Foreigner
Bluelighter
This will be the official thread for discussions about whether or not consciousness really is just in the brain.
There is the view that consciousness must only be part of the brain, as evidenced by the fact that when the brain is damaged or altered in any way, a person's consciousness changes. There are many neuroscience experiments whose results strongly imply that we are no more than the sum of our biology, and when the body is gone so are we.
Others who say that out of body experiences, astral travel, and psychic powers are possible will contend that there must at least be some component of consciousness that is not intrinsic to the brain, and that aspects of consciousness are capable of experiencing externalities.
Another view will argue that consciousness and the soul are strictly non-physical and are just in this body for the human experience, before moving on. One analogy here could be that of a radio receiving signals. If the radio is damaged the signals are still broadcasting, but the interface is just damaged so it cannot be received; thus the brain is merely part of the physical aspect of the interface, but other levels of consciousness beyond the brain still exist simultaneously. i.e. we are non-material beings having a material experience.
What say you?
There is the view that consciousness must only be part of the brain, as evidenced by the fact that when the brain is damaged or altered in any way, a person's consciousness changes. There are many neuroscience experiments whose results strongly imply that we are no more than the sum of our biology, and when the body is gone so are we.
Others who say that out of body experiences, astral travel, and psychic powers are possible will contend that there must at least be some component of consciousness that is not intrinsic to the brain, and that aspects of consciousness are capable of experiencing externalities.
Another view will argue that consciousness and the soul are strictly non-physical and are just in this body for the human experience, before moving on. One analogy here could be that of a radio receiving signals. If the radio is damaged the signals are still broadcasting, but the interface is just damaged so it cannot be received; thus the brain is merely part of the physical aspect of the interface, but other levels of consciousness beyond the brain still exist simultaneously. i.e. we are non-material beings having a material experience.
What say you?