The Man Who Wasn't There

Summary and Review

by Anil Ananthaswamy

Has The Man Who Wasn't There by Anil Ananthaswamy been sitting on your
reading list? Pick up the key ideas in the book with this quick summary.



Most of us have, at some point in our lives, wondered exactly who we really
are. But at the same time, very few people feel that their thoughts belong
to someone else, or that their body is something alien to themselves, or
that they are already dead and rotting. And even in the throes of a deep
teenage identity crisis, hardly any adolescent will ever lose his
fundamental sense of self.

Consequently, it’s easy to overlook how incredibly fragile our sense of
self really is – that is, unless you know someone who suffered brain damage
and all but lost herself, for instance because of Alzheimer’s disease. As
you’ll discover in this book summary, many regions of our brains work
together to make us feel like ourselves, and the tiniest damage to the
right spot or an innocuous little malfunction can throw it completely off
balance.

In this summary of The Man Who Wasn't There by Anil Ananthaswamy, you’ll
also find out

why some people are yearning to get rid of a healthy leg;

what causes people to feel as if they were stuck in a perpetual dream; and

about a man who mistook himself for his doppelgänger (and almost died as a
result).

The Man Who Wasn't There

 Key Idea #1: Studying people who feel like the walking dead teaches us how
the brain constructs our fundamental sense of self.

Who are you? Most of us consider the self – the subject, the "I" – as an
unchanging part of who we are. We feel an attachment to this self, as well
as the body it inhabits, and have no concern as to whether we are really in
control of our bodies or actions; we feel that we are.

This sense of self is the result of our brain’s elaborate work. But what if
your brain fails to provide you with a proper sense of self? And what if,
as a consequence, you come to the conclusion that you’re actually dead?

As bizarre as it sounds, individuals who suffer from Cotard's syndrome are
truly, unshakeably convinced that they’re dead.s brain-dead. After a
divorce and a failed suicide attempt, Graham suffered from severe
depression and his emotions had lost all vividness. His conclusion: he must
be dead. He also claimed to have lost the need to sleep, eat or drink –
although he continued doing all these things – and he even stopped brushing
his teeth.

When he was informed that he was, in fact, still living, he refused to
believe it.

Certain regions of the brain are vital for our sense of self. In the brains
of people with Cotard’s syndrome, some of these regions are damaged or
misfire, thus disrupting fundamental elements of a person’s sense of self,
such as the feeling of being alive.

Physicians scanned Graham’s brain to see what was going on. They discovered
that his frontoparietal network, an area of the brain that is involved with
conscious awareness, was hardly showing any metabolic activity.

The network concerned with awareness of internal activities (such as
emotions) was especially affected, causing him to lose awareness of his
emotions and physical needs. Detached from this awareness, he concluded
that he was dead.

The Man Who Wasn't There

Key Idea #2:

 Thanks to Alzheimer’s patients, we now know that our sense of self is made
up of two parts.

Most of us look back at our lives in the form of stories, and together
these stories form the narrative self that makes up our identity.
Interestingly, Alzheimer’s patients lose the ability to maintain their
narrative self, and the results can be catastrophic.

According to neuropsychologist Robin Morris, a special form of semantic
memory stores the data and notions we have of ourselves in a
“self-representation system.” These memory stores are filled with episodic
memories, the memories of events we experience, which are then integrated
into our narrative self.

The brains of those who suffer from Alzheimer’s are unable to carry out
this process. We can see how this plays out in a patient who had the
hippocampi removed from his brain – the results were similar to Alzheimer’s
patients. When asked what his favorite memory of his mother was, he could
say little more than "Well, that she's my mother.” He was no longer able to
form a story of who she was based on his episodic memories of her.

And without access to this narrative, people can no longer maintain their
identity.

While it might seem as if our entire sense of self boils down to the
narrative self, further research into Alzheimer's has proven differently.
Rather, part of the patient’s sense of self is preserved, the embodied
self, which comprises memories that are inscribed into the body.

Typing, for example, is something you do more or less automatically. It’s
as if this knowledge were stored in your fingers, not in your brain.

As researcher Pia Kontos explains, this embodied knowledge persists even as
the brain suffers from Alzheimer's.

On a Jewish holiday, one of Kontos’s Alzheimer’s patients, who was unable
to speak, lined up with other men to sing a prayer in a synagogue.
Incredibly, he was able to recite the prayer just fine, as the years he
spent participating in this same ritual had etched it into his body. In
essence, he could perform without thinking.

The Man Who Wasn't there

 Key Idea #3: Your brain works hard to convince you that your body is part
of yourself – but some brains can’t do it.

Look at your hand. Whose hand is it? It’s yours, right? It simply feels
like it belongs to your body. Well, consider yourself lucky. The feeling
that your limbs are part of your body is nothing to take for granted.

In fact, it takes serious work for your brain to construct this sense of
ownership that most of us experience – and it’s easily manipulated.

