3. Each hemisphere
allows us to attend to the world in different ways.
If the pop psychological conceptions of rational left
brain-emotional right brain are bogus, but the hemispheric differences do
still matter, what exactly are the distinguishing hemispheric features
worthy of attention? We could, like most neuroscientists, focus our
attention on the brain’s structure and function, on the brain’s whatness.
It brings us into a world of objects and mechanisms (a very left brain
preoccupation, as it turns out). But another way to view the differences is
the quality or texture of how the hemispheres attend to the world,
which is a right brain process. Ultimately, “how each hemisphere
does is more important than what it does.”
The right hemisphere is the “master” of the pair, and the left hemisphere
is his “emissary,” so when we ask the what questions, we are
playing by the emissary’s rules, rather than the master’s. The how
question shows us a new way of exploring the brain and attending to life.
So how do the hemispheres attend to the world?
The right hemisphere offers us breadth and flexibility,
whereas the left brain focuses and grasps. We first are present to the
world we experience (a right hemisphere process), but then the left
hemisphere processes what we are experiencing and “re-presents” parts of
that experience in a way that helps us “use” what is around us in order to
make life more manageable and livable.
The right hemisphere is what allows us to be present to new
experiences—the whole of it, whereas the left hemisphere hones in on
particulars. Once a skill, whether learning a sport or an instrument,
becomes familiar, the left brain renders those experiences as “known.”
Relatedly, the right hemisphere sees possibility and what is
“out there” in the world, whereas the left hemisphere prizes
predictability. The right hemisphere, being the more flexible, can shift to
a new paradigm, but the left hemisphere resists the disruptions to the
categories it has. It sticks to what it thinks it knows. New experiences,
new skills, new information all change the right, but not the left. The
right predicts better in the face of uncertainty, whereas the left sticks
to what it knows, even when familiar solutions won’t help. Victims of right
frontal lobe damage tend toward pathological intransigence, digging in
their heels on an issue. They go with their immediate response, with what
has worked in the past, even if a new problem requires a different tack.
They will deny, sometimes angrily, any discrepancy between their grid and
the evidence presented.
The right brain attention is broader, whereas the left brain
is more tunneled. If the right brain offers a lantern glow, the left gives
us a flashlight. We see the difference when something is “on the tip of
your tongue.” The harder you try to dredge up the information, the slimmer
your chances of retrieving it, because the left brain narrows the field of
exploration. Usually, giving it a rest gives you the best chance of
retrieval, and the memory virtually sneaks up on you at the moment you
least expect. This narrowing capacity of the left hemisphere also explains
why a left hemisphere stroke often results in augmented creativity.
Conversely, right hemisphere damage (which renders patients
more reliant on the left hemisphere) results in an inability to expand the
scope of attention. The quality of attention becomes tighter, more
unbending.
The right hemisphere looks at the whole and considers
context, whereas the left hemisphere looks at the parts and creates
abstractions that can be used regardless of context. The right hemisphere
sees individuals, whereas the left sees categories. A natural consequence
is that the right hemisphere is more relationally oriented, whereas the
goal of control motivates the left hemisphere. The right experiences life
as living, connected, and relational, whereas the left hemisphere is
anxious to create predictable mechanics.
The right hemisphere keeps us open to different ways of
doing things, to adapting our way of seeing things and pivoting to new ways
of viewing the world. The left brain struggles mightily, almost
pathologically, against these disruptions of predictable patterns.
It’s not so much that the two hemispheres “think about” the
world differently, as much as they represent two different modes of “being
in” the world. More than interesting bits of trivia, the differences
between the hemispheres are extremely consequential for how we live in the
world as individuals and as members of a particular culture and
civilization. Without realizing it, Western civilization has become overly
reliant on and unwittingly trapped in left hemisphere operations that no
longer communicate with the right (master) hemisphere.
|
No comments:
Post a Comment