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Are you really reading this? A primer in skepticism
Tuesday, 13 February 2007 17:37
Marc Mullinax
MARS HILL ó Now, something completely different. Iíve run across the ìbrain in the vatî (BIV) concept as Iíve tried recently to teach Socratesí famous preachment on why the unexamined life is not worth living. In the teaching Iíve discovered a brand new drug.

The BIV idea is indebted to Descartes, but illustrates ideas of Socrates, Platoís Allegory of the Cave, and other fascinating premises about what an individual can really know. It goes like this:

Imagine that science can remove your brain, suspend it in a special vat that would keep it alive, and then wire it to a special program that stimulates it in an infinite variety of ways (much like our world stimulates our brains). Your brain would then still be experiencing, but virtually, by electrical impulses. Through your brain you continue to sense what appears to be normal conscious experiences.
That is, stimulate your brain a certain way, and youíre running the opening kickoff in the Super Bowl for a touchdown, winning the Nobel Prize, hiking on the moon, being famous, living out your fantasies ... whatever ... you ... want.

Since a BIV operates the same as if it were in a skull, and electrical activity is its only way of interacting with its environment, then it is not possible to tell, from the perspective of that brain, whether it is in a skull or a vat.

If you are not sure that you are not a BIV, then you cannot rule out the possibility that all of your beliefs about the external world are artificial or virtual. You could be living a program, a lie, or virtual reality. Since it is nigh-impossible to rule out your being a BIV, you cannot have good grounds for believing any of your beliefs.


This is the ultimate stance of the skeptic: we live in a dream world. You are just dreaming that you are now reading on p. 21 of the Asheville Daily Planet. There is no eyeball, no body, just a stimulated BIV.

Whatís wrong with this idea? We could be living a drug addictís life. Whatever you want is this new drugís name. Imagine your brain stimulated as strongly and as long as ìyouî want. Electrical signals stimulate the brain either way, so why not put it on the narcotic, ìWhatever you wantî? Why not have it all, all the time?

Whoís doing the stimulation of our brains? Well, if we are slutted out to the culture, without a mind to call our own, we might as well be a BIV hooked up to anything. And if through some feedback process we get to do ìwhatever we want,î then our lives remain essentially determined by others, and we remain a morass of unexamined desires that enable us to evade response-ability.


Once on this ìwhatever you wantî drug, would the BIV ever want to question its addictive reality? I doubt it. We rarely understand addictions enough to decode how they work on us. The solution to this BIV scheme (if true) is really to know ourselves by asking the most uncomfortable questions. I cannot tell if we are one big simulation game. Skepticism may be the only way out; skepticism coupled with an examined life. While believers may be happier, give me skepticism any day for understanding belief. Skepticism is not denial; being addicted is.


Is the BIV farfetched? Maybe. Good science fiction, such as the Holodeck simulator in ìStar Trek: The Next Generation,î ìThe Matrixî trilogy, ìThe Truman Showî and ìVanilla Sky,î start a long list of plausible scenarios that say, ìmaybe not.î What, and who, stimulates your brain? Seems important to know.


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Dr. Marc S. Mullinax, chairman of the philosophy and religion departments at Mars Hill College, can be reached at mmullinax-at-mhc.edu.

 



 


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