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FRINGE SCIENCE
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Is the brain the origin of our consciousness? OR is the brain merely a receiver?


Harvard Research Team Reveals The SHOCKING ‘Superhuman’ Abilities Of The Tibetan Monks -- http://simplecapacity.com/2016/03/har...
And yeah, I'm 100% on your wavelength regarding all the similarities of experiences worldwide. Also like the works of Hancock a lot - he's a real trailblazer on this subject. I would guess a lot of serious academics follow his output, but wouldn't public admit to that for fear of ridicule...

And anyway, if I sensed correctly during those OOBEs, I felt that consciousness is non-local (not local to the body or brain) and therefore the brain is indeed a receiver. Could be wrong about that, but that's what my gut tells me.
A lot of the things you list like Ayahuasca, acid LSD etc, sex, meditation etc (I would add in brain stimulation technologies to that list as well), are all simply ways of breaking down the hold our five senses have over us to induce altered states of consciousness. Scientifically it can even be measured in how we go into less common brainwaves during these experiences.


What separates our brain from other species has been much studied by scientists...not just our brain, but the difference between species in general...you should check out some of these studies, J.J, i think you'd find them fascinating :)


I've come across a lot of ..."
He works as a civil servant like myself.



In relation to what you wrote above, Jim, here's an excerpt from the Coast to Coast show:
So the answer to divinity must be the magic mushroom?
In the latter half, educator, anthropologist and activist, Jerry B. Brown, Ph.D., talked about evidence for visionary plants being involved in early Christianity, as well as the many health and psychological benefits that psychedelic plants can provide when taken in a controlled or therapeutic setting. Brown and his partner Julie M. Brown visited various churches and abbeys in Europe (such as Rosslyn Chapel in Scotland) to view medieval icons and works of art depicting scenes of the Bible. They discovered that in these works-- paintings, illustrated manuscripts, and stained glass, psychedelic mushrooms and their usage were hidden in plain sight (see related images).
Brown has concluded that psychedelic mushrooms played a role in Jesus' awakening to his divinity and immortality and that this information has been suppressed by the Catholic church. He also spoke about the pioneering work of Gordon Wasson studying mushrooms and ethnobotany, and how different cultures used the plants, including the ancient Hindu (the Vedas spoke of the sacred psychoactive substance Soma), as well as Siberian reindeer herders, who are considered the fathers of shamanism. There is a renaissance currently underway within the health-based compassionate medical model, using psychedelics to treat such conditions as addiction, PTSD, and depression, he added.
https://psychedelicgospels.com/

I'm just someone with a casual interest in the brain and its workings but I think I've chosen some of the top books on the subject to fill my shelves. Mind, consciousness, brain functionality, literacy, language development. Visual and spatial skills.
I'm pretty sure that all the books I've read on the brain indicate that when part of a brain is injured (or even 'missing'), it frantically re-wires itself (in itself, this is amazing). In other words, parts of the brain that were 'responsible' for other tasks, switch their functionality when faced with any kind of survival crunch. The brain 'fills in gaps for itself', does whatever it needs to do to keep the ship running.
My point is that I would not leap to assume that all our conceptual framework for understanding the mind is somehow wrong when presented with a puzzling case; I would go in the other direction and try to fit the puzzling case to what we already know is proven.

Those two things suggest there is always some sort of gap between the reality we experience and whatever may or may not exist outside our brains.
Another fun fact, you can induce hallucinations be reducing or eliminating sensory input. On the low end is the Ganzfield effect where you make your visual field uniform, like by covering your eyes with halves of ping pong balls. The high end is sensory deprivation in a flotation tank. The theory behind hallucinations there is that the brain needs input so much that it will generate its own if it can't get any from the environment.
It may be that the brain taps into other "frequencies" rather than produces hallucinations. You might be able to falsify that notion if you could show pattens of brain activity that suggest the brain itself is creating the experiences. I would still argue that we don't know enough to be absolutely sure but understand what Occam's Razor suggests.

Now I have since read reports and watched documentaries on those who have had NDEs (near death experiences) where they have been looking down at their close to death selves or even clinically dead selves in hospital or in an ambulance or wherever, and many report their conscious mind and thinking is identical to everyday life. They nearly all report thinking things like concern for family members and other stuff one could think on normal everyday waking consciousness.
This is all obviously subjective to those who have had such experiences, and difficult to relate to for those who haven't. Plus, it's certainly not proof, but I think Western scientists need to study these things more. I feel sure they will in future and what is called "paranormal" and "supernatural" and "mystical" today will probably be replaced by scientific terms tomorrow...
Out-of-body experience https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Out-of-...
Near-death experience https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Near-de...

