Litcius/Paper detail

Integration, lateralization, and animal experience

Peter Godfrey‐Smith

2021Mind & Language31 citationsDOI

Abstract

Many vertebrate animals approximate, to various degrees, the “split‐brain” condition that results from surgery done in humans to treat severe epilepsy, with very limited connection between the left and right sides of the upper parts of the brain. The split‐brain condition has been the topic of extensive philosophical discussion, because it appears, in some circumstances, to give rise to two minds within one body. Is the same true of these animals? This article attempts to make progress on two difficult topics—animal experience, and the consequences of the human split‐brain condition—by considering both at once.

Topics & Concepts

Lateralization of brain functionPsychologyCognitive scienceConnection (principal bundle)Cognitive psychologyNeuroscienceMathematicsGeometryHemispheric Asymmetry in NeuroscienceChild and Animal Learning DevelopmentCephalopods and Marine Biology