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sirhinojo
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congruous associations

hi dudes,

The other day I got to thinking about the game we played on PG forum where we took a concrete concept and explained to the alien this concept using six types of input.  Now i am wondering if this is good to do for abstract concepts. 

Gerunds and verbs are interesting to me.  Mostly because gerunds and verbs are about the things we do in life, and I find that I have trouble doing certain things in life like..... "waiting" or "eating".... 

Perhaps if we can be clear about what we are doing in any given moment in time, and then make the congruent associations to those moments, then they might become easier in the sense of less painful, more efficient, etc..

Let me try doing this with the word "waiting"

WAITING

1. To wait refers to an abstract concept.  It is non-physical in the sense that it describes a behavior. It is however associated with a relaxed state wherein regeneration can take place.
2. Waiting is seen as a passive non-doing, a perched, alert, and balanced holding of the space around you, keeping it open to receive the event or thing you are expectant of.
3. Waiting is associated with the archetype of healers, attenders, servers and loyal guards.
4. Waiting is very much a receptive state of mind and body in that you are allowing time to pass without impatience or boredom. 
5. Waiting is a term, a gerund in grammatical terms. 
6. Humans know that certain events in the world cannot be willed and can only be waited for. 

oh lordy lordy lordy, I have a lot of uncertainty as to how to include network six into the description!

well, I am curious, what is your guys' reaction to this!

sirhinojo



Edited By:  Alex
Mar-24-17 07:48:08

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Alex
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Re: congruous associations

Long mail! Get coffee!  :  )

Sirhinojo wrote:
well, I am curious, what is your guys' reaction to this!

Hopefully, we won't have one  :  )
Reactions are a sign of trouble. But it would be good to hear our responses to this. (It's important to remember this distinction, because its a massive one; see below)

So, now we're constructing tutorial 11 already, wow, that's very cool...but again we need some background info.
...Excuse me while I interface with my hot database Janice**
(don't forget to use a conduit!)  :  )

Here we are:
Nouns and verbs use different parts of N5:
http://www.sciencedaily.com/releases/20 … 084640.htm

But when adjectives become involved, N3/N6 get involved:
http://www.nyu.edu/about/news-publicati … rases.html

Because adjectives associate with emotional weighting much more than other words.

But the context of words, as well as the words themselves, determines which network does most of the processing, because different types of language use different networks. N4 processes metaphoric language, poetry, song lyrics, emotional language, swearwords, new words, and sound effects (for example laughter, blowing a raspberry), which is why left-hemisphere strokes don't take those abilities away*

Conversely, N5 processes formal language, grammar and syntax, facts, figures, backwards speech, and known words.

When we're looking at frontal processing and abstract concepts though, we also have to remember that 'agents in context' is the brain's rule, rather than as with N1&N2 which process agents OR contexts. Simply, things get more complex up the front end of your starship.

There is some speciality in that N4 is more interested in contexts and N5 more interested in agents, but both take both into consideration.
...(I'm not sure if that last bit's coherent -excuse me a moment while I eat a banana) :  )

...Okay, looking at your suggestion in light of all this, the 'explain it to the alien game' works best to reveal the literal meanings of our words that we sometimes consciously miss, but that the unconscious always takes on board.

A great example is the word 'reaction' in this context because I'm guessing that you used it above without realizing that you were saying 'what are your dysfunctional responses?' to the unconscious (because to the unconscious the personal-context meaning associated with 'reaction' is: “something's going wrong”; whereas it's associated meaning for 'response' is: ”all is well”.) The average conscious mind, however, thinks that both 'sort of mean the same thing'.

It's not being aware of contextual unconscious meaning consciously that allows incongruity to remain. If you used the same word ('reaction') in the literal context of chemistry, the unconscious would NOT send the 'problem' message, which is why contexts are really important.

A similar demonstration to 'the alien game' is shown in sci-fi when AI characters are usually portrayed as not understanding metaphor, and also in some forms of aspergers syndrome when people take everything that is said literally (in a similar way. (Aspergers people are often N5-dominant at the expense of N4 and often various other networks).

'Waiting' is a particularly loaded word, because it has program code associations with a subprocess, associated with strategies usually involved with that subprocess. Hopefully we'll have room to talk about this in tutorials too.

Waiting is a subprocess because it never happens on its own; always as an 'episode' in a bigger picture as a length of time or distance between significant events.

