spuriousmonkey said:Why wouldn't it be right?
What I meant to say is that if there was no neurons there wouldn't be any memory to send to all other parts of the brain.
spuriousmonkey said:Why wouldn't it be right?
Gravage said:What I meant to say is that if there was no neurons there wouldn't be any memory to send to all other parts of the brain.
Read Rupert Sheldrakes "Morphic Resonance - The Habits of Nature - The Lessons of the Past" who makes the point that the brain does not store information, which makes some sense. Consideraing all the memories of a lifetime theoretically available for recognition, Colors, smells, shapes changeing patternsns and etc., the brain doesn't have the storage capacity to store all known forms of memory that is using a computer/brain analogy.Gravage said:Can anyone give me a guide,detailed explanation or a website how it works,how the memory is stored inside the brain?
Does this also occurs in near-death experiences?
I'm just trying to check some information,I pcked up from the net,years ago.
Thanks!
geistkiesel said:Read Rupert Sheldrakes "Morphic Resonance - The Habits of Nature - The Lessons of the Past" who makes the point that the brain does not store information, which makes some sense. Consideraing all the memories of a lifetime theoretically available for recognition, Colors, smells, shapes changeing patternsns and etc., the brain doesn't have the storage capacity to store all known forms of memory that is using a computer/brain analogy.
Sheldrake make the analogy that the brain and a television set are comparable. A transistor goes out in the TV tuning cricuit and channel 19 and "The Best of the Beverly Hill Billys" doesn't come in, instead you get the Madrid Bullfights and "The Best of Matador El Cordobez" reruns.
Or some brain malfunctions gets you tapped into Napolean's memory source. This implies, obviously that the brain is no more than an antenna, to be sure a very complex and sensitive antenna. The "real" storage mechanism is "nonlocal" in the quantum mechanics theory" sense. This model would explain much of mental activity such as ESP, thinking you are Napoleaon, hearing voices, instinct, "ansers popping into consciouisness, listening to space men, intuition instantaneous message transmission, past life rememberances etc. (all very heretical for sure).
I understand from medical science that sever brain damaged functions can be assumed by other physical parts of the brain that are trauma free and still intact. In other words there is no absolutely invariant localized brain function that cannot migrate, at least partially, to other locations in the brain,
Any discussion on this?
Geistkiesel
When a sound, for instance, reaches your ear, by the time it is recognized by you as a familar "sound" the wave form of the sugnal has been changed so many times that your would not be able to distinguish even two succeeding wave forms of the signal much less the fiorst and the last wave form.Gravage said:I doubt that brain doesn't store all memory,can you explain me why smell reminds me what happened 30 years ago?