Vocabulary List:
1. vexed: caused difficulty or worry for someone
Original sentence: "It has vexed philosophers and thinkers who have debated what the self is."
2. fray: a competitive or challenging situation
Original sentence: "A few years ago, neuroscientists also entered the fray."
3. intuitive: based on feelings rather than facts or reasoning
Original sentence: "Early efforts were motivated by an intuitive question: if we can localize vision, language, and motor control, why not the self?"
4. localize: to find or identify the exact position of something
Original sentence: "if we can localize vision, language, and motor control, why not the self?"
5. functional brain imaging: a technology that shows which parts of the brain are active during tasks
Original sentence: "With the rise of functional brain imaging in the 1990s, neuroscientists began designing experiments that contrasted self-referential mental states with non-self states."
6. self-referential: relating to or referring to oneself
Original sentence: "neuroscientists began designing experiments that contrasted self-referential mental states with non-self states."
7. adjectives: words that describe nouns
Original sentence: "In the scanner, people might be asked to judge whether adjectives applied well to themselves or others."
8. cortical midline: the central strip of the brain's outer layer
Original sentence: "These studies repeatedly identified activity along the cortical midline from front to back."
9. traction: support or acceptance that makes something progress
Original sentence: "This idea gained further traction with the discovery of the so-called 'default mode network' of brain regions"
10. default mode network: a set of brain areas active when the mind is resting or daydreaming
Original sentence: "This idea gained further traction with the discovery of the so-called 'default mode network' of brain regions"
11. interconnected: connected to each other
Original sentence: "a set of interconnected brain areas that become active when the mind is at rest"
12. introspection: the process of examining your own thoughts and feelings
Original sentence: "engaged in introspection, retrieving memories, or imagining one's future."
13. selfhood: the quality or state of being a particular person
Original sentence: "Because these mental activities feel tied to selfhood, this collection of brain areas was sometimes described loosely as the brain's 'self network.'"
14. overlapping: partly covering or sharing the same area
Original sentence: "Second, different kinds of 'self' tasks activated overlapping but not identical patterns of brain regions within the network."
15. self-evaluation: judging your own abilities or character
Original sentence: "what was being localized was not the self, but processes related to self-reference: self-evaluation, autobiographical recall, perspective-taking, and narrative construction."
16. autobiographical recall: remembering events from your own life
Original sentence: "self-evaluation, autobiographical recall, perspective-taking, and narrative construction."
17. perspective-taking: imagining or understanding another person's point of view
Original sentence: "self-evaluation, autobiographical recall, perspective-taking, and narrative construction."
18. narrative construction: creating a story or explanation
Original sentence: "self-evaluation, autobiographical recall, perspective-taking, and narrative construction."
19. consensus: general agreement among a group of people
Original sentence: "The consensus is that the self has not been localized by these sorts of brain scanning studies."
20. category mistake: an error of putting something into the wrong type of category
Original sentence: "Daniel Dennett, the philosopher, famously argued that searching for the self in the brain was a category mistake, akin to searching for the center of gravity of an object."
21. akin: similar to
Original sentence: "searching for the self in the brain was a category mistake, akin to searching for the center of gravity of an object."
22. physical properties: characteristics that can be measured or seen, such as weight or size
Original sentence: "The self has no physical properties."
23. theorist's fiction: an idea invented by thinkers rather than something real
Original sentence: "It is not a real thing but a theorist's fiction."
24. proclaimed: announced or stated publicly and firmly
Original sentence: "No one has ever seen or ever will see a center of gravity. As David Hume noted, no one has ever seen a self, either," Dennett proclaimed.
25. useful abstraction: a general idea that helps understanding even if not physically real
Original sentence: "The self, according to Dennett, is a useful abstraction: a narrative construct that we create to explain who we are"
26. narrative construct: a story or explanation built by the mind
Original sentence: "a narrative construct that we create to explain who we are, not a biological object waiting to be found."
27. biological object: a physical thing that is alive or part of a living being
Original sentence: "not a biological object waiting to be found."
28. illusory: not real, based on an illusion
Original sentence: "It is illusory."
29. virtuoso novelists: extremely skilled storytellers
Original sentence: "We are all virtuoso novelists," he quipped.
30. quipped: said something clever or funny
Original sentence: "We are all virtuoso novelists," he quipped.
31. cohere: to fit together logically or consistently
Original sentence: "We try to make all of our material cohere into a single good story."
32. autobiography: a story of a person's life written by that person
Original sentence: "And that story is our autobiography."
33. chief: most important or main
Original sentence: "The chief fictional character at the center of that autobiography is one's self."
34. theatre: a place where performances happen; used metaphorically for a central stage
Original sentence: "His theory rejected the idea of a single, unified 'theatre' in the brain where experiences are presented to an inner observer."
35. inner observer: an imaginary person inside your mind watching your experiences
Original sentence: "where experiences are presented to an inner observer."
36. parallel: happening at the same time but separately
Original sentence: "what we call conscious experience of the self is actually the outcome of many parallel, distributed, and competing neural processes"
37. distributed: spread across different areas rather than concentrated in one place
Original sentence: "the outcome of many parallel, distributed, and competing neural processes"
38. competing: working against each other for priority
Original sentence: "many parallel, distributed, and competing neural processes"
39. multiple drafts: many different versions or attempts
Original sentence: "multiple drafts — none of which is intrinsically privileged as the final version."
40. intrinsically privileged: naturally having special advantage or authority
Original sentence: "none of which is intrinsically privileged as the final version."
