Topic: The brain vs the mind.
no photo
Sun 11/23/08 10:30 PM

JB...

Your response was eloquent and appreciated. There is only one thing contained within it that I would care to extrapolate on.

Then when someone misunderstands you or where you are coming from, you get offended.


This statement is quite misleading actually. People misunderstand me more often than not when an attempt to gain a personal understanding of me is based entirely upon the position I am holding within a topic of debate. There are an infinite number of other factors which help to determine who a person is and why.

So, just because another misrepresents my personal character as a consequence from drawing a conclusion which has been based upon too little information does not mean that I am offended as a result of that alone. However, when there have been repeated attempts on my part to either clear up or ignore such things, and those attempts go completely unnoticed or disregarded, then I sometimes get offended. It is then a deliberate matter of respecting another's dignity.

Is it unreasonable for one to dislike being misrepresented by another's interpretation and wrongful conclusion?


No it is not unreasonable. But it is unreasonable to attempt to influence my impressions with what amounts to a correction by you (about your opinion of your own character) and a character reference from your 'artgurl' friend, correcting my "wrong" impressions.

I had extrapolated my impressions, (right or wrong) from your posts and by the way you communicated your ideas to me and to others. Had you been 'real' and revealed the true you and the wonderful human being you and artgurl described maybe I would not have gotten the wrong impression of you. In other words, you were talking the talk but I did not see you walking the walk.

A non-personal discussion should revolve around the content of the authors' words not the content of the author's character as viewed by one who holds a position on the other side of a debate.

flowerforyou


I agree, but on occasions you have assumed wrong when you accused me of responding to the author and not the content. I take each post and each assertion on its own merit, and I disregard who the author is.

However, I do not disregard the tone and nature of the content itself. I respond to that. I dislike being accused of making it personal when I am not. You just jumped to that conclusion because you can't seem to let go of a misunderstanding from the past. So let it go.

And show me what a nice person you are.




Maikuru's photo
Mon 11/24/08 03:18 AM
there is nothing to take personal in these threads. Semantics, definitions and counter views of ones opinions (be them supported by fact or not is nothing to be bothered by. The mind is merely the seat of the conciousness. Having had a near death exprience and surviving a diabetic comatose i can speak to the individual having a brain but lacking a sense of mind as it were. Since i went into a coma my brain lost its conciousness but the brain continued to function and support the body. Yet i have memories of sensations and experiences despite my brain not having its mind as it were. We arrive at a paradox here. If memories are part of the mind and since my mind was absent during the comatose, is it not plausible to state then that the mind can also be absent from the brain. My sensei told me this when i put the question to him. The brain and body are like a car. They merely act as a place for our mind(thoughts,intents,memories)to reside and interact with the physical world. He then asked me,"Can you not exit the car and still continue to travel on?" The point i think he was trying to make was that the brain and the body can be independent of the mind and the soul.

SkyHook5652's photo
Mon 11/24/08 10:25 AM
Edited by SkyHook5652 on Mon 11/24/08 10:25 AM
there is nothing to take personal in these threads. Semantics, definitions and counter views of ones opinions (be them supported by fact or not is nothing to be bothered by. The mind is merely the seat of the conciousness. Having had a near death exprience and surviving a diabetic comatose i can speak to the individual having a brain but lacking a sense of mind as it were. Since i went into a coma my brain lost its conciousness but the brain continued to function and support the body. Yet i have memories of sensations and experiences despite my brain not having its mind as it were. We arrive at a paradox here. If memories are part of the mind and since my mind was absent during the comatose, is it not plausible to state then that the mind can also be absent from the brain. My sensei told me this when i put the question to him. The brain and body are like a car. They merely act as a place for our mind(thoughts,intents,memories)to reside and interact with the physical world. He then asked me,"Can you not exit the car and still continue to travel on?" The point i think he was trying to make was that the brain and the body can be independent of the mind and the soul.
That sounds very much like my own beliefs. I don't even like to differentiate between the body and the brain in this type of discussion though. The brain, to me, is not significantly different from the heart or lungs or big toe, for the purposes of a discussion about consciousness, the mind and the "I". The way I see it, the car analogy works pretty well. I would say the driver is "me", the body is the car, and the mind is like the controls (pedals, steering wheel, switches, nobs, etc.)