If we think about it, waiting is multi-contextual: for most human beings waiting is NOT a relaxed state, but one in which they get more and more frustrated and depressed as time goes by, consciously about the thing they are waiting for (eg, damned train is always late, why don't they have more staff serving, why don't they publish our results faster, etc, etc) but internally the frustration is due to anxiety over lack of input (which is why NH students strategize; using techniques or tech to amuse ourselves in waiting times.)

Planned waiting can also be a long term strategy situation (eg, I'm waiting till my kids are grown up before I move to mars, the seed is waiting for rain to trigger its growth, the child is waiting for her teeth to grow before she can eat steak, etc) in which there is no frustration because there is no lack of input during the waiting time (and inserting input is exactly how we hack the problem during otherwise boring waiting times).

In defining what waiting IS, though, we are left with:
'a subprocess; the part of a process between significant associated processing events'. As to our own basic behaviors during this subprocess, individual details will differ according to context.

'Waiting' is a CC set, so I'd find it challenging to categorize this particular word in the alien game. But I'll probably have a go, because its fun  :  )

Really enjoyed writing this, thanks; diving in there baked my noodle a bit  :  )
There are more relevant papers below.
Best,
AR

*Gardner, 1975; Goldstein, 1942; Smith, 1966; Smith & Burklund, 1966; Yamadori et al., 1977.
** (My database is called Janice. And she's hot. I need better heat-dispersal gear.)

More of the latest:
“A Neurosemantic Theory of Concrete Noun Representation Based on the Underlying Brain Codes”
Source: PLoS One [Open Access]
http://www.plosone.org/article/info:doi … ne.0008622
"New study uncovers brain's code for pronouncing vowels." August 21st, 2012. http://medicalxpress.com/news/2012-08-u … owels.html


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sirhinojo
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Re: congruous associations

hi dude,

Am I getting this right?  Words have literal meanings of which the unconscious aware of and incongruently the conscious part isn't.  I can understand that especially in light of hypnotic language use, but, a word like 'reaction' just seems too complex to be better understood by unconscious processes.  I suspect I am missing some information that would help me understand your example.  Like I said, I know that words have nuances that influence the output behavior, but I can't see how "reaction" is inherently "dysfunctional" except by arbitrary definition. 

By the way, what does CC stand for?

The explanation of WAITING as a sub-process makes sense to me.  Funny feeling to think that we have also designated a whole class of people to literally wait on us for life.  Servants have the task to lead lives with no significant events of their own. 

sirhinojo



I


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sirhinojo
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Re: congruous associations

CC means core concept set, sorry, my over-sight.


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Alex
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Re: congruous associations

Hi dude,

We face the same problem all curious people do -life and the mind are incredibly complex. And there's a lot of information here so there's gonna be long mails and a lot to say. Some of it can really bake our noodles, but grasping the ideas is really worth it. If you're happy with that, on we go...


Sirhinojo wrote: Am I getting this right? Words have literal meanings of which the unconscious aware of and incongruently the conscious part isn't.