Supposedly people with dementia appear to be more attuned to the other side and less attuned to this one. It's almost as if it's a way of easing the transition at the end of one's life.
Not sure where that fits but it's another data point.

If you believe my guidance wave interpretation of quantum mechanics, for every quantum of action generated in our physical world, there is an equal quantum generated somewhere else (where the wave is oscillating -I favour an additional dimension, but that is a bit speculative) which means that if whatever controls your thoughts while you are alive is also, or really, controlling the other energy field, then when you die it is possible the alternative can continue. I mention that because for me, the physics do not rule it out, but equally they do not confirm it. Possible does not mean "is".
I guess you have to die to find out.

Interesting observations, Ian, especially as you are a scientist.


―Graham Hancock


a jungian collective (un)conscious?
Ian wrote: "If you believe my guidance wave interpretation of quantum mechanics, for every quantum of action generated in our physical world, there is an equal quantum generated somewhere else (where the wave is oscillating -I favour an additional dimension, but that is a bit speculative) ."
this sounds worth exploring. do you have references?


oh, this is your Elements of Theory book 3 on an alternative interpretation of quantum mechanics, right? i didn't see it on amazon like your first 2 volumes? have you published it somewhere else?

Is that like the Universal Mind theory, Alex?
Or something different?

http://www.amazon.com/dp/B00GTB8LJ6"
ah, thanks for the link. i'm reading the sample now. ^_-
i'm interested in this topic because it has to do with the scientific underpinnings for my WIP horror novel.


Is that like the Universal Mind theory, Alex?
Or something different?"
i'm not familiar with the Universal Mind theory. i was speculating that if we accept Jungian archetypes as real and valid and that Jungian archetypes are one of the manifestations of a collective unconscious, then it could support the concept that one of the functions of the brain is to be a transceiver. however, i don't know enough about these concepts to say whether these archetypes would be passed on in a genetic or a realtime manner.
Ian wrote: "Alex, in that case you might be interested in my somewhat speculative blogs on the possibility of life after death, or at least the continuation of the "soul". They are on Wordpress, but again if y..."
thanks, Ian. I'll PM you. btw, i thought that your book, Guidance Waves An Alternative Interpretation of Quantum Mechanics was of sufficient quality to buy, so you don't have send me a PDF.


"Nobody understands what consciousness is or how it works. Nobody understands quantum mechanics either. Could that be more than coincidence?"

Man Missing Most Of His Brain Challenges Everything We Thought We Knew About Consciousness http://www.iflscience.com/brain/man-m...
Back in 2007, scientists reported that a French man in his mid-40s had walked into a clinic complaining of a pain in his leg. As a child, he’d had this same problem as a result of the ventricles in his brain filling with cerebrospinal fluid, so the doctors decided to scan his brain to see if this was again causing his limb-related lamentations. To their astonishment, they found that his ventricles had become so swollen with fluid that they’d replaced virtually his entire brain, leaving just a thin cortical layer of neurons.
Yet miraculously, the man was not only fully conscious, but lived a rich and unhindered life, working as a civil servant and living with his wife and two kids, blissfully unaware of the gaping hole in his brain. His ability to function without so many of the key brain regions previously considered vital for consciousness raises some major questions about existing theories regarding how the brain works and the mechanisms underlying our awareness.
For example, neuroscientists have often asserted that a brain region called the thalamus, which relays sensory signals to the cerebral cortex, is indispensable for consciousness. This is because research has indicated that damage to the thalamus often causes people to fall into a coma, while one team of scientists were even able to manually “switch off” an epileptic patient’s consciousness by electrically stimulating this brain region.
Similarly, researchers have shown that it is possible to cause people to lose consciousness by using electrodes to manipulate the activity of a brain region called the claustrum, which receives input from a wide variety of brain areas and communicates extensively with the thalamus.
Clearly, then, the fact that a man was able to maintain consciousness with nothing but a sliver of cortical neurons rains all over the theories put forward by the great many neuroscientists who have sought the origins of consciousness in the structure of the brain. It may, however, add weight to the arguments made by other researchers who claim that brain anatomy is not actually all that vital for consciousness, which instead arises simply via the ways in which neurons communicate with one other.
For instance, a recent study looking into the patterns of neural activity that give rise to thoughts found that neurons rarely send signals to one another by the most direct route when communicating, but instead explore every possible connection and channel, producing a complex and highly improvised impulse. This idea also forms the basis of what Axel Cleeremans has termed the “Radical Plasticity Theory”, which suggests that consciousness arises as a result of the brain continually reflecting on itself in order to “learn” how to become self-aware.
Undoubtedly, though, there are a whole host of questions still to be answered, and the majority of theories regarding the nature of consciousness are yet to be fully developed. On the plus side, at least we know what was making that French guy’s leg hurt.
See full article here: http://www.iflscience.com/brain/man-m...