no photo
Mon 11/24/08 02:21 PM
Edited by Bushidobillyclub on Mon 11/24/08 02:28 PM

I wonder if you did a survey of scientists, the worlds most elite researchers on the brain what they think . . . . I wonder what they would say . . .
One thing is pretty well guaranteed - it wouldn't be even close to what a group of the worlds most elite researchers on the paranormal would say. drinker

so in 20 years we have learned enormous amounts of falsifiable data about the brain . . . any thing falsifiable come out of the paranormal research?


there is nothing to take personal in these threads. Semantics, definitions and counter views of ones opinions (be them supported by fact or not is nothing to be bothered by. The mind is merely the seat of the conciousness. Having had a near death exprience and surviving a diabetic comatose i can speak to the individual having a brain but lacking a sense of mind as it were. Since i went into a coma my brain lost its conciousness but the brain continued to function and support the body. Yet i have memories of sensations and experiences despite my brain not having its mind as it were. We arrive at a paradox here. If memories are part of the mind and since my mind was absent during the comatose, is it not plausible to state then that the mind can also be absent from the brain. My sensei told me this when i put the question to him. The brain and body are like a car. They merely act as a place for our mind(thoughts,intents,memories)to reside and interact with the physical world. He then asked me,"Can you not exit the car and still continue to travel on?" The point i think he was trying to make was that the brain and the body can be independent of the mind and the soul.
What you should ask yourself instead of going into the metaphysics of "guru's" and "sensei's" is why a computer when it is rebooting does not display your desktop and cannot connect to the internet, but when it is done rebooting it then again has all of its functionality . .. I mean it never lost power during a reboot . . . yet you still cant make use of all its features. . . .

Consciousness is a function of the brain which is not required in the short term to sustain the organism, where as breathing, blood flow, and metabolism are . . .

You will not die without consciousness for 20 minutes, where as if the brain has to choose between consciousness and those other "features" . . . well. . . if it choose consciousness vs the other items listed it would be a fatal error that your system would not recover from.


no photo
Mon 11/24/08 02:44 PM
That is because you have a different idea about just exactly what consciousness is. You claim the word and define it as having an awareness (perhaps human awareness) of what you also define as 'reality."

Unfortunately there is no other word to describe what I mean as consciousness except spirit, and because that word has a "religious" overtones it is not taken seriously.

Consciousness is a function of the brain which is not required in the short term to sustain the organism, where as breathing, blood flow, and metabolism are . . .


That is a perfect example of how you don't use the word consciousness the way I do. You believe it is a function of the brain. I'm not so sure that can be proven, but it is the common assumption of science.

But I think consciousness is required to sustain the organism, it is just not waking consciousness.

jb




no photo
Mon 11/24/08 04:28 PM

That is because you have a different idea about just exactly what consciousness is. You claim the word and define it as having an awareness (perhaps human awareness) of what you also define as 'reality."

Unfortunately there is no other word to describe what I mean as consciousness except spirit, and because that word has a "religious" overtones it is not taken seriously.

Consciousness is a function of the brain which is not required in the short term to sustain the organism, where as breathing, blood flow, and metabolism are . . .


That is a perfect example of how you don't use the word consciousness the way I do. You believe it is a function of the brain. I'm not so sure that can be proven, but it is the common assumption of science.

But I think consciousness is required to sustain the organism, it is just not waking consciousness.

jb






JB, you should just create your own words. Otherwise you are just creating confusion and asking to be rebuked.

Spirit is closer to what you are talking about . . . and at least its a word without a specific definition unlike consciousness . . . .

no photo
Mon 11/24/08 08:12 PM
Edited by Jeanniebean on Mon 11/24/08 08:16 PM


That is because you have a different idea about just exactly what consciousness is. You claim the word and define it as having an awareness (perhaps human awareness) of what you also define as 'reality."

Unfortunately there is no other word to describe what I mean as consciousness except spirit, and because that word has a "religious" overtones it is not taken seriously.

Consciousness is a function of the brain which is not required in the short term to sustain the organism, where as breathing, blood flow, and metabolism are . . .