That's often true, but 'not being aware' is not the source of the incongruity. Incongruity happens when the conscious takes on a FALSE meaning and the unconscious knows the true one.
Example: if our unconscious believes that the color orange is a danger to us because it raises our blood pressure, there's no incongruity if the conscious mind doesn't know that. Only if the conscious mind believes something like 'this room will be much better now I'm painting it orange' -then we're in trouble. Because the unconscious is thinking, “No it wouldn't” and the conscious is thinking “Yes it would”.
When C/U believe opposite things, or things that contradict each other like this, we get incongruity. There's a lot of stuff about this going in T10 & T11, but for now here are some everyday examples that most people experience:
A The conscious mind thinks it knows what a 'good diet' is, but the unconscious knows the body & brain isn't getting what it needs.
B The conscious mind believes that whatever job we are doing is a good thing because it makes money, and the unconscious knows it's destroying our creativity and sending us down the road to alzhheimers.
C The conscious mind believes we need 'x' amount of sleep per night but the unconscious knows the body and brain need more.
D The conscious mind believes we feel love for someone but the unconscious knows we feel lust.
E The conscious believes that when people die they go to heaven, but the unconscious is grief stricken at the loss of a friend.
F The conscious mind is told that parents/teachers are smarter than us, but the unconscious knows they're dumb, dysfunctional and coercive.
It doesn't make sense.
Most people have these 'standard' incongruities and a whole lot more. Our task in NH is to cut through to the truth and get both ends of our consciousness continuum in agreement about reality, and to do that we need to look into the mind's ontology and beliefs and make sure they fit with the available evidence and the facts of reality. That's in T10 too.
The rabbit hole goes much deeper than words. Individual SOUNDS mean things to the unconscious. A steady heartbeat (or drum beat) in our ears is unconscious code for “all is well”. Sudden loud or harsh noises (and even a high wind) mean “danger”. Everything in our immediate experience tells us something, gives us unconscious information, and this sensitivity is only lost through lack of use or wronguse.
The combination of sounds in any word conveys information to the unconscious. This has nothing to do with what the word 'means' in a dictionary. If we have a dude called “Darth Vader” and a dude called “Anakin Skywalker” we know who the baddie is just from the sound of their names. If we had two alien dudes, one called “Boloba” and one called “Kiku”, and we tell you that one is short and fat and one is tall and thin, the unconscious automatically assumes that 'Boloba' will be the fatter, shorter dude and Kiku the tall thin one. If asked to guess “which one is probably the female alien?”, it would automatically say Kiku.
Okay let that bake our noodles for a moment before going on...the unconscious makes assumptions based on sound.
Now let's flip over the noodles and bake the other side by considering this: These unconscious  assumptions are correct. In reality, certain sounds do associate with certain conditions, good or bad, nasty or nice, harmful or beneficial. In reality, sound affects our neurotransmission and physiology bigtime.
It is remarkable. If humans had known about this stuff, of course, they would have designed words to 'sound like what they mean' and we would have a fully congruent conscious language.
We haven't developed as a species enough to get that far yet, but some older cultures came close by accident because originally 'language' was totally congruent, when it was only grunts and squeals and expressive sounds. The noises that we made conveyed the same message to the unconscious as the words' literal meanings conveyed.
A lot of this still shines through: think of the words “Yuck!”  “Poo!” and “Ugh!” when we're disgusted, or the words “Ha!” “Yippee!” and “Wow” when we're excited. The very sound of the words agrees with their meaning. Onomatopoeic words work too: examples are atchoo, cuckoo, hiccup, splash, crash, bang, miaow, sizzle, frizz.
And enough remains for our language to be congruent in many areas, but much has also degraded. Words now convey less meaning than they did hundreds of years ago, because most people aren't aware of this connection. Those who are, are considered inspirational speakers, great poets or amazing lyricists, and all they are doing is exploiting the sounds of words in congruency with human unconscious responses. Self hypnosis makes us more aware of this sort of ability.
What is meant by 'words convey less meaning'? Let's take a modern word: “Responsible”. What does it mean in everyday colloquial speech?
The dictionary gives us: “answerable or accountable, as for something within one's power, control, or management”, and “able to discharge obligations or pay debts.”
That sounds like the definition of a society that needs someone to blame when things go wrong. “He is responsible” has come to mean “It was his fault! Blame him!”
If we want the original meaning of a word, though, we need to look at its etymology and if we dig there, we find the meaning “Able to respond appropriately”. To say “He is responsible” USED to mean “He is competent”.
In effect the word has reversed its meaning, but still sounds exactly the same, and hence the conscious/unconscious conflict.
This is explored in George Orwell's 1984 with “newspeak”, where people use the words love and peace (which sound great to the unconscious) to mean war and hatred consciously.
Awareness of what language does to the unconscious is a very useful tool, but we need to know a few other bits before it all fits together.


[s] I know that words have nuances that influence the output behavior, but I can't see how "reaction" is inherently "dysfunctional" except by arbitrary definition.

You're right; it isn't. As I said above, if you used the same word ('reaction') in the literal context of chemistry, the unconscious would NOT send the 'problem' message, which is why contexts are really important. If you used the same word to describe lighting a rocket fuse and the reaction makes a rocket take off, it wouldn't send a problem message either. The word 'reaction' only implies dysfunction in the personal human response context, NOT in other contexts (where it makes sense.)
Asking someone what sort of reaction they had is like asking them whether they had a heart attack or a shock response or some sort of seizure. It leaves no room for anyone healthy to reply. Those who don't experience any such thing are left with 'no box to tick' unconsciously.
In short: Chemicals react. Combustion engines react. Humans respond. Reactions are automatic, responses are autonomous. Lots more on this in T10.