―Nikola Tesla

Awesome quote

I wonder if Bucky was equally ahead of his time like Tesla...

https://youtu.be/oEKUOaqf1XY?list=PL_...
Wonderful!
I haven´t read the book yeat but I will....
https://www.goodreads.com/book/show/2...

If received from WITHIN consciousness it is mere thought.
I think ;)

The short answer is, we don't know. We don't know whether thinking is a quantum phenomenon. The discharges between synapses that we measure are too big to be quantum phenomena, but we don't know whether they are what causes thinking, or how the brain resets itself after thinking so that it is ready for the next thought. Basically, we seem to be fairly ignorant on this.

Not so, Ian. In my opinion, thought should be defined as the reasoning of input via the five senses and in addition the cross-referencing of previous data learned from experience, education and theoretical conclusion. To say that the brain generates thought is to suggest that the data processed didn't previously exist. I would argue that all the data existed, but it is viewed and processed from different perspectives dependent upon experience, knowledge and the ability to collate.
We think in language and most if not all life forms appear to do that. Through the sense of sound, language enters our brain in an arrangement of sound and, after processing, we communicate the information gathered via an arrangement of sound. Nothing clever in that. All or most life forms appear to have that ability.
But do other life forms have the ability to cross-reference (collate) all the data as effectively as humans, thus think as clearly? ... This is a question I am currently trying to tackle through my own thought process. The answer appears obvious... And then I consider termites, ants and bees that demonstrate collective "thinking" processes that appear very effective...
But back to humans: in my opinion thought is simply a process whereby we collate "external" information into a coherent language we understand.

The "collective thinking" of certain insects appears to be "hard-wired" instructions to ;leave signals (usually scents) and later follow them. There is no evidence that I know of that ants or bees sit down and have a reasoned discussion, but merely one worker returns, gives a signal, and they all follow their program.
Yes, we collate external information and draw conclusions from it. But the real issue of the discussion is, why do we do that? How did the ability to do this come about when random action is probably more natural. It is true the directed thought is more effective, but how did we come to realise that? What directs our ability to reason?

Strangely, whilst human thought has given rise to the ability to create, too often that results in the destruction of the environment of "all" life forms (including human). I do not want to undermine human achievements, but we live and exist on a very small planet in a vast universe and appear intent on the planet's destruction rather than preservation. In conclusion, I would offer that humans are very short-sighted and our thought process doesn't collate the "long-term" effectively.


Thought is natural to all or most visible life forms. All or most life forms have senses via which they receive data. That data is collated. I have concluded to my own satisfaction that that collation results in a language by which the data is understood. Language is the basis of thought - I believe there are other processes occurring such as reception and transmission, but I'll place that aside for now.
So, in my opinion, all or most life forms think. Thought is simply a part of the biological entity as a means to make sense of the environment.
Why do life forms become extinct. I think there's a vast number of reasons and most are a natural process of evolution. There is also natural disaster, biological efficiency and the food chain and disease... Humankind have become very efficient in controlling and re-creating their environment and we always impact the environment of other life forms. But humankind remains vulnerable to natural disaster and disease. We have the ability it rebuild and recover very quickly, but so do termites and ants and bees... My point is that we are not yet so clever that we are safe from the possibility of extinction...


Books mentioned in this topic
The Biology of Belief: Unleashing the Power of Consciousness, Matter and Miracles (other topics)Ultimate Journey (other topics)
The Wisdom of Your Cells: How Your Beliefs Control Your Biology (other topics)
The Holographic Universe (other topics)
Far Journeys (other topics)
More...
Authors mentioned in this topic
Graham Hancock (other topics)R. Buckminster Fuller (other topics)
Bruce H. Lipton (other topics)
Art Bell (other topics)
Robert A. Monroe (other topics)
More...
I've come across a lot of stories like this article that seem to contradict the idea popular scientific assumptions about consciousness:
A man who lives without 90% of his brain is challenging our concept of 'consciousness' -- http://www.sciencealert.com/a-man-who...
"A French man who lives a relatively normal, healthy life - despite missing 90 percent of his brain - is causing scientists to rethink what it is from a biological perspective that makes us conscious."
"Despite decades of research, our understanding of consciousness - being aware of one's existence - is still pretty thin. We know that it's somehow based in the brain, but then how can someone lose the majority of their neurons and still be aware of themselves and their surroundings?"