A group of scientists at Carnegie Mellon University demonstrated how easy
it is to manipulate this sense of ownership. In their experiment, they told
otherwise normal subjects to sit down and place one hand on the table in
front of them, right next to a rubber hand. Both hands were separated by a
barrier that prevented the subject from seeing their own hand, and they
instead saw only the rubber one. Then the hands, both the real one and the
rubber one, were stroked simultaneously with paint brushes.

The subjects reported not only that they “felt” the brush on the fake hand
instead of on their real one, but for many of them the rubber hand felt
like it was actually their own hand.

But this can also work the other way around, where part of your body feels
alien to you, resulting in body integrity identity disorder (BIID).

Sufferers of BIID develop an obsession with having a specific part of their
body amputated, typically an arm or a leg that feels like it doesn’t
belong.

The reason lies in the brain. Normally, our brain possesses “maps”
representing all our body parts. This way, when someone tickles your foot,
the corresponding brain region can be activated. As long as the maps remain
intact, your brain will understand that the foot belongs to you.

However, if the maps are incomplete, then your foot might feel foreign, as
if it weren’t really yours.

The Man Who Wasn't There

Key Idea #4: Studying schizophrenia offers insights into the sense of
agency over our bodies.

Before reading on, find the most ticklish spot on your body and try to make
yourself laugh. It’s hard, isn’t it? For some schizophrenic people, it’s no
problem at all! But why?

In general, schizophrenics have lost the feeling that they are in control
of their bodies. In other words, their sense of agency is disrupted.

For example, if they do something like lift a glass, it doesn't feel like
they were the ones who told their body what to do. This may cause them to
think that they’re possessed by someone else who is making them do things.

This might also explain why so many schizophrenics hear strange voices. It
may just be the usual mental chatter that every person experiences – they
simply fail to recognize it as their own.

This kind of dissociation occurs when the brain mechanism responsible for
generating our sense of agency is impaired.

To get an idea of how this mechanism works, imagine that you want to kick a
football. Your motor cortex then sends two signals: one command to move the
leg, and a copy of this command to other parts of your brain. With this
copy, your brain makes predictions regarding the sensations that your leg
is going to encounter during this action, such as the impact of the
football.

It’s the alignment of your brain’s predictions and the reality of your
experience that creates a sense of agency.

A schizophrenic person’s brain fails to send this copy command, leaving it
unable to make predictions about the sensations the body is about to
experience. Without these predictions, your actions don’t feel like you
actually initiated them. Instead, it feels like someone – or something –
else is responsible.

This explains why some schizophrenic people can tickle themselves so
easily. Their brains can’t predict the movement of their hands; the body is
unprepared and can thus be tickled.

The Man Who Wasn't There

Key Idea #5: Studying people who feel unreal teaches us about the way our
brain processes emotions.

Imagine waking up one morning only to feel that you’re still dreaming. You
can pinch yourself until you’re sore, but nothing seems to wake you up to a
world that feels real. While this sounds more like a Hollywood movie
script, this is the actual lived experience of people who suffer from
depersonalization.

Depersonalization fundamentally disrupts your sense of self and the
vividness of your overall perception. People who suffer from
depersonalization feel completely detached from their body, their emotions,
their life and the world around them. To them, everything feels like a
dream. And while they can preserve a semblance of a normality in their
everyday lives, they nonetheless feel deeply alienated.

Again, this phenomenon is caused by malfunctioning brain mechanisms. This
time, it involves the way in which your brain processes emotions, and, as
with schizophrenia, it has to do with impaired prediction mechanisms.

As you’ve already learned, the brain is essentially a prediction machine.
It perceives the world by making predictions about the causes of sensory
signals and then weighing those predictions against reality.

But these predictions aren’t just related to your body. The brain also
makes predictions about your body states, which include very basic feelings
like anger or enjoyment. When your brain’s predictions about your feelings
are accurate, you feel like they are your feelings, and this feeling
underpins your sense of self.

However, in cases of depersonalization, the brain fails to make accurate
predictions about incoming emotional signals. Put another way, your
emotions don’t feel like they belong to you.

The Man Who Wasn't There

 Key Idea #6: By studying autism, we can learn more about the brain as a
prediction machine.

Many people today have heard the term “autism” before. But do you know what
it actually is and what causes it?

Autism describes a wide range of symptoms resulting from a disorder of the
brain’s development. One typical symptom of autism is a difficulty relating
to others.

People with autism often have trouble interpreting other people’s facial
expressions and identifying their emotional states. For example, they don't
naturally understand that a frowning person might be concerned about
something. Rather, they have to be taught the meaning of this facial
expression the same way someone would memorize vocabulary.

Autistic people often fear anything new and unforeseen, and thus thrive on
repetition and rituals. For example, kids with autism often watch the same
film over and over again without tiring of it.

Like with schizophrenia or depersonalization, these symptoms are a result
of problems with the brain’s ability to make predictions.

