Comment Re:kicker (Score 1) 149
While we certainly may just rationalize things after the fact, there may be more to it than that. For example, if asked to explain why we caught rocks hurled at our faces, most of us would have some good reasons. Aha! say researchers, but you acted before you could have possibly thought about the fact that you don't want a mangled face. The thing is though we don't want mangled faces, and we don't want pain. If we think of our conscious mind like a General commanding an army, then it actually makes a lot of sense. Generals do give direct orders to troops to act, but they also give standing orders. If a general receives a report that his troops in a particular area encountered the enemy and behaved according to the general's standing orders you could ask the general why the troops acted the way they did. The general would have an explanation involving tactics and the higher level strategy behind those tactics and how they serve the overarching goal. You could then say: "Aha! you didn't even know about the engagement until after it happened, so how can you claim that your reasoning had anything to do with it!". Except that, obviously, it did. The same goes for the body. It is quite clear that learning is not just something that happens inside your skull. It goes on all through your nervous system. Your brain quite simply does not stop at the spinal cord, your brain is a supervisor for all sorts of actions taken throughout your body and many of those decisions that are made before the "conscious" brain engages actually are canned decisions that the conscious part made beforehand. If we think about those actions after, and they weren't the right decision, then the overriding consciousness can advise the part of the brain that made the decision on how to do better next time. Stated another way, a lot of the brain operates on heuristics to make quick decisions, but those heuristics can be altered if they are not successful, and the higher level functions of your brain are what evaluate those heuristics.
It should not be that surprising. We see evidence of all kinds of independent actions taken by parts of our bodies all the time. For example, go to the doctor and have them whack your knee to promote a reflex. It's kind of neat the way the leg jumps. If your brain tells it not to though, it won't. Consider breathing. You do it all the time or you die, but you seldom think about it. If you choose to though, you can take very direct control. Same for your heartbeat if you really spend a lot of time figuring out how. Or isolating the control to wiggle your ears. I once knew someone who liked to do a trick where he half swallowed an object, like a lighter, kept it somewhere in his esophagus while still continuing to breathe, etc. then simply reversed direction and brought the lighter back up. Lots of escape artists learn to do that to hide keys, etc. Creepy, but doable, although some people may be predisposed to being able to do it more than others. Basically, we have layers and layers of systems and we can exert conscious control or even "program" many of them.