That is a perfect example of how you don't use the word consciousness the way I do. You believe it is a function of the brain. I'm not so sure that can be proven, but it is the common assumption of science.

But I think consciousness is required to sustain the organism, it is just not waking consciousness.

jb






JB, you should just create your own words. Otherwise you are just creating confusion and asking to be rebuked.

Spirit is closer to what you are talking about . . . and at least its a word without a specific definition unlike consciousness . . . .


I am not "creating confusion." (I am not the least bit confused about what I am saying.) If someone wants to "rebuke" me because they do not understand what I am trying to say I guess that is their problem. I am only trying to communicate with my limited vocabulary.laugh

If they don't get it, they just don't get it, and it is not for them. But I know there are some who do understand what I am saying. Very few, but some.

Neither word is sufficient for what I am trying to say. How about conscious spirit that permeates the universe?

Wallace D. Wattles calls it "The thinking stuff."

Consciousness is something that is distributed according to how much of it is required or needed. Even a bacteria has a degree of consciousness and is aware. Awareness and consciousness does not have to meet specific requirements except in the way humans use the term to describe their own waking awareness. They do not consider that there are other creatures who have "consciousness" but it is not human consciousness. They only think in terms of memory and human consciousness.

Why do scientific humans think that only they are conscious? (The same reason some religious humans think that only they have souls.)

Humans think they are something real special... they are, but not as separate and special at they think. We are all made out of the same stuff and we all came from the same place.

jb


no photo
Tue 11/25/08 10:49 AM
Edited by Bushidobillyclub on Tue 11/25/08 10:50 AM
AARP did a little article on Brain Myths, I thought this was interesting.

http://www.aarp.org/health/brain/aging/myths_about_aging_and_the_brain.html


Myths About Aging and the Brain

We acquire knowledge, gain wisdom, and finely tune our skills as we age. But we may also come across incorrect information. You may have gathered some incorrect information about aging and the brain.

This page will help you dispel four common myths and find answers to your questions about how our brains age.

Brain Myth #1: You can't change your brain.

Your brain is constantly changing in response to your experiences, and it retains this basic "plasticity" well into old age.

Everything we do and think about is reflected in patterns of activity in our brains. Scientists can see these patterns in brain-imaging scans that show which parts of the brain are functioning during specific tasks.

Changing our thinking or changing the way we behave causes corresponding changes in the brain systems involved. This is why therapy that teaches people to alter negative patterns of thought and behavior (like cognitive therapy, for example) can be effective in treating some mental disorders.

Brain Myth #2: People lose brain cells every day and eventually just run out.

Actually, most regions of the brain do not lose brain cells as you age. And while you may lose some nerve connections, this is not necessarily a bad thing. It can be part of the reshaping of the brain that occurs with experience.

It's also possible that you can even grow new brain cells and create new connections, or prevent the ones you have from withering, if you exercise your brain.

Brain Myth #3: The brain doesn't make new brain cells.

This myth was widely believed for generations, but has recently been proven false. We now know that certain areas in the brain—including the hippocampus (where new memories are created) and the olfactory bulb (the scent-processing center)—regularly generate new brain cells. Many of these cells go on to become working parts in brain-cell connections.

Brain Myth #4: Memory decline is inevitable as we age.

Many people reach very old age and are still sharp as ever. Genetics clearly plays a role in "successful aging," but how we live our lives on a day-to-day basis is also critical. To help your brain age well, you can:

* Perform physical exercise (especially aerobic exercise)
* Engage in intellectually stimulating mental activity
* Eat a healthy diet
* Maintain social connections (spending time with friends and family members, for example)
* Learn to manage stress
* Develop a positive attitude toward yourself and your world

Some of the above information is from Memory: Remembering and Forgetting in Everyday Life and Intelligent Memory: Improve the Memory That Makes You Smarter by Barry Gordon, M.D., Ph.D., and Lisa Berger


SkyHook5652's photo
Tue 11/25/08 11:37 AM
I wonder if you did a survey of scientists, the worlds most elite researchers on the brain what they think . . . . I wonder what they would say . . .
One thing is pretty well guaranteed - it wouldn't be even close to what a group of the worlds most elite researchers on the paranormal would say. drinker
so in 20 years we have learned enormous amounts of falsifiable data about the brain . . . any thing falsifiable come out of the paranormal research?
Not that I know of. And neither has anything falsifiable come out of studies of ethics or communication or politics or esthetics or philosophy.

