| TIME WRITER M.
LEMONICK'S MIND-BODY ERROR
Time
magazine carried an article called "Your Mind, Your Body" in
its February 17, 2003, edition. It was suggested that the Cartesian
separation of mind and body no longer applies, and that psychologists
and neurologists are now agreed that mind and body are interconnected.
The claims in this article, written by Michael L. Lemonick, consist
of nothing but deceptions. All Lemonick does is to set out his own
materialist fantasies, though he is unable to offer a shred of scientific
evidence to back them up.
Lemonick maintains that the thoughts
and emotions that color our reality are the result of complicated
electrochemical effects taking place within and among the nerve
cells. As evidence for these claims, he suggests that the feelings
of low self-esteem and self-hatred that appear in schizophrenia
and depression have nothing to do with reality, but rather consist
of faults in the electrochemical system in the brain.
Materialist philosophers can never explain
the source of human consciousness. In order not to accept
the fact that there is a being beyond the material world,
they attempt to reduce human intelligence to matter. |
Lemonick's interpretation, which makes
the mind and body one, is nothing more than a dogmatic claim lacking
any kind of scientific and rational foundation. Even today the materialists'
mind-body problem has not been solved. In other words, the question
of how consciousness (the state of a person's having knowledge of,
understanding, thinking about, interpreting, and feeling his surroundings
and himself) could have come about in a piece of flesh like the
brain has not yet been resolved.
According to materialists, consciousness
is the result of electrochemical reactions in the brain. In other
words, consciousness comes about with the chemical and electrical
exchanges between the cells that make up the tissue of the brain.
The fact is, however, that there is no scientific foundation for
this claim. Not even the most highly advanced MR brain scans have
been able to establish where consciousness is located in the brain,
nor which chain of brain functions comprise it. All the scientific
research carried out throughout the twentieth century in order to
explain the phenomenon of consciousness shows that consciousness
has no material base.
Such a conclusion is inevitable. Matter
has no ability or essence within itself that could give rise to
consciousness. All things considered, the brain cells that are believed
to be the source of consciousness consist of nothing but unconscious
atoms. How is it that a grey, damp piece of flesh made up of such
atoms is able to create the very different characters of billions
of different people? How do carbon, oxygen, and hydrogen atoms know
how to arrange our bodies and emotions?
In fact, consciousness is an extraordinary
property, and one that cannot be explained in terms of matter. Consciousness
is literally a miracle.
Julian Huxley, an evolutionist who
spent years trying to establish a materialist foundation for consciousness,
admits his failure in these terms:
How it is that
anything so remarkable as a state of consciousness comes about as
a result of irritating nerve tissue, is just as unaccountable as
the appearance of the Djin, when Aladdin rubbed his lamp…1
Of course brain damage can affect behavior.
The chemicals people take can affect their characters. The symptoms
of schizophrenia or depression can be observed in the brain. That
is because the soul, the true origin of consciousness, extends to
the material world via the brain. However, saying that the chemistry
of the brain influences behavior and that psychological diseases
can be observed in the brain, is not sufficient to resolve the mind-body
problem. Colin McGinn, author of the book The Problem of Consciousness,
makes the following confession on the subject:
We have been trying
for a long time to solve the mind-body problem. It has stubbornly
resisted our best efforts. The mystery persists. I think the time
has come to admit candidly that we cannot solve the mystery.2
Conclusion
The claim made in Time magazine
expresses nothing more than Lemonick's own personal and ideological
fantasies. For Lemonick and other materialists, the mind-body problem
is incapable of solution.
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