pharmakos
Bluelighter
The doctor would have patients recall their traumatic memories after being given a dose of a drug that dampens neural connections from re-forming easily. (I forget the name of this drug.)
cycloserine, maybe?
awesome post btw
The doctor would have patients recall their traumatic memories after being given a dose of a drug that dampens neural connections from re-forming easily. (I forget the name of this drug.)
Foreigner said:I find this really fascinating. It implies that there is some kind of other foundation beyond neurology, which guides neural formation. The theory of memory engrams is false... our memories don't have specific coordinates, they are re-created neurally when consciousness attempts to recall it. My personal belief is that consciousness is a field and neurology simply responds to changing field dynamics. How else can memory be explained? Or consciousness? It doesn't seem like consciousness is in the brain, and many of the higher functions we would ascribe to the brain don't seem to have static physical manifestations. In the case of memory, the neurons seem to recreate the memory via the guidance of some unseen hand.
Neurology's current understanding is that LTM is encoded by the way in which experiences modify the total structure of the brain due to exposure to particular patterns of signaling, hippocampal activity facilitating these structural changes. And then recall is driven by the brain's ability to reactivate these patterns of activity per these structural modifications. Thus, I don't think that the function of memory need depend on any unseen hand; rather, the system itself functions as a dynamic whole.
Consciousness might be another story, but I think that the Hofstadterian explanation is on the right track. This might give us an inkling of the 'how' of consciousness, but not really the "why".
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I'm wondering what people's critiques of the compatiblist interpretation of free will are.
ebola
TNW said:some people believe that someday the human brain will be able to be completely quantized... that the uncertainty principle is just a misunderstanding, and that perhaps someday the entirety of the universe (consciousness included) could be summed up into a single equation.
^ I've heard the view of determinism that you describe. I've also heard it described as a "program" that is running for you to learn specific lessons, but unlike the co-creation concept, determinism believes that the program is concretely pre-set so that it is merely being carried out verbatim. I guess that's the difference between soft and hard determinism, though I think the co-creation concept is not exactly soft determinism.
^what if everything is pointless?
i suspect that's probably the case, although its a very depressing thought
^ you don't believe in free will, and you seem to believe in god
if god didn't give us free will, then why did he cause us to question whether or not we have free will?
i dont believe in god in traditional sense