Science has made incredible advances in the area of toolmaking. But that, quite literally, is all it will ever be able to do - make better tools. That really is it's entire function. It will never be able to solve issues of ethics or esthetics or politics or philosophy or any of the humanities. Because those issues are founded on a non-falsifiable postulate. That of free will. And free will, by definition, is not falsifiable. If it were, it would not be free will.

So what's your point?

And that's not a fascetious question. What really is the point?

Personally, I love tools. I like television and cell phones and computers and running water and flush toilets and central heating and microwave ovens and space probes. And I am glad that there are people who are dedicated to "the scientific method" that resulted in those things being available to me.

But honestly, I would trade all those tools and gadgets for a world without social unrest and terrorism and political corruption and mental illness and bigotry and racism and war and riots and financial recession and opression and a myriad of other social and personal ills.

So what has "falsifiability" done to alleviate any of those? Zero, zip, nada, zilch and nothing.

And in fact, it could be argued that the doctrine of falsifiability has actually been the driving force behind the the increase of those ills on this planet.

(Boy I love a good run of rhetoric! drinker)

no photo
Tue 11/25/08 12:05 PM
Edited by Bushidobillyclub on Tue 11/25/08 12:09 PM
Your obfuscating the issue.

Lets go one at a time.

Paranormal: Lets list some things that can fall under this column.

-Levitation
-Channeling the dead
-Healing via spiritual energy.

Here are three anyone care to help me list some more?

Of these three examples each claim can be falsified and tested . . . . I don't see where you are going with this except to try to obfuscate and deny that science can and will determine these things. . . . also aesthetics can be mapped scientifically . . . where have you been? After mapping the brain and its decision making process we accurately "guess" your reaction to different visual, audio, and tactile information . . . this is very accurate, and means we can predict what you will like or dislike by the structure and network of communication of your brain. (this is new and we are getting better and better at it the more we know) even if it is a thing which was not witnessed during the initial analysis . . . (believe it or not our reactions are very predictable . . . this jives with my experience of people btw, and probably everyone as well)

I think I understand, no one wants someone to tell them there great intellect can be boiled down to a sophisticated computer. Ego ego ego.


Maikuru's photo
Tue 11/25/08 03:25 PM
<Quote>What you should ask yourself instead of going into the metaphysics of "guru's" and "sensei's" is why a computer when it is rebooting does not display your desktop and cannot connect to the internet, but when it is done rebooting it then again has all of its functionality . .. I mean it never lost power during a reboot . . . yet you still cant make use of all its features. . . .

Consciousness is a function of the brain which is not required in the short term to sustain the organism, where as breathing, blood flow, and metabolism are . . .

You will not die without consciousness for 20 minutes, where as if the brain has to choose between consciousness and those other "features" . . . well. . . if it choose consciousness vs the other items listed it would be a fatal error that your system would not recover from.



Jeremy your arguement is flawed becuase you presume that conciussness is hardwired to the brain, like that of the hard drive in your computer i would have remebered that the hard drive(conciuosness) can be removed from the computer and still mantain its directives and functions. In fact it can be placed in another computer even (brain,body) and continue to function. The real fatal error here is presumption thats ones existence is determined and isolated to the brain,the body and its functions. A medical note for you: My heart stopped functioning and i was "rebooted" several times, so my "computer" as your metaphysically flawed comprasion did lose power, repeatly amd last time i checked they don't have surge protectors for the brain... I think i will stick to the wisdom of my teachers thank you and not presume to know something prior to understanding or experiencing it myself...noway

no photo
Tue 11/25/08 03:45 PM
Edited by Bushidobillyclub on Tue 11/25/08 03:45 PM
I see no flaws in my logic, and you have not pointed out any. The only assumption is that consciousness is NOT housed within the brain.

I have made no assumption, what I have stated has been tested, and is the standard accepted fact among the neuroscience community.

I respect your opinion and your experience, just not your conclusion.




SkyHook5652's photo
Tue 11/25/08 05:22 PM
Your obfuscating the issue.
Guilty as charged. But I know I can always depend on you to not be easily diverted Billy. :tongue: :thumbsup:

Lets go one at a time.

