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Tammuz wrote:Jar Axel wrote:Tammuz wrote:Jar Axel wrote:Dark Zarak wrote:Insurgent wrote:So what makes us behave differently from each other is simply the way the synapse firing patterns differ in our brains.
Yep. The brain is so complicated, and outside events so different, that all throughout history not once has the synapse firing pattern ever repeated itself exactly.
It's pure random chance of synapse firing based on the outside influences of our lives, and past firing patterns, that dictate how we think.
And I'm just theorizing all this out of the blue. But it makes sense doesn't it?
From a certain point of view
However from a wider point of view it would make more sence that one a brain reaches a certain point of development some subconcious controll is gained over the way and rate at which synapses fire otherwise would would all still be subject to our animalistic instincts and desires.
are we not still? we are hungry we eat, we are tired we sleep, we are horny we...well you know.
surely any animal capable of being trained can also overcome it's instinct, just as a baby is taught not to scream wehn it wants food...
if a child was left feral, and somehow survived would it have the it still have the reasoning to ignore it's primal desires?
Do we not have the ability to deny these desires Tammuz? to make our own choices and not be controlled by these desires? I do what of you?
Show me that a child left feral would develop in the same way a human raised child would. The feral child would still make his own choices; just because we don't understand someone's or something's choices does not mean that they are not making them in opposition to their instincts and desires.
but is that not part of how a child is brought up? do not spoiled brats lack the self control to reighn in there desires? if a child wants something, they take it or they scream, until they are taught self control, no?
Jar Axel wrote:Dark Zarak wrote:Insurgent wrote:So what makes us behave differently from each other is simply the way the synapse firing patterns differ in our brains.
Yep. The brain is so complicated, and outside events so different, that all throughout history not once has the synapse firing pattern ever repeated itself exactly.
It's pure random chance of synapse firing based on the outside influences of our lives, and past firing patterns, that dictate how we think.
And I'm just theorizing all this out of the blue. But it makes sense doesn't it?
From a certain point of view
However from a wider point of view it would make more sence that one a brain reaches a certain point of development some subconcious controll is gained over the way and rate at which synapses fire otherwise would would all still be subject to our animalistic instincts and desires.
Dark Zarak wrote:Jar Axel wrote:Dark Zarak wrote:Insurgent wrote:So what makes us behave differently from each other is simply the way the synapse firing patterns differ in our brains.
Yep. The brain is so complicated, and outside events so different, that all throughout history not once has the synapse firing pattern ever repeated itself exactly.
It's pure random chance of synapse firing based on the outside influences of our lives, and past firing patterns, that dictate how we think.
And I'm just theorizing all this out of the blue. But it makes sense doesn't it?
From a certain point of view
However from a wider point of view it would make more sence that one a brain reaches a certain point of development some subconcious controll is gained over the way and rate at which synapses fire otherwise would would all still be subject to our animalistic instincts and desires.
Subconcious control? What subconscious control? You mean the kind that results from synapses firing in the brain?
You can't control the rate your synapses fire anymore than you can control the way nutrients are absorbed in your intestines, or the way oxygen is absorbed in your lungs but not nitrogen. The chemical makeup of the body only allows certain things to happen within it, and those certain things happen without any control.
If you want to say "but that's the definition of the soul then; that we can overcome our animalistic desires on a molecular level" then I say fair enough. But it's only a theory because there's no evidence for it. Religious faith is all fine and good when it comes to ideals and treated everyone fairly and honestly, but it's another thing entirely when people don't want to accept what has been empirically tested and studied.
We are slaves to synapses and impulses still. We're just so complicated up there that we can put a fancy dress on it. That's all.
Tammuz wrote:what i ws trying to argue Jar is that we need to be taught to control our desires.
the thing is jar with synapse firing is that it happens about 200 millisecond before you think about, i'll have to see if i can find the Libet's '83 paper, but the gist of is the brain decides to do it BEFORE the mind does
Jar Axel wrote:Dark Zarak I have yet to see any scientist provide proof that we cannot controll such things; I have only seen them explain that they have no way of measuring weather or not we can controll such things.
Jar Axel wrote:But then there are alot of things we can do with our bodies that science is at a lack to explain or measure. Including things that defy what the chemical makeup of our bodies says should be possible....
Dark Zarak wrote:Jar Axel wrote:Dark Zarak I have yet to see any scientist provide proof that we cannot controll such things; I have only seen them explain that they have no way of measuring weather or not we can controll such things.
I don't think you're getting my point. Control resulting from subconscious thought is the result of synapses firing. Thoughts come from synapses firing. All thoughts, not just conscious ones. How else would they happen?
