DBT
Contributor
So when you use the fallacious argument that something is a widely believed dogma, therefore it is true, that is not persuasive.
Neuroscience can make no statements about consciousness because it does not know what consciousness is.
Chomsky? Holy boloney, the man is as irrational as you when it comes to neurophysiology.
You need to do better than that, mr untermensche;
On neurophysiology
Even Chomsky realizes that it is the brain that does the thinking, and that the brain is made of neurons and neuroglia. Thus sciences of neurons, neuroglia and brain anatomy, collectively called neurophysiology, are important in understanding human thinking.
Not according to Chomsky. Here is what he has to say in a newer book
(Chomsky (1993). Language and Thought. Moyer Bell, 1-55921-074-5)(P. 85):
"In fact, the belief that neurophysiology is even relevant to the functioning of the mind is just a hypothesis. Who knows if we're looking at the right aspect of the brain at all. Maybe there are other aspects of the brain that nobody has even dreamt of looking at yet.".
Thus Chomsky can dismiss complete fields of science as 'just a hypothesis'. Note that what Chomsky is dismissing is not specific theories inside neurophysiology, but the whole field, and that it is not based on any evidence to contradict the fundamental tenets of neurophysiology. It is based on the possibility of 'other aspects of the brain', but Chomsky does not tell us how these 'other aspects' could have escaped years of scrutiny by invasive methods in both animals and humans patients.
Dismissing whole sciences without evidence may seem outrageous, but it follows directly from Chomsky ideas about science. If science is 'blind luck', then neurophysiology can be simply a bad draw.
There is special significance for dismissing neurophysiology, because while Chomsky's ideas can be easily shown to be nonsense, they can be totally refuted (or confirmed) only by neurophysiological evidence. Thus by dismissing neurophysiology as 'a hypothesis', Chomsky protects his ideas from refutation.
6. Conclusion
Chomsky believes that learning of novel concepts is impossible, and hence that everything must be built in, as part of human 'biological endowment'. This applies not only to language, but to everything, including general knowledge about the world, numerical ability and science inquiry ('blind luck').
The amazing thing about these statements is not that Chomsky states them, as many people state all kinds of nonsense. The amazing thing is that after stating these, he is still regarded seriously by any intelligent person. In particular, considering his contempt to science, it seems surprising that serious scientists regard him as an authority. ''