OVER-EMPHASIZING THE SPECIFIC FUNCTIONS AND DYSFUNCTIONS OF THE BODY AND
THE BRAIN-MIND ENTAILS TACIT CREATIONISM
Abstract
Notions of function and dysfunction are fundamental for neuroscience,
psychology and psychiatry, but remain contentious. We propose that some
of these controversies arise from tacit creationism, which incorrectly
views aspects of evolved systems as if intentionally designed. Many
philosophers agree that “failure to perform a normal function” is
fundamental to the concepts of physical disease and mental disorder.
However, unlike machines and computers, bodies and brain-minds are
variable in multiple respects, and these variations may have advantages
and disadvantages in different environments. Indeed, in the case of
bodies and brain-minds it may be difficult to draw a bright line between
normal and excessive activation of an adaptive defense in a particular
context. The metaphors of body as machine, or the brain-mind as
computer, encourage the notions that components of bodies and
brain-minds have specific functions like those of the parts of machines,
and that disorders have clear boundaries. Rejecting tacit creationism,
and accepting the messy reality of organic complexity, as well as the
fuzzy boundaries of disorder, offers a better way forward for
neuroscience, psychology, and psychiatry.