 |

 |
 |
 |
 E-mail your letter to the editor
|
 |
 |
|
 |
 |
 |
 |
ILLUSTRATION FOR TIME BY BRIAN CRONIN |
|
 |
| Your Mind, Your Body |
 |
 |
Doctors and scientists are learning how emotions are connected to our physical health
|
 |
 |

By Michael D. Lemonick |
|
 |
Posted Sunday, January 12, 2002; 8:31 a.m. EST
If you close your eyes and think about it for a while, as philosophers have done for centuries, the world of the mind seems very different from the
one inhabited by our bodies. The psychic space inside our heads is infinite and ethereal; it seems obvious that it must be made of different stuff
than all the other organs. Cut into the body, and blood pours forth. But slice into the brain, and thoughts and emotions don't spill out onto the
operating table. Love and anger can't be collected in a test tube to be weighed and measured.
Rene Descartes, the great 17th century French mathematician and philosopher, enshrined this metaphysical divide in what came to be known in Western
philosophy as mind-body dualism. Many Eastern mystical traditions, contemplating the same inner space, have come to the opposite conclusion. They
teach that the mind and body belong to an indivisible continuum.
In the past, doctors and scientists have tended to dismiss that view as bunk, but the more they learn about the inner workings of the mind, the
more they realize that in this regard at least, the mystics are right and Descartes was dead wrong.
Mind and body, psychologists and neurologists now agree, aren't that different. The brain is just another organ, albeit more intricate than the
rest. The thoughts and emotions that seem to color our reality are the result of complex electrochemical interactions within and between nerve
cells. The disembodied voices of schizophrenia and the feelings of worthlessness and self-hatred that accompany depression, although they seem to
be based on reality, are no more than distortions in brain electrochemistry. Researchers are learning how these distortions arise, how to lessen
their severity and, in some cases, how to correct them.
Scientists are also learning something else. Not only is the mind like the rest of the body, but the well-being of one is intimately intertwined
with that of the other. This makes sense because they share the same systemsnervous, circulatory, endocrine and immune. What happens in the
pancreas or liver can directly affect brain function. Disorders of the brain, conversely, can send out biochemical shock waves that disturb the
rest of the body. The pages that follow, our annual special report on health, take you to the cutting edge of mind-body research, where scientists,
having left Descartes's great mistake far behind, are exploring how the brain works, how it malfunctions, and what can be done when it goes awry.
 |
 |
 |
 |

NATION
Can This War Be Avoided?
Many push for alternatives. But those who know Bush say, Don't bet on it
NATION
Get Ready for Class Warfare
Critics say Bush's plan outrageously favors the rich. The President says nonsense, everyone gets a break. But here's the question worth exploring:
Does the economy win or lose in all this
arm wrestling?
|
|
BUSINESS
Tight Skivvies
They're what everyone's wearing this season. Here's why
ARTS
What They Really Want Is to Direct
Big-name stars like George Clooney, Nicolas Cage and Denzel Washington are using their box-office clout to get their shot behind the camera
|
|
|
|
|
 |
 |


|
 |