You might wonder, at some point today, what’s going
on in another person’s mind. You may compliment someone’s great mind, or
say they are out of their mind. You may even try to expand or free your
own mind.
But what is a mind? Defining the concept is
a surprisingly slippery task. The mind is the seat of consciousness,
the essence of your being. Without a mind, you cannot be considered
meaningfully alive. So what exactly, and where precisely, is it?
Traditionally, scientists have tried to define the
mind as the product of brain activity: The brain is the physical
substance, and the mind is the conscious product of those firing
neurons, according to the classic argument. But growing evidence shows
that the mind goes far beyond the physical workings of your brain.
No doubt, the brain plays an incredibly important role.
But our mind cannot be confined to what’s inside our skull, or even our
body, according to a definition first put forward by Dan Siegel, a
professor of psychiatry at UCLA School of Medicine and the author of the 2016 book,
Mind: A Journey to the Heart of Being Human.
Mind: A Journey to the Heart of Being Human.
He first came up with the definition more than two
decades ago, at a meeting of 40 scientists across disciplines, including
neuroscientists, physicists, sociologists, and anthropologists. The aim
was to come to an understanding of the mind that would appeal to common
ground and satisfy those wrestling with the question across these
fields.
After much discussion, they decided that a key
component of the mind is: “the emergent self-organizing process, both
embodied and relational, that regulates energy and information flow
within and among us.” It’s not catchy. But it is interesting, and with
meaningful implications.
The most immediately shocking element of this
definition is that our mind extends beyond our physical selves. In other
words, our mind is not simply our perception of experiences, but those
experiences themselves. Siegel argues that it’s impossible to completely
disentangle our subjective view of the world from our interactions.
“I realized if someone asked me to define the
shoreline but insisted, is it the water or the sand, I would have to say
the shore is both sand and sea,” says Siegel. “You can’t limit our
understanding of the coastline to insist it’s one or the other. I
started thinking, maybe the mind is like the coastline—some inner and
inter process. Mental life for an anthropologist or sociologist is
profoundly social. Your thoughts, feelings, memories, attention, what
you experience in this subjective world is part of mind.”
The definition has since been supported by research
across the sciences, but much of the original idea came from
mathematics. Siegel realized the mind meets the mathematical definition
of a complex system in that it’s open (can influence things outside
itself), chaos capable (which simply means it’s roughly randomly
distributed), and non-linear (which means a small input leads to large
and difficult to predict result).
In math, complex systems are self-organizing, and
Siegel believes this idea is the foundation to mental health. Again
borrowing from the mathematics, optimal self-organization is: flexible,
adaptive, coherent, energized, and stable. This means that without
optimal self-organization, you arrive at either chaos or rigidity—a
notion that, Siegel says, fits the range of symptoms of mental health
disorders.
Finally, self-organization demands linking together
differentiated ideas or, essentially, integration. And Siegel says
integration—whether that’s within the brain or within society—is the
foundation of a healthy mind.
Siegel says he wrote his book now because he sees so
much misery in society, and he believes this is partly shaped by how we
perceive our own minds. He talks of doing research in Namibia, where
people he spoke to attributed their happiness to a sense of belonging.
When Siegel was asked in return whether he belonged
in America, his answer was less upbeat: “I thought how isolated we all
are and how disconnected we feel,” he says. “In our modern society we
have this belief that mind is brain activity and this means the self,
which comes from the mind, is separate and we don’t really belong. But
we’re all part of each others’ lives. The mind is not just brain
activity. When we realize it’s this relational process, there’s this
huge shift in this sense of belonging.”
In other words, even perceiving our mind as simply a
product of our brain, rather than relations, can make us feel more
isolated. And to appreciate the benefits of interrelations, you simply
have to open your mind
This article was originally published on
December 24, 2016, by Quartz, and is republished here with permission.
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