41. emergent property: a quality that appears from the interaction of simpler parts
Original sentence: "Marvin Minsky, who argued that the self is simply the emergent result of many interacting brain processes."
42. society of mind: Minsky's theory that mind is made of many small agents working together
Original sentence: "For Minsky, this 'Society of Mind' is a collection of semi-independent agents"
43. semi-independent agents: partly separate small units that can act on their own
Original sentence: "a collection of semi-independent agents — simple mechanisms that each do one small thing well"
44. coordination: organizing different parts to work together smoothly
Original sentence: "Intelligent behavior arises from their coordination."
45. unitary thinker: a single, central thinking entity
Original sentence: "Minsky was deliberately opposing the intuitive idea that somewhere in the brain there must be a unitary thinker."
46. master agent: a central controller that gives orders
Original sentence: "There is no such master agent, according to him."
47. attracted fire: received strong criticism or opposition
Original sentence: "These ideas have had great influence but also attracted fire."
48. fragmented: broken into separate, disconnected pieces
Original sentence: "this does not explain why the self feels singular, not fragmented."
49. first-person subjective experience: personal feeling of being yourself from your own perspective
Original sentence: "They don't explain the experience of being a unified self – the first-person subjective experience of being who we are."
50. easy problem: in consciousness studies, problems about how the brain functions
Original sentence: "They deal with the 'easy problem' of how cognitive functions operate"
51. hard problem: the mystery of why and how brain activity creates subjective experience
Original sentence: "but not the 'hard problem' of conscious experience."
52. reductionist explanation: an explanation that breaks things down into simpler parts
Original sentence: "No amount of reductionist explanation, Chalmers argues, logically entails the existence of experience."
53. entails: makes necessary or implies
Original sentence: "No amount of reductionist explanation, Chalmers argues, logically entails the existence of experience."
54. neurodegenerative condition: a disease that progressively damages nerve cells
Original sentence: "Researchers have been observing what happens to people who have suffered a stroke or developed a neurodegenerative condition such as Alzheimer's disease."
55. focal impairment: damage limited to a very specific area or function
Original sentence: "Some of these individuals can have highly focal impairment, limited to one cognitive process or module."
56. module: a specialized part or unit of the mind or brain
Original sentence: "limited to one cognitive process or module."
57. visual perception: the ability to see and understand what you see
Original sentence: "They may, for example, have difficulty with visual perception, paying attention, retrieving information from memory, comprehending language, understanding concepts, and being motivated."
58. comprehending language: understanding spoken or written words
Original sentence: "comprehending language, understanding concepts, and being motivated."
59. articulate: able to express thoughts and feelings clearly
Original sentence: "To begin with, he seemed to be highly articulate."
60. evident: clear or obvious
Original sentence: "As we talked more though, it began to be evident that he didn't understand the meaning of some words that he really should know."
61. semantics: the study or area of meaning in language
Original sentence: "it became clear that Michael was suffering from a highly limited impairment in semantics — understanding the meaning of words and the concepts that are attached to them."
62. semantic dementia: a brain disease that slowly destroys knowledge of word meanings
Original sentence: "His diagnosis was semantic dementia."
63. inclined: tending or willing to do something
Original sentence: "He didn't understand jokes and became less inclined to talk."
64. sense of humor: the ability to find things funny
Original sentence: "His friends thought that he'd lost his sense of humor and came to visit him less."
65. isolated: separated from others, alone
Original sentence: "He became more isolated."
66. demonstrate: to show or prove clearly
Original sentence: "What do stories such as Michael's reveal about our selves? At one level, they demonstrate that the self can be altered."
67. eroded: gradually destroyed or worn away
Original sentence: "People behave differently if their semantics and understanding of concepts are eroded."
68. visual hallucinations: seeing things that are not really there
Original sentence: "Similarly, for individuals whose perception might be impaired, start to experience visual hallucinations"
69. disinhibited: behaving without normal restraint or control
Original sentence: "or become disinhibited in their behavior."
70. dysfunction: abnormal or unhealthy functioning
Original sentence: "All these types of dysfunction in a limited cognitive module can lead to profound changes in a person's identity."
71. identity: who a person is, their character and sense of self
Original sentence: "profound changes in a person's identity."
72. social identity: how others see and define you in society
Original sentence: "They can also alter how they appear to others and have a huge impact on their social identity."
73. first-person perspective: the viewpoint of being yourself
Original sentence: "They still have a first-person perspective on the fact that they are a person with a sense of self."
74. neurological observations: findings from studying the nervous system and brain disorders
Original sentence: "In this way, these neurological observations support the view that the self is not housed in one particular brain region"
75. distributed constellation: a scattered group of connected elements (like stars in a pattern)
Original sentence: "but rather emerges from the activities of a distributed constellation of cognitive modules."
76. focal brain disruption: damage to a specific small area of the brain
Original sentence: "Focal brain disruption to one of these does not eliminate the self."
77. selectively alters: changes only some aspects while leaving others unchanged
Original sentence: "It selectively alters it."
78. integral parts: essential or necessary pieces
Original sentence: "They are integral parts of the 'Society of the Mind' that creates our self."
79. personal identity: your own sense of who you are as an individual
Original sentence: "Very basic brain functions clearly play a key role in determining who we are — our personal identity."
80. definitive answer: final, certain, and complete solution
Original sentence: "we don't have a definitive answer to what makes up the self."
81. discipline: a branch of knowledge or academic study
Original sentence: "And we don't know whether philosophy, neuroscience, or both will be the discipline that helps us answer this question once and for all."