PRIBRAM: That does that that your mind does it. MISHLOVE: Yet somehow when I'm aware of myself being aware, I think, "Well, that's my mind that does that." There might be something you want to call yourself, but the mind sort of makes something concrete out of something that's very multifaceted. Those are all mental processes, mental activities. PRIBRAM: Well, I don't like the term the mind, because it reifies - that means it makes a thing of - something that's a process. I wonder if you can explain that perspective - talk about what we mean, or what you mean, by the mind. You know, many academic psychologists - and perhaps you have some sympathy for this point of view - over the years have taken a perspective which laymen tend to laugh at, at times. MISHLOVE: It's a pleasure to have you here. Pribram is probably one of the most influential scholars alive today in probing the mysteries of the mind-brain relationship. Pribram is the author of Languages of the Brain and hundreds of articles about the mind-brain relationship. Karl Pribram, professor of neuropsychology at Stanford University, in the Department of Psychology and in the medical school. Our topic today is the mind-brain relationship, and my guest is Dr. JEFFREY MISHLOVE, Ph.D.: Hello and welcome. THE HOLOGRAPHIC BRAIN with KARL PRIBRAM, Ph.D.
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