. They shave and cleaned-up as they could.
Those small rituals give strength...
If you see me with days of growth on my face, please help me 'cuz I'm either mortally ill or mad.
--Gray