{"id":468,"date":"2008-11-19T09:53:27","date_gmt":"2008-11-19T08:53:27","guid":{"rendered":"http:\/\/cognitionandculture.local\/?p=468"},"modified":"2023-08-07T11:54:34","modified_gmt":"2023-08-07T09:54:34","slug":"your-brain-needs-a-british-headmistress","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/cognitionandculture.local\/blogs\/michaels-blog\/your-brain-needs-a-british-headmistress\/","title":{"rendered":"Your brain needs a British headmistress"},"content":{"rendered":"
(Editor’s note) Anthropologist Michael Stewart considers the unexpected impact of\u00a0 pop-cognitive science on British schoolgirls.<\/em><\/p>\n I was struck this week how easily work in the field of cognition and culture is acquired and transposed by others with strange agendas \u2013 as is always the case with an academic discipline that is making waves.<\/p>\n Time was when tribal justifications were all the rage. In the late 1960s it was anthropologists whose writings set the printing presses churning. Mary Douglas, Edmund Leach and even Colin Turnbull became household names in educated families. More recently, evolutionary explanations seem to been the mode at the millennium and now it is the turn of \u2018cognitive science.\u2019 With Nature running a new, occasional series on \u2018what it is to be human\u2019 kicked off recently by Pascal Boyer and followed up by Eors Szathmary (on language origins) it is clear that \u2018culture and cognition\u2019 is the tune of the moment.<\/p>\n And while the field should make the most of its fifteen minutes of fame, there is a downside…<\/p>\n However hard scholars in the spotlight try and preserve the integrity and complexity of their vision, it seems their efforts are in vain. At the LSE seminar last week Annette Karmiloff-Smith was arguing, inter alia, against simplistic models linking mental performances in a rigidly fixed fashion to localised brain functions. The developmental evidence (of changes in the brain regions associated with task processing) spoke flatly against single stranded links between architecture and function. She argued persuasively that we should all pay far greater attention to the way our neural architecture changes over time. This, at least, might guard against the crazier forms of reductionist simplification, she hoped.<\/p>\n And then, yesterday morning I was woken just before seven o\u2019clock by the radio program that provides the morning prayer of the realist these days in the UK. At 6.51 precisely, up popped a Ms. Vicky Tuck, headmistress of the above pictured school urging us all to become familiar with the latest findings of neuroscience. Ms Tuck was on the airwaves [BBC’s morning\u00a0Today Program) to argue that the general decline in single sex schools in our pretty lands is contrary to the nature of \u2018the adolescent brain\u2019 and all human inclination since the 1960s to bring the male and female of the anglo-saxon species together at this stage of their development had been to their irrevocable detriment. Ms Tuck had acquired all the latest knowledge and spoke its attendant jargon with remarkable fluency and authority \u2013 I pity her girls who try and pick a dispute with her –\u00a0 but rendered the \u2018stages\u2019 of development as rigidly and as monochromatically as may be conceivable “With the girls, they approach maths through the cerebral cortex\u201d she told us, \u201cwhile the boys do it through the hippocampus ……” and the impact of neural architecture did not stop there: with literature in boys “it’s the amygdala that is very strong”\u00a0 whereas the (poor or fortunate?) girls with all their emotional empathies were stuck with the cerebral cortex again. And from there it was no step at all to suggest that the follies of the 1960s be set once and for all behind us and the poor dears of the fair sex be cloistered once more alone.<\/p>\n As a plea to the ever anxious parents of middle England to spare their daughter\u2019s honour in more way than one, I think Ms Tuck is probably onto something. And who are we to care that the science is all scrambled \u2013 it will be someone else\u2019s eggs in the mix in ten year\u2019s time. We should, perhaps, be grateful that ours are so marketable today.<\/p>\n Link<\/a> to The Independent dwelling on Ms. Tuck’s doctrine. (Editor’s note) Anthropologist Michael Stewart considers the unexpected impact of\u00a0 pop-cognitive science on British schoolgirls. I was struck this week how easily work in the field of cognition and culture is acquired and transposed by others with strange agendas \u2013 as is always the case with an academic discipline that is making waves. The Girls\u2019 […]<\/p>\n","protected":false},"author":801,"featured_media":0,"comment_status":"open","ping_status":"closed","sticky":false,"template":"","format":"standard","meta":{"footnotes":""},"categories":[55],"tags":[],"acf":[],"yoast_head":"\n<\/a>The Girls\u2019 neural architecture will be well protected by Cheltenham Ladies’ College educational architecture
\n(Cheltenham Ladies’ college in the 50s).<\/h6>\n<\/a>Cheltenham Ladies’ School Headmistress Vicky Tuck.
\nSource: The Telegraph (telegraph.co.uk)<\/h6>\n
\n
\nLink<\/a> to The Neuroskeptic writing about Vicky and the Crockus (sounds like a Roald Dahl title).<\/p>\n","protected":false},"excerpt":{"rendered":"