Paranormal: Lets list some things that can fall under this column.

-Levitation
-Channeling the dead
-Healing via spiritual energy.

Here are three anyone care to help me list some more?

Of these three examples each claim can be falsified and tested

I don't see where you are going with this except to try to obfuscate and deny that science can and will determine these things. . . . also aesthetics can be mapped scientifically . . . where have you been? After mapping the brain and its decision making process we accurately "guess" your reaction to different visual, audio, and tactile information . . . this is very accurate, and means we can predict what you will like or dislike by the structure and network of communication of your brain. (this is new and we are getting better and better at it the more we know) even if it is a thing which was not witnessed during the initial analysis . . . (believe it or not our reactions are very predictable . . . this jives with my experience of people btw, and probably everyone as well)

Based on what you say here it appears that we’ve been operating off different definitions for “falsifiability” and that I did not understand what you meant by it. So I’ll concede anything to do with falsifiability here and now.

And I’ll also concede that anything science can measure and or describe is “real” and anything it can’t is not “real”.

So there you have it. You have defined the nature of reality as “that which can be demonstrated or described by science” and I accept that definition.

You win the debate.

I think I understand, no one wants someone to tell them there great intellect can be boiled down to a sophisticated computer. Ego ego ego.
I don’t think you do understand. The whole point is that it is ego based. It is always ego based. It cannot be anything but ego based. It is always about whether or not the individual is personally satisfied with an answer, regardless of where it came from or how it was arrived at or who presented it or who agrees with it. The bottom line is whether or not it satisfies the individual’s desire for satisfaction. Anything else is unimportant because it is that desire for satisfaction that assigns importance.

And for me, the “self as neural connections” hypothesis does not satisfy my desire for understanding as well as other hypotheses do. And that is the one and only thing I can say that philosophy has done for me that science has not.

drinker


SkyHook5652's photo
Tue 11/25/08 05:28 PM
Edited by SkyHook5652 on Tue 11/25/08 05:29 PM
Jeremy your arguement is flawed becuase you presume that conciussness is hardwired to the brain
I have to go with Jeremy on this one. He has given definitions and evidence. The evidence agrees with his definition, so there can be no doubt that his argument is flawless.

He defines consciousness as a function of the brain. Therefore, consciousness is, by definition housed in the brain. There is no flaw in that logic.

The only grounds for disagreement is in the definitions.

Maikuru's photo
Tue 11/25/08 06:17 PM

Jeremy your arguement is flawed becuase you presume that conciussness is hardwired to the brain
I have to go with Jeremy on this one. He has given definitions and evidence. The evidence agrees with his definition, so there can be no doubt that his argument is flawless.

He defines consciousness as a function of the brain. Therefore, consciousness is, by definition housed in the brain. There is no flaw in that logic.

The only grounds for disagreement is in the definitions.

I respect both jeremy and your views however i disagree that there is any proof that becuase something by theory is housed in the brain that it is in fact a part of the brain. To use jeremy's arguement science and pychology have to yet to quanitively or physically determine a location to which conciousness resides. Just saying that is something somewhere is not proof. Are brainwaves really your conciousness much less your mind? Even stating the ego resides in the mind is questionable. question the question and question the answers. Scientist would have us believe we are nothing more than synaptic reponses to stimuli, I ask is that really what the conciousness is. What makes the concept of "I am" an actual person much less an entity taking residence in the body. What about the Soul? What is the essence of our being? Just becuase you are satisfied with definitions and statements that you believe have substance does not mean that those definitions or statements have any meaning in what is actually real. Question evrything, especially the percieved definitions and statements. Truth is more than Logic. Logic is just words that try to agree with each other. ohwell

no photo
Tue 11/25/08 06:56 PM

I see no flaws in my logic, and you have not pointed out any. The only assumption is that consciousness is NOT housed within the brain.

I have made no assumption, what I have stated has been tested, and is the standard accepted fact among the neuroscience community.

I respect your opinion and your experience, just not your conclusion.



A "fact" of course, is an "agreement." A "test" depends upon observation.

