Article ID: CBB001201194

Conceptual Mediation: Philosophy between the History of Physiology and Contemporary Neuroscience (2014)

unapi

In the 1780s the anatomist Vincenzo Malacarne discussed the possibility of testing experimentally whether experience can induce significant changes in the brain. Malacarne imagined taking two littermate animals and giving intensive training to one while the other received none, then dissecting their brains to see whether the trained animal had more folds in the cerebellum than the untrained one. This experimental design somewhat anticipated one used 180 years later by Mark R. Rosenzweig at the University of California, Berkeley. This paper explores some methodological aspects of the case study just outlined by pointing out that our grounds for being interested in it are neither merely neuroscientific (for, strictly speaking, Malacarne's proposal was false) nor narrowly historical (for there is no causal chain linking Malacarne's ideas to Rosenzweig's experiment). Rather, the really interesting point here is to what extent Malacarne's ideas are similar to Rosenzweig's, a point that we can better investigate by employing certain conceptual tools borrowed typically (but not exclusively) from (a certain kind of) philosophy. If we do not handle the analogy with care, we run the risk of `discovering' nothing but void platitudes or anachronistically misleading common features.

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Authors & Contributors
Wainer, Juan Manuel Garrido
Yan, Karen
Hricko, Jonathan
Beard, Alexander
Hirmas, Natalia
Schregel, Susanne
Concepts
Neurosciences
Brain
Philosophy of science
Experiments and experimentation
Physiology
Methodology of science; scientific method
Time Periods
19th century
18th century
21st century
20th century, late
20th century
17th century
Places
Scotland
Poland
Germany
Austria
Chile
Institutions
Johns Hopkins University, Baltimore
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