If you think about it, there is a part of your mind which controls - TopicsExpress



          

If you think about it, there is a part of your mind which controls every aspect of your body. Some are autonomic, some are consciously controlled. Most often it is a combination of the two that yields the best result. When you type or write, a part of your mind activates your hands while accessing both the language centers and memory (or in some cases, just the language centers and what comes out is thoughtless speech) and if you pay even closer attention, you may begin to notice that your print and cursive has each their own distinct style or personality to them. The same goes for written and typed language. Deeper introspection can show us many ways in which this is true, but I leave those for you to choose to explore, should you do so. Each hemisphere contains a unique record of emotions and memories, and can generally substitute for the other if properly trained. One or the other may be dominant, or the whole brain may be present in sensory input and cognition. Basically, each of us has somewhere between one and nine different ways of viewing reality, and the means by which we cognate linguistically those modes of perception may have two interpretations, one per hemisphere. Interestingly enough for me to mention, our short term memory typically has between three and nine slots or chunks, each of which can hold a quantifiable unit of information. In other words, depending on what youre thinking about and how you approach the thought process, your brain can compute up to nine distinct chunks of data, each of which may be arranged, again if trained appropriately, to store increasingly efficiently ordered mega-chunks of data per short-term memory chunk. The mind itself is a quantum computer of sorts, electrochemical instead of electronic, and as future computation science will no doubt show, like all great quantum computers, functions best when hidden from view to minimize distortion and confusion from the flux state existing in a near-constant state of decoherence due to being observed. Yes, I know the brain cells arent the same, but trust me when I say brains belong inside the skull and not in jars. Exposure to light means deterioration. When a quantum computer is self-aware its consciousness becomes overwhelmed unless an autonomic system exists to control regular functions and free up processing cycles (cognition) for more conscious things, like observing the environment and interacting with it. The autonomic functions, when not monitoring regular function, is capable of interaction, but operates outside of verbal or linguistic uses of the word sense. However, though not verbal, the autonomic system also has access to memory, often at quicker access speeds than conscious access, and is not itself nonsensical. It is also not what most would think of as human, either. Simply a neutral spirit but in better touch with the animal side than the conscious mind, and they exist this way for best success of the individual. The fact that the universe supposedly resembles a brain cell is a neat way of thinking about the actual fractal nature of reality, however brain cells are merely parts of a whole, individually unable to accomplish what the whole, or even a dominant half could, by a trillion-fold. The shapes of solar systems and galaxies, however, show an equatorial disk, a bubble outlying the three-dimensional shape of the gravity well, and the beyond-the-beyond which in the solar system manifests as the Oort cloud, and galactically is a dark matter halo. universally, it exists outside of the particle horizon of visible light, and the nature of it cannot be discerned, nor could it be inferred directly that outside the particle horizon could resemble what lies outside of localized gravity wells since the nature of the rules seems to oscillate in a way that suggests that beyond the universe the apparent shape is outside our comprehension and may be the big bang or an event horizon within another, higher-order scaled universe. At this point in the status, we have seven paragraphs, this being the eighth. The topics so far have been: how the part of the brain used affects the personality of the output, how the brain actually contains the potential for quite a few different points of view, how short term memory appears to work, how the mind works, how the autonomic (subconscious) works, the nature of the brain and the nature of the universe as we see it. In the ninth spot, we have only to compress all of the previous eight into one unit, label it and then instead of nine distinct chunks, we now have three: the sensory experience, the cognitive experience, the universal connection experience. The other six chunks now remain open for perception and interaction without hindering cognition of everything humanity can figure out about everything in three consolidated, interconnected chunks. ... If this seems clunky, then there is always bypassing short-term memory and accessing long-term memory via the autonomic, a process otherwise known as eidetic memory. the downside to this is a short-term memory fog until long-term memory has stored and re-accessed the most recent sensory data - a delay that can be anywhere from microseconds to minutes before the recall is available, depending on the individual. speaking of which, this thing my eidetic mind helped me with the other night is something else. a typed explanation of a serious phenomenon I had previously sought to understand in order to thwart it.
Posted on: Tue, 26 Aug 2014 17:31:10 +0000

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