RE: objections to "memes"

From: Gatherer, D. (Derek) (D.Gatherer@organon.nhe.akzonobel.nl)
Date: Wed Mar 22 2000 - 16:19:52 GMT

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    From: "Gatherer, D. (Derek)" <D.Gatherer@organon.nhe.akzonobel.nl>
    To: "'memetics@mmu.ac.uk'" <memetics@mmu.ac.uk>
    Subject: RE: objections to "memes"
    Date: Wed, 22 Mar 2000 17:19:52 +0100
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    Richard:
    I forget, Derek... how do you explain a learned behavior -- say cracking an
    egg open with one hand against the edge of a bowl -- being repeated over and
    over again if nothing is stored internally?

    Derek:
    Something must be happening internally, and it may well be localised, eg.
    the cabbies are all exercising their posterior hypothalami, but
    a) probably what goes on in my brain when I crack an egg is not the same as
    what goes on in yours, except in the grossest regional sense (maybe chefs,
    like cabbies, have particular parts of their brains that ... etc), so
    nothing internal replicates in any sense of the word 'replicate', except the
    fudgiest, hand-waviest etc.
    b) even if something internal does replicate in any sense worthy of the
    name, we can't currently observe it given the technology we have.

    However, the behaviour _does_ replicate and we _can_ observe it.

    In the summer of 98 I posted a short piece to the list called 'Doing the
    neural walk' (can't remember what the source of the title was) which takes
    John Eccles' description of the neural correlates of a simple behaviour, and
    shows just how
    a) difficult it would be to detect any replicating neural event, due to
    their extreme complexity, and
    b) inherently unlikely that there are such things, given what we know about
    motor control of behaviour.

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