Literature DB >> 20518157

Taking care of one's brain: how manipulating the brain changes people's selves.

Jonna Brenninkmeijer1.   

Abstract

The increasing attention to the brain in science and the media, and people's continuing quest for a better life, have resulted in a successful self-help industry for brain enhancement. Apart from brain books, foods and games, there are several devices on the market that people can use to stimulate their brains and become happier, healthier or more successful. People can, for example, switch their brain state into relaxation or concentration with a light-and-sound machine, they can train their brain waves to cure their Attention Deficit Hyperactivity Disorder (ADHD) or solve their sleeping problems with a neurofeedback device, or they can influence the firing of their neurons with electric or magnetic stimulation to overcome their depression and anxieties. Working on your self with a brain device can be seen as a contemporary form of Michel Foucault's "technologies of the self." Foucault described how since antiquity people had used techniques such as reading manuscripts, listening to teachers, or saying prayers to "act on their selves" and control their own thoughts and behaviours. Different techniques, Foucault stated, are based on different precepts and constitute different selves. I follow Foucault by stating that using a brain device for self-improvement indeed constitutes a new self. Drawing on interviews with users of brain devices and observations of the practices in brain clinics, I analyse how a new self takes shape in the use of brain devices; not a monistic (neuroscientific) self, but a "layered" self of all kinds of entities that exchange and control each other continuously.

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Year:  2010        PMID: 20518157     DOI: 10.1177/0952695109352824

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Hist Human Sci        ISSN: 0952-6951            Impact factor:   0.690


  2 in total

1.  Prudence, pleasure, and cognitive ageing: Configurations of the uses and users of brain training games within UK media, 2005-2015.

Authors:  Martyn Pickersgill; Tineke Broer; Sarah Cunningham-Burley; Ian Deary
Journal:  Soc Sci Med       Date:  2017-06-21       Impact factor: 4.634

2.  The changing brain: Neuroscience and the enduring import of everyday experience.

Authors:  Martyn Pickersgill; Paul Martin; Sarah Cunningham-Burley
Journal:  Public Underst Sci       Date:  2014-03-04
  2 in total

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