Originally Posted by
RideTheWalrus
I don't think that our current explanation 'works' at all. It does adequately address some of the correlations between mind and brain, but it also dismisses a great deal of inconvenient observable evidence that throws the whole model into question.
For example, in the case of dying people who have developed severe brain damage. Often, in the later stages of disease, these people can't even remember the names and faces of family members. In the hours approaching their death, sometimes these people will spontaneously become lucid and clear of thought. They will remember faces, names, and be able to speak clearly despite the fact that the brain damage supposedly responsible for their cognitive affliction is still very much there. This phenomenon is well known as "Terminal Lucidity".
Similarly there is a brain affliction known as hydrocephalus. In the most severe cases of hydrocephalus, a patient can be left with less than 5% of the brain mass of a normal person - and yet, even in these most severe cases there are patients who have above average IQs and seemingly no mental deficits.
The last one I'll bring up here is acquired savant syndrome - where brain damage actually results in radically increased mental abilities.
Those who believe consciousness to be a creation of the brain are left in an uncomfortable position by these kinds of mysteries. After all, if the brain produces consciousness why would brain damage result in radically increased mental abilities? Why are some people with severe brain tumors suddenly able to transcend their brain damage and remember people, faces, and hold a normal conversation as their death nears? How would people be able to live a normal life with a miniscule fraction of a normal brain?