The hard-wired brain
Howard Bloom in an email quotes neurobiologist John Skolyes as saying
"culture can literally rewire the brain".
Some thoughts (leaving aside the linguistic quibble about whether
"literally" is to be taken literally):
- the child is a clean slate, a "tabula rasa" until exposed to
rewiring by its culture
- an authentic culture which encourages development beyond the level
at which it is functioning can lead to a more favourable rewiring
than a problematic culture which blocks development above its own
level, or which is indifferent to the whole question of development
- if the mainstream culture doesn't provide the hard-wiring it will
come from somewhere else (pop, peer group, commercial TV)
- recognizing the fact that another's brain may be hard-wired in a
different way is a help to profitable communication and avoidance
of a lot of futile arguments that are not going to lead anywhere
- recognizing the hard-wiring in one's own brain is a help to
personal development which consists to a large extent in
deprogramming that part of the hard-wiring that has a limiting
effect on that development
- of course personal trauma can also be an important source of
hard-wiring which also needs deprogramming
- pathological hard-wiring can include anything from minor obsessions, guru worship,
addictions, eating disorders to criminal behaviour
- deprogramming can take hours, weeks or even the best part of a lifetime but
remains worthwhile
Simplistic? maybe, but a simple model can still be a useful one.
The Boddhisatva vow becomes:
As long as there are sentient beings
I vow to save them from exposure to problematic hard-wiring
And from the limiting effects of hard-wiring already carried out
PIERS
Clement
7 February 2002
Back to Studio index |
Return Home
This page hosted by
Get your own Free Home Page
Last updated 25.4.2003