The Brain Without the Body? Virtual Reality, Neuroscience and the Living Flesh

Since the early 1990s, the architect and artist Marcos Novak has been developing an experimental and transdisciplinary practice at a point of convergence between architecture, art, science, technology and philosophy, questioning the becoming of the digitally-enhanced body. With AlloBrain@AlloSphere,...

Full description

Saved in:
Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Marion Roussel
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: SAES 2016-04-01
Series:Angles
Subjects:
Online Access:https://journals.openedition.org/angles/1872
Tags: Add Tag
No Tags, Be the first to tag this record!
_version_ 1850129333719400448
author Marion Roussel
author_facet Marion Roussel
author_sort Marion Roussel
collection DOAJ
description Since the early 1990s, the architect and artist Marcos Novak has been developing an experimental and transdisciplinary practice at a point of convergence between architecture, art, science, technology and philosophy, questioning the becoming of the digitally-enhanced body. With AlloBrain@AlloSphere, a virtual reality environment developed between 2005 and 2009 with the support of the Brain Mapping Center (University of California, Los Angeles), Novak proposes an immersive exploration of our brain spaces. AlloBrain is modelled from brain MRIs, extruded in the form of a three-dimensional volume. The experience offered is that of an immersion inside our heads. However, in this way of looking beyond the face, we find it hard to recognise ourselves. Projections or exteriorisations of a hidden interiority, the showing of these unknown territories of the body, of this anonymous and subterranean singularity, arouse an uncanny feeling in us. The explored interior is not that of the mind or of consciousness but, very strictly, that of the brain, more precisely that of a brain without a body, without flesh, a bare and digitally reconstructed enclosed space that yet appears empty of interiority. Are we dealing with a project that tries to explain the mind by mere brain matter, similar to the cognitive sciences or neurosciences? Still, the effect of uncanniness produced by the immersion in AlloBrain seems to result from the confrontation between this “naked brain” and our subjective experience, which seems unable to dispose of the physical body we inhabit and that inhabits us, too. Thus, what AlloBrain causes is a real return to the flesh, a lived-in and living flesh, highlighting a particularity that is nonetheless alien to us, because in reality something always resists. It not the thing that cannot be captured by digitisation the phenomenal “I” itself, the “I” by which we experience our body and the world? Such a hypothesis would give us ground to doubt that by avoiding the materiality of the body, by uploading our minds in the machine, we could remain the same.
format Article
id doaj-art-78eb664ccf26475eb73ddb0fa8a66b98
institution OA Journals
issn 2274-2042
language English
publishDate 2016-04-01
publisher SAES
record_format Article
series Angles
spelling doaj-art-78eb664ccf26475eb73ddb0fa8a66b982025-08-20T02:33:02ZengSAESAngles2274-20422016-04-01210.4000/angles.1872The Brain Without the Body? Virtual Reality, Neuroscience and the Living FleshMarion RousselSince the early 1990s, the architect and artist Marcos Novak has been developing an experimental and transdisciplinary practice at a point of convergence between architecture, art, science, technology and philosophy, questioning the becoming of the digitally-enhanced body. With AlloBrain@AlloSphere, a virtual reality environment developed between 2005 and 2009 with the support of the Brain Mapping Center (University of California, Los Angeles), Novak proposes an immersive exploration of our brain spaces. AlloBrain is modelled from brain MRIs, extruded in the form of a three-dimensional volume. The experience offered is that of an immersion inside our heads. However, in this way of looking beyond the face, we find it hard to recognise ourselves. Projections or exteriorisations of a hidden interiority, the showing of these unknown territories of the body, of this anonymous and subterranean singularity, arouse an uncanny feeling in us. The explored interior is not that of the mind or of consciousness but, very strictly, that of the brain, more precisely that of a brain without a body, without flesh, a bare and digitally reconstructed enclosed space that yet appears empty of interiority. Are we dealing with a project that tries to explain the mind by mere brain matter, similar to the cognitive sciences or neurosciences? Still, the effect of uncanniness produced by the immersion in AlloBrain seems to result from the confrontation between this “naked brain” and our subjective experience, which seems unable to dispose of the physical body we inhabit and that inhabits us, too. Thus, what AlloBrain causes is a real return to the flesh, a lived-in and living flesh, highlighting a particularity that is nonetheless alien to us, because in reality something always resists. It not the thing that cannot be captured by digitisation the phenomenal “I” itself, the “I” by which we experience our body and the world? Such a hypothesis would give us ground to doubt that by avoiding the materiality of the body, by uploading our minds in the machine, we could remain the same.https://journals.openedition.org/angles/1872uncannyvirtual realitymind-bodysubjective experiencephenomenal consciousness
spellingShingle Marion Roussel
The Brain Without the Body? Virtual Reality, Neuroscience and the Living Flesh
Angles
uncanny
virtual reality
mind-body
subjective experience
phenomenal consciousness
title The Brain Without the Body? Virtual Reality, Neuroscience and the Living Flesh
title_full The Brain Without the Body? Virtual Reality, Neuroscience and the Living Flesh
title_fullStr The Brain Without the Body? Virtual Reality, Neuroscience and the Living Flesh
title_full_unstemmed The Brain Without the Body? Virtual Reality, Neuroscience and the Living Flesh
title_short The Brain Without the Body? Virtual Reality, Neuroscience and the Living Flesh
title_sort brain without the body virtual reality neuroscience and the living flesh
topic uncanny
virtual reality
mind-body
subjective experience
phenomenal consciousness
url https://journals.openedition.org/angles/1872
work_keys_str_mv AT marionroussel thebrainwithoutthebodyvirtualrealityneuroscienceandthelivingflesh
AT marionroussel brainwithoutthebodyvirtualrealityneuroscienceandthelivingflesh