Many scientists today describe the brain as a kind of prediction machine—constantly guessing what will happen next and correcting itself when it’s wrong. Others strongly disagree, arguing that thinking doesn’t happen mainly inside the brain at all, but through our ongoing interaction with the body and the world. A third camp insists that real thinking still depends on symbols, concepts, and internal structures. This paper asks a simple but deep question behind these debates: are these rival theories of the mind—or are they explaining different aspects of how thinking works? By drawing on neuroscience, philosophy, and artificial intelligence, the paper argues that each approach captures something real but incomplete. Prediction explains how the brain efficiently processes signals, but not how meaning, understanding, and context arise. Embodied theories highlight action and experience, but struggle to explain abstract reasoning and planning. Symbolic models help explain interpretation, but cannot stand alone. Looking at modern AI systems makes the issue clearer: machines can predict remarkably well without truly understanding. This suggests that the mind cannot be explained at just one level. The brain is not simply a prediction engine or an interpretive storyteller, but a layered system where prediction, embodiment, and symbolic meaning work together. Reframing the mind–body problem this way shifts the debate from “which theory wins” to how these levels fit together.
MARLON BULAQUEÑA (Thu,) studied this question.