How does the physical brain give rise to the psychological mind? How do the laws of mental life emerge from the brain?
The hypothesis of all those who examine the brain as "organ of the mind" is that a close enough analysis of the workings of the brain would, if we also had the key to psychophysiology, lead to a knowledge of consciousness. The psychophysiological hypothesis, at least in its narrow version of it, seeks point-to-point mappings of brain, consciousness, and memory.
If this research program is interpreted as a metaphysics, it runs up agains the tradition privelege of mind over body in Western thought. In Descartes' dualism, all phenomena could be explained in terms of two distinct and irreducible principles, mind and matter, their only connection being the intervention of God. Thomas Hobbes contested this notion, claiming that mental states were just particular physical states. This doctrine is materialism. Alfred North Whitehead, in Science and the Modern World, attributes the duality of mind and matter to the scientific ideas of the seventeenth century. He sees the concepts of life, organism, function, instantaneous reality, interaction, and order of nature as the collective Achilles' heel of the system. (p.57)
a neuron and its connections 