As you’ve learned, the brain makes sense of the world by making predictions
about upcoming experiences. These predictions are based on your previous
experiences, stored in the brain in the form of models.

Sometimes, however, these models are inaccurate, leading to poor
predictions. The brain is “surprised” by the disparity between its
prediction and reality, and seeks to correct these models with the help of
new signals from the sensory organs.

But the brains of autistic individuals have problems processing these
signals correctly, whether they’re hunger cues from their own body or
another person’s sad face.

Similarly, the brains of autistic people are full of “brain static,”
causing feedback signals to become so distorted that they no longer make
sense to the brain.

Consequently, the feedback signals can’t be used to update the brain’s
prediction models, meaning that it sometimes can’t integrate new knowledge
or stimulus.

As a result, individuals with autism regularly suffer prediction errors,
leaving them continually surprised. This surprise is stressful, and is one
reason why they prefer experiences, like films, that they’re already
familiar with.

The Man Who Wasn't There

Key Idea #7: Brain damage can cause you to doubt that you inhabit your body
and cause doppelgänger hallucinations.

The idea of a doppelgänger, someone’s “double,” is well known from books
and movies. But the phenomenon is indeed real, and some people who suffer
from the doppelgänger effect actually hallucinate that their bodies have
multiplied.

If you were to experience this complex hallucination, you’d not only see
another “you,” but you’d likely also feel that your center of awareness
jumps between your real body and the hallucinated one.

There is a well-documented case of a young man from Zurich who almost
killed himself due to a doppelgänger hallucination. One morning, after
discontinuing his seizure medications and drinking a lot of beer, he
decided to stay in bed rather than go to work.

As he got out of bed later, he turned around dizzily only to see himself
still lying in bed. Enraged at his lazy “self,” he shouted and shook the
person lying in bed; that is, his doppelgänger.

While this was going on, his consciousness shifted rapidly from one body to
the other, leaving him unable to discern which of the two men was actually
him. Horrified, he leaped from his window, but luckily survived.

So what causes these complex hallucinations? Again, we look to the brain to
find the answer.

There’s a region of the brain called the anterior insula, which is
responsible for integrating all kinds of sensory signals. It is this brain
region that gives you the feeling that you are located inside of your body
and that identifies where your body is located in space.

People who experience the doppelgänger effect have a damaged left anterior
insula and, as a result, lose the feeling that they are situated in their
body. Their brain no longer knows where they are, resulting in
hallucinations that place them elsewhere.

The Man Who Wasn't There

Key Idea #8: Epileptic seizures can be ecstatic experiences – and can teach
us about our brain’s reality check mechanism.

Up to this point, we’ve looked exclusively at brain dysfunctions with
consequences that are at best weird and at worst horrific. But there’s a
condition with a telling name, ecstatic epilepsy, whose effects are
anything but unpleasant.

During an ecstatic seizure, heavy electrical discharges are produced in
certain regions of the brain. The subject often remains conscious, and
people who experience such seizures report overwhelmingly positive
emotions, like bliss and a sense of total security.

Russian novelist Fyodor Dostoevsky wrote eloquently about his ecstatic
seizures, describing unimaginable happiness and a feeling of perfect
harmony. Apart from this sense of bliss, people also report feeling a
sudden sense of clarity and a deep understanding of reality.

Interestingly, the explanation for this phenomenon is related to the
neurological explanation of autism discussed earlier: while people with
autism suffer because their brains’ predictions are often wrong, those with
ecstatic epilepsy enjoy the feeling that their brains are right all the
time.

Neuroscientific research has found that ecstatic epilepsy also originates
in the anterior insula, where awareness and subjective feelings are
generated. Not only does the anterior insula integrate the signals it
receives from the body, it also translates these signals into emotions.

Swiss neurologist Fabienne Picard hypothesizes that the anterior insula
plays a key role in the brain's predictions of what we’ll experience next.
When our brain gets it wrong – in other words, when it makes a bad
prediction – we experience anxiety and uncertainty. But if the brain’s
predictions are correct, we feel safe and upbeat.

During ecstatic seizures, electrical storms in the anterior insula disrupt
the mechanism that compares the brain’s predictions with one’s actual
experiences. From the perspective of someone experiencing an ecstatic
seizure, the brain’s predictions seem to simply come true – as if
everything in the world were exactly as it should be.

Our brain puts a lot of working into making sense of the world around us
and making sure we understand how we relate to that world. But when our
brain gets important mechanisms, predictions and models wrong, it can
fundamentally alter the way we relate to the world – and ourselves.

This book explores the complex realm of hallucinations, and explains how
they happen not only to people who are ill, but also to those who are
completely healthy. Drawing on various studies, patient cases and the
author’s own experiences, it describes the different causes and types of
hallucinations, and shows that they're actually a common phenomenon that
manifest in a variety of ways.  KR IRS 29125 from Sri Rangarajan

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