This is the first of a series of posts on mind myths. Mind myths
typically arise as a result of hucksters' attempts to use the allure of
neuroscience to sell New Age type self-improvement products. I would
place such mind myths in one of four categories:
Representing
the originator's fantasy and bearing no resemblance to any neuroscience
findings. The 10% myth would be one of these.
Misinterpretation or misrepresentation of actual neuroscience findings. The whole-brain craze comes to mind.
The
inappropriate or premature application of actual neuroscience findings,
for example attempts to implement neuroscience findings before they
have been well replicated.
Using neuroscience explanations
redundantly for well-known cognitive processes in order to sound more
scientific. Much of so-called brain based education and brain based management would fall into this category.
I'm
starting the series with the most common of the myths, the claim that
we only use 10% of our brain. Hucksters commonly claim that their
products can activate the other 90% and that we all could then become
Einsteins! Barry Beyerstein indicated that the myth was already common
early in the 20th century. This myth is typically encountered as “…
scientists say we use only 10% of our brains”. Who these "scientists"
are and how they determined this fact is never indicated.
Beyerstein and others exposed the myth on a number of grounds:
The
brain comprises 2% of body weight, but accounts for 20% of the body’s
oxygen consumption. There would no evolutionary advantage in
maintaining such an extravagant organ that is only 10% functional.
If
we used only 10% of our brain, damage to large areas of the brain
should have no effect. There is, however, virtually no area of the
brain that does not result in some deficit when it is damaged.
The
principle of "use it or lose it" also applies to the brain. If we used
only 10%, the remaining 90% would deteriorate permanently. That has
never been found in histological examinations of normal brains at
autopsy.
Modern brain imaging research has completely refuted the idea that large areas of the brain are inactive most of the time.
What we and our brains could have looked like if we used only 10% of it! (Image from Internet, origin unknown)
The
10% myth, however, is good for business and the myth-makers are not
about to let it go. Under the premise that if 10% is good for business,
less will be even better; there has been claims that we may use as
little as half a percent (0,5%) of our brain! This claim, incidentally,
was in a magazine called Insight and was by who else but a
Brain Gym practitioner!
See more on this myth in or at:
Beyerstein,
B.L. 1999. Whence cometh the myth that we use only 10% of our brains?
In S. Della Sala (Ed.), Mind myths: Exploring popular assumptions about
the mind and brain. New York: John Wiley & Sons.
See Beyerstein online at
Do we really use only 10 percent of our brains?Jeremy Dean's PsyBlog:
Seriously, Would You Admit to Only Using 10% of Your Brain?Also see Eric Chudler's excellect Neuroscience for Kids:
Do we use only 10% of our brains?
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