Recent neuroscience, in replacing the old model of the brain as a single centralized source
of control, has emphasized “plasticity,” the quality by which our brains develop and change
throughout the course of our lives. Our brains exist as historical products, developing in
interaction with themselves and with their surroundings.
Hence there is a thin line between the organization of the nervous system and the political
and social organization that both conditions and is conditioned by human experience. Looking
carefully at contemporary neuroscience, it is hard not to notice that the new way of talking
about the brain mirrors the management discourse of the neo-liberal capitalist world in
which we now live, with its talk of decentralization, networks, and flexibility. Consciously or
unconsciously, science cannot but echo the world in which it takes place.
In the neo-liberal world, “plasticity” can be equated with “flexibility”—a term that has become
a buzzword in economics and management theory. The plastic brain would thus represent
just another style of power, which, although less centralized, is still a means of control.
In this book, Catherine Malabou develops a second, more radical meaning for plasticity. Not
only does plasticity allow our brains to adapt to existing circumstances, it opens a margin of
freedom to intervene, to change those very circumstances. Such an understanding opens up a
newly transformative aspect of the neurosciences.
In insisting on this proximity between the neurosciences and the social sciences, Malabou
applies to the brain Marx’s well-known phrase about history: people make their own brains,
but they do not know it. This book is a summons to such knowledge.
| CATHERINE MALABOU teaches philosophy at the Université de Paris X-Nanterre and at the
University at Buffalo. The most recent of her books are Les nouveaux blessés, de Freud à la
neurologie: Penser les traumatismes contemporains (The New Wounded, from Freud to Neurology:
Thinking Contemporary Traumas) and, in English translation, Plasticity at the Eve of Writing. |
| SEBASTIAN RAND is Assistant Professor of Philosophy at Georgia State University. |
| MARC JEANNEROD is the founder of the Institute for Cognitive Science in Lyon, a member
of the French Academy of Science, and a leader in the field of motor representations.
His most recent book in English is Motor Cognition: What Actions Tell the Self. |