Thursday, October 22, 2009

This is your brain on Kafka

Can weird stuff be good for you? Tom Jacobs, from the research publication Miller-McCune, summarizes a new study that tries to get at this phenomenon-- how absurdity stimulates certain reactions in our brains. Rabbis will be happy to hear that humans come with "meaning frameworks", which, when threatened, jump into action to activate "meaning maintenance."
Absurdist literature stimulates our brains. That's the conclusion of a study recently published in the journal Psychological Science. Psychologists Travis Proulx of the University of California, Santa Barbara and Steven Heine of the University of British Columbia report our ability to find patterns is stimulated when we are faced with the task of making sense of an absurd tale. What's more, this heightened capability carries over to unrelated tasks.
To Proulx and Heine, these finds suggest we have an innate tendency to impose order upon our experiences and create what they call "meaning frameworks." Any threat to this process will "activate a meaning-maintenance motivation that may call upon any other available associations to restore a sense of meaning," they write.
So it appears Viktor Frankl was right: Man is perpetually in search of meaning, and if a Kafkaesque work of literature seems strange on the surface, our brains amp up to dig deeper and discover its underlying design. Which, all things considered, is a hell of a lot better than waking up and discovering you've turned into a giant cockroach.

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