tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-2349173885651707639.post3816881878224429322..comments2023-10-29T13:30:37.281-04:00Comments on Communications & Society: CCK11: The Orchestra of Mindkeith.hamonhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/08404376705918243534noreply@blogger.comBlogger2125tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-2349173885651707639.post-67552712964089126362011-03-28T13:58:17.935-04:002011-03-28T13:58:17.935-04:00You are correct, Theodore, that metaphors will tak...You are correct, Theodore, that metaphors will take us only so far, but that's true of all metaphors—this one no exception. And yes, we must account for the bicameral brain, yet to my mind, this bicameralism simply adds to the magic of networks as the structural device by which consciousness is illuminated. I find it remarkable that a single thought can be spread across both hemispheres of keith.hamonhttps://www.blogger.com/profile/08404376705918243534noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-2349173885651707639.post-24191459027163516432011-03-24T17:04:40.940-04:002011-03-24T17:04:40.940-04:00the While I love the metaphor of the mind as an or...the While I love the metaphor of the mind as an orchestra,"with clusters of violins, bassoons, and drums, with a lead violinist," many parts working in concert with one another, it will only take us so far. <br />Accepting Sporn's comment that "cognition is a network phenomenon" we must understand the twin hemispheric nature of the brain.<br />Louis Cozolino's book, &dustproductionhttps://www.blogger.com/profile/17175799632729075455noreply@blogger.com