The chemical makeup of the body comes first. On a molecular level, we are not able to control our thoughts, because the molecular process happens first. The only things we can control in our bodies are things that are based on complicated movements rigged to react to our thoughts.
Yes, I'm saying that when you get right down to it, we cannot control our thoughts. Every decision we make is based on some kind of desire deep down that we can't control. It's there and can't be ignored.
For instance, I post all kinds of Stephen Hawking time and entropy stuff in a thread about souls because the Freudian sexual urge is telling me to make myself look cool in the eyes of my peers, so I do it in a way that makes me laugh and hope others do as well. I could decide that posting on the internet because of the Fruedian sexual urge is for losers and go out to a club, but that's an unfamiliar enviroment, and it's Sunday night anyway. Whatever I decide to do, it will be because of some kind of urge. Of course I'm not looking for sex in the forums, I'm just saying that's the urge that makes me do just about everything in my life. It's that way for everyone. Think about everything you've ever done in your life. It's ultimately to feel and look good right? Why would you want to do that?
Slaves to our synapses.
VecPrime wrote:ugh.
That has to be the most inhuman worldview ive ever read. Think about where exactly some of that thinking leads, ethically.
I will point to Soviet Russia, (where borscht eats YOU!), for an example of where exactly it leads.
After all, if we are just highly complex machines, there is no real ethical objection to, say, reformatting a human being, or replacing a defective one. According to you, i am no better than an I-pod.
Someone asked about the holographic paradigm. I reccomend reading Michael Talbot (The Holographic Universe) and Amir Goswami (The Self-Aware Universe). In that order.
VecPrime wrote:"To say otherwise is granola eating flower power wishful thinking."
Hey, i proudly eat my granola bars at breakfast.
That sounds like something Limbaugh would say.
Not like a quote from the official voice of reason.
Ad hominem does not work, and its gonna kill this forum, did you read Bish's post?
VecPrime wrote:Well, with all those electrons buzzing around in there subject to entanglement from the Big Bang, it could very well be a quantum-mechanical interface device.
Think about it - weve got a googol of the little dudes up there, all bound to neurochemicals and such. Bonding is either dependent on these electrons or in the case of ligand bonding to neuroreceptor substrate, its dependent on even weaker hydrogen bonding.
Only four forces have been experimentally confirmed to exist (strong interaction, weak interaction, electromagnetism and gravitation). The only force which operates relevantly at the human scale is electromagnetism. This force is fully understood and described by Quantum Electrodynamics and Special Relativity. Any additional force acting upon humans or emanating from the mind would have long ago been detected in laboratories as an aberration of the predictable behaviour of electromagnetism - and this has never been detected. Much of scientific study relating to the soul has been involved in investigating the soul as a human belief or as concept that shapes cognition and understanding of the world, rather than as an entity in and of itself.
VecPrime wrote:any good scientific thewory should be predictive.
Can we yet calculate out how a person's life is going to run based on their childhood and genes?
No, and we probably never will. I hope not at any rate. What would be worse is if those in power pretended to be able to do that, and use it as an excuse to liquidate ethnic groups secretly.
Wait, thats happened. Russia.
As for explaining a quantum-mechanical interface...as i said, lots of electrons making up your brain signals there one way or another. All are subject to Heisenberg, Einstein-Podolsky-Rosen, et al quantum physics laws. If these laws, like other physical laws, are really calculating other forces involved in the quantum realm, then it stands to reason that its possible that at the very least we can interface with it and get something out of it. The holographic paradigm, which explains EPR and a fair amount of everything in the Standard Model (and more!), completes the picture.
anyhow, due to THAT, best we might ever be able to do is say that there's a x% chance of a person doing something. x could be like 99% if a person has two genes for schizophrenia, or lower in other cases, but we can never say for certain that a particular person is going to do something, bad or good.
VecPrime wrote:any good scientific thewory should be predictive.
Can we yet calculate out how a person's life is going to run based on their childhood and genes?
No, and we probably never will. I hope not at any rate. What would be worse is if those in power pretended to be able to do that, and use it as an excuse to liquidate ethnic groups secretly.
Wait, thats happened. Russia.
As for explaining a quantum-mechanical interface...as i said, lots of electrons making up your brain signals there one way or another. All are subject to Heisenberg, Einstein-Podolsky-Rosen, et al quantum physics laws. If these laws, like other physical laws, are really calculating other forces involved in the quantum realm, then it stands to reason that its possible that at the very least we can interface with it and get something out of it. The holographic paradigm, which explains EPR and a fair amount of everything in the Standard Model (and more!), completes the picture.
anyhow, due to THAT, best we might ever be able to do is say that there's a x% chance of a person doing something. x could be like 99% if a person has two genes for schizophrenia, or lower in other cases, but we can never say for certain that a particular person is going to do something, bad or good.
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