If consciousness (or spiritual awareness) is not "a physical thing" it cannot be observed. Therefore all that can be observed is the brain which is an organ that is effected. So all they are doing is observing the effect of something and they don't know the cause.

They don't know anything about thoughts and dreams and how or where they come from.

Just because something cannot be observed does not mean it does not exist, (as I have been schooled on by a few of you "scientists.")

There have not been enough tests. I say this because science has not yet discovered the mind operating in the human energy field in advance and even separate from brain functions. I sighted some examples, and I am sure there are others doing these kind of experiments.

It is strange that some things are just ignored by the scientific community. They believe what they believe and they don't seem to want to look beyond that or experiment beyond that into the human consciousness. They think it is a waste of time to speculate. They only study what they can observe.

It will take a major personal spiritual awakening for you to consider these things. That is, if you give yourself and your personal experience any credit at all.

Some scientists, if they had a spiritual awakening or experience might just explain it away by thinking that they are hallucinating.

Here is hoping you will have yours Billy. drinker

(Without drugs of course) laugh laugh

MirrorMirror's photo
Tue 11/25/08 07:05 PM
:smile:Is there some sort of test that a person can use to determine their psychic potential?:smile:Or some sort of exercises or practices a person can do to develop such potential?:smile:

SkyHook5652's photo
Tue 11/25/08 07:10 PM
Edited by SkyHook5652 on Tue 11/25/08 07:12 PM
Jeremy your arguement is flawed becuase you presume that conciussness is hardwired to the brain
I have to go with Jeremy on this one. He has given definitions and evidence. The evidence agrees with his definition, so there can be no doubt that his argument is flawless.

He defines consciousness as a function of the brain. Therefore, consciousness is, by definition housed in the brain. There is no flaw in that logic.

The only grounds for disagreement is in the definitions.
I respect both jeremy and your views however i disagree ...
Don't get me wrong. I'm not saying I use his definitions when speaking of consciousness. Just that I see no flaw in his logic when his definitions are used. Personally, I define consciousness differntly from the way he does and so his logic is flawed when my definitions are used.

no photo
Tue 11/25/08 09:02 PM

Jeremy your arguement is flawed becuase you presume that conciussness is hardwired to the brain
I have to go with Jeremy on this one. He has given definitions and evidence. The evidence agrees with his definition, so there can be no doubt that his argument is flawless.

He defines consciousness as a function of the brain. Therefore, consciousness is, by definition housed in the brain. There is no flaw in that logic.

The only grounds for disagreement is in the definitions.
I respect both jeremy and your views however i disagree ...
Don't get me wrong. I'm not saying I use his definitions when speaking of consciousness. Just that I see no flaw in his logic when his definitions are used. Personally, I define consciousness differntly from the way he does and so his logic is flawed when my definitions are used.


Perhaps that is where so much miscommunication and and disagreement arises, the definition or meaning of words.

JB

creativesoul's photo
Tue 11/25/08 09:41 PM
Edited by creativesoul on Tue 11/25/08 09:58 PM
I knew there was a reason why the term actuality was invoked earlier...

laugh

Ahhh... words, definitions, meanings...

What's the difference, huh?

We can all use language for our own personal agendas...

huh




Sky...

I wonder of this response from you...

I don’t think you do understand. The whole point is that it is ego based. It is always ego based. It cannot be anything but ego based.


huh

As if it were impossible for one to remove the worldly fingerprint.

It is always about whether or not the individual is personally satisfied with an answer, regardless of where it came from or how it was arrived at or who presented it or who agrees with it. The bottom line is whether or not it satisfies the individual’s desire for satisfaction. Anything else is unimportant because it is that desire for satisfaction that assigns importance.


This presupposes the notion that all actions are based upon personal "satisfaction", yet you have continually argued against the idea of a determined will?

As long as one views the world through the worldly fingerprint that it places upon each of us, it forever remains incorruptable.

For one who speaks so often of spirituality, I find it hard to believe that these two opposing views(ego-based choice and free will) can coincide within one personal truth.

Perhaps I am just confused...

flowerforyou



JB...

We almost built a bridge of mutual understanding.

You just jumped to that conclusion because you can't seem to let go of a misunderstanding from the past. So let it go.


I have no idea what you are talking about here...

flowerforyou