Fernyhough Excerpt
Fernyhough Excerpt
Fernyhough Excerpt
Beyond the science lab, questions about inner speech have been a
source of fascination for as long as humans have been thinking about
their own thoughts. One thing we can say about thinking is that it
often appears to us as a kind of conversation between different voices
propounding different points of view. But what do these voices
sound like? What language do they speak? Does your thinking self
speak in fully grammatical sentences, or is it more like listening to
something written down in note form? Are your thoughts softly spo-
ken, or do they ever raise their voice? And anyway, who is listening
when your thinking selves are speaking? Where are “you” in all of
this? Such questions may sound strange, and yet these qualities of
thinking must define what it is like to inhabit our own minds.
All of these puzzles might be explicable if we take seriously the idea
(so persuasive to our introspection) of thinking as a voice, or voices,
in the head. I want to explore this view and test it to its limits. In one
way or another, this approach, which I term the “Dialogic Thinking”
model, has informed most of my scholarly work in psychology, and it
will be a focus throughout this book. It follows from a particular the-
ory of the emergence of thinking in early childhood, and it is sup-
ported by psychological and neuroscientific studies of normal and
disordered cognition. Yet, no matter how strong the evidence for the
model, it is clear that there are many aspects of our inner experience
that are not verbal and voice-like, and I will explore whether the hy-
pothesis can be developed and expanded to account for thinking in
people who do not have a language to think in, as well as the evidence
that much of inner experience is visual and imagery-based.
I am fortunate in having a very wide range of evidence to draw
on. Some aspects of the mystery of mental voices have had hundreds,
even thousands of years’ worth of attention. Philosophers have
struggled with thorny problems about how a mind can represent
knowledge, constructing principled arguments about, for example,
whether thinking could occur in natural language. Psychologists
have set their participants reasoning tasks and asked them to speak
their thought processes out loud for close analysis. Neuroscientists
have tracked inner speech by recording electrical signals from the
not be tractable otherwise. Our inner speech can plan, direct, en-
courage, question, cajole, prohibit, and reflect. From cricketers to
poets, people talk to themselves in all sorts of ways and for a whole
range of very different purposes.