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What’s so critical about Critical Neuroscience? Rethinking experiment, enacting critique

In the midst of on-going hype about the power and potency of the new brain sciences, scholars within “Critical Neuroscience” have called for a more nuanced and sceptical neuroscientific knowledge-practice. Drawing especially on the Frankfurt School, they urge neuroscientists towards a more critical...

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Autores principales: Fitzgerald, Des, Matusall, Svenja, Skewes, Joshua, Roepstorff, Andreas
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Frontiers Media S.A. 2014
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC4039067/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/24910605
http://dx.doi.org/10.3389/fnhum.2014.00365
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author Fitzgerald, Des
Matusall, Svenja
Skewes, Joshua
Roepstorff, Andreas
author_facet Fitzgerald, Des
Matusall, Svenja
Skewes, Joshua
Roepstorff, Andreas
author_sort Fitzgerald, Des
collection PubMed
description In the midst of on-going hype about the power and potency of the new brain sciences, scholars within “Critical Neuroscience” have called for a more nuanced and sceptical neuroscientific knowledge-practice. Drawing especially on the Frankfurt School, they urge neuroscientists towards a more critical approach—one that re-inscribes the objects and practices of neuroscientific knowledge within webs of social, cultural, historical and political-economic contingency. This paper is an attempt to open up the black-box of “critique” within Critical Neuroscience itself. Specifically, we argue that limiting enactments of critique to the invocation of context misses the force of what a highly-stylized and tightly-bound neuroscientific experiment can actually do. We show that, within the neuroscientific experiment itself, the world-excluding and context-denying “rules of the game” may also enact critique, in novel and surprising forms, while remaining formally independent of the workings of society, and culture, and history. To demonstrate this possibility, we analyze the Optimally Interacting Minds (OIM) paradigm, a neuroscientific experiment that used classical psychophysical methods to show that, in some situations, people worked better as a collective, and not as individuals—a claim that works precisely against reactionary tendencies that prioritize individual over collective agency, but that was generated and legitimized entirely within the formal, context-denying conventions of neuroscientific experimentation. At the heart of this paper is a claim that it was precisely the rigors and rules of the experimental game that allowed these scientists to enact some surprisingly critical, and even radical, gestures. We conclude by suggesting that, in the midst of large-scale neuroscientific initiatives, it may be “experiment”, and not “context”, that forms the meeting-ground between neuro-biological and socio-political research practices.
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spelling pubmed-40390672014-06-06 What’s so critical about Critical Neuroscience? Rethinking experiment, enacting critique Fitzgerald, Des Matusall, Svenja Skewes, Joshua Roepstorff, Andreas Front Hum Neurosci Neuroscience In the midst of on-going hype about the power and potency of the new brain sciences, scholars within “Critical Neuroscience” have called for a more nuanced and sceptical neuroscientific knowledge-practice. Drawing especially on the Frankfurt School, they urge neuroscientists towards a more critical approach—one that re-inscribes the objects and practices of neuroscientific knowledge within webs of social, cultural, historical and political-economic contingency. This paper is an attempt to open up the black-box of “critique” within Critical Neuroscience itself. Specifically, we argue that limiting enactments of critique to the invocation of context misses the force of what a highly-stylized and tightly-bound neuroscientific experiment can actually do. We show that, within the neuroscientific experiment itself, the world-excluding and context-denying “rules of the game” may also enact critique, in novel and surprising forms, while remaining formally independent of the workings of society, and culture, and history. To demonstrate this possibility, we analyze the Optimally Interacting Minds (OIM) paradigm, a neuroscientific experiment that used classical psychophysical methods to show that, in some situations, people worked better as a collective, and not as individuals—a claim that works precisely against reactionary tendencies that prioritize individual over collective agency, but that was generated and legitimized entirely within the formal, context-denying conventions of neuroscientific experimentation. At the heart of this paper is a claim that it was precisely the rigors and rules of the experimental game that allowed these scientists to enact some surprisingly critical, and even radical, gestures. We conclude by suggesting that, in the midst of large-scale neuroscientific initiatives, it may be “experiment”, and not “context”, that forms the meeting-ground between neuro-biological and socio-political research practices. Frontiers Media S.A. 2014-05-30 /pmc/articles/PMC4039067/ /pubmed/24910605 http://dx.doi.org/10.3389/fnhum.2014.00365 Text en Copyright © 2014 Fitzgerald, Matusall, Skewes and Roepstorff. http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/3.0/ This is an open-access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License (CC BY. The use, distribution or reproduction in other forums is permitted, provided the original author(s) or licensor are credited and that the original publication in this journal is cited, in accordance with accepted academic practice. No use, distribution or reproduction is permitted which does not comply with these terms.
spellingShingle Neuroscience
Fitzgerald, Des
Matusall, Svenja
Skewes, Joshua
Roepstorff, Andreas
What’s so critical about Critical Neuroscience? Rethinking experiment, enacting critique
title What’s so critical about Critical Neuroscience? Rethinking experiment, enacting critique
title_full What’s so critical about Critical Neuroscience? Rethinking experiment, enacting critique
title_fullStr What’s so critical about Critical Neuroscience? Rethinking experiment, enacting critique
title_full_unstemmed What’s so critical about Critical Neuroscience? Rethinking experiment, enacting critique
title_short What’s so critical about Critical Neuroscience? Rethinking experiment, enacting critique
title_sort what’s so critical about critical neuroscience? rethinking experiment, enacting critique
topic Neuroscience
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC4039067/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/24910605
http://dx.doi.org/10.3389/fnhum.2014.00365
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