[s] Funny feeling to think that we have also designated a whole class of people to literally wait on us for life.
We haven't; the TE has. I personally don't have servants or slaves, and I'm guessing you don't either. In this context, the word 'waiting' has been used to mean 'serving'. It too doesn't make sense.
We have to remember we are a minority and not use “we” when referring to 'most people'. What 'we' are doing is something really rather special.
  :  )


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Sakiro
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Re: congruous associations

Wow this is interesting dudes!

Alex, do you think that we have associated too certains response to the sounds of music too? (i mean, the notes of music, chords etc) like certains tones the unconcious associate with happiness and other emotions.

I remember reading here that a lot of music evoke sentimenal reactions in us, and i'm curious if this happend more because of the lyrics (words) of it, or because or the notes per se, or some kind of combinations of it .. or just is us that associate wrong in the first place with sentiment x kind of music ..(because it makes us remember some shitty experience in our past etc)

Hope it makes sense!

Some interesting Ted's video related

http://www.ted.com/talks/julian_treasur … ts_us.html

http://www.ted.com/talks/charles_limb_b … quote=1218

Cheers


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sirhinojo
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Re: congruous associations

Hello Dudes,

wow, this is all very interesting.  It seems we are crossing out into a new open territory, full of new information.  A lot of questions are pushing me from behind me, but let me take it slowly.

A quick note...  I checked out one of the references you made about the brain imaging studies that show where nouns and verbs are processed in the brain.  Here is a quote from the paper:

"Learning nouns activates the left fusiform gyrus, while learning verbs switches on other regions LEFT inferior frontal gyrus and part of the left posterior medial temporal gyrus)," says Antoni Rodríguez-Fornells, co-author of the study and an ICREA researcher at the Cognition and Brain Plasticity Unit of the University of Barcelona.

I am confused because you said that verbs are processed in the 4th Network and the 4th Network is in the right half of the brain.  Here they say "left inferior frontal gyrus". 

But isn't my question really about anatomical specificity of brain processes?  According to neuro-plasticity, all kinds of brain areas can jump in to replace other areas.  For example, visual cortex re-organization into a tactile processor in blind people, etc..

And you mention the phonetic bits of language.  Kiku vs. Boloba for example.  Are these phonetic bits tied into our animal mind?  Is this what we mean by the unconscious?  Or is the unconscious as we are referring to it just as "human" as the conscious, only a parallel stream that is left out of awareness by... inhibition???

I feel like I am getting a bit sidetracked and over-whelmed by this new information, it will take time to put it all into context.  But I certainly want this discussion to continue, and I hope my questions are somehow on-track. 

I am a fan of the psychonaut Terence McKenna, and I am left now wondering how the idea of human transcendence, eschaton, and entelechy can fit into the NH model of the brain having to base all its higher functions of abstraction on earth-bound, animal wiring.  It seems that the three big words I just used all point to a potential that is free of earth-bound, incarnate being.

Ooooh, I feel like I am wading into the deeper water....

When I think of looking at a human brain, all slimy organic tissue, and I think that this is our interface to the world of all experience,  I get this very quiet and peaceful sensation of wonder.  I am left mute, with no answers, and I want to stay in this state of infinite wonder, because it seems like the most wonderful, peaceful, innocent place to be.  But I can't stay there, because immediately some desire takes over.  It appears to me that life is just a continuum of wants and desires.  One could spread the continuum to include the universe.... but I am really digressing now....  I will continue on this track of transcendence as the discourse unfolds.

hoping there is little confusion!

sirhinojo


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Alex
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Re: congruous associations

My theory: This is a long mail that is sensible at one end, much much sillier in the middle, and sensible again at the other end  :  )

Sakiro Wrote:
do you think that we have "fixed" certains response to the sounds of music too?


Weeellll, it's not really about what I think  :  )  it's about what facts do we have and what evidence is available, and what questions we can ask that lead to finding out what we want to know:

Why did music evolve? Once humans had speech, why did we carry on singing? Why do birds sing? What does sound actually do to us to make us 'feel things'? When we express ourselves in sound, what sounds do we use to express what sort of emotions and what sort of events?

There are six separate issues at least to consider in looking at these questions:

1. Cells that fire together wire together. So any sound that is associated with any event will remain associated with that event for that person. In this factor, everyone is different as we all experience different sounds associated with different things.
2. Biology responds mechanically to certain sounds. This will happen regardless of what associations are made. In this factor, everyone is the same. However, the link between sound and mechanical motion is different for each individual, as discussed in T9.
3. Music will evoke emotion in the healthy and sentiment in the unhealthy. In this factor we fall into two groups; those who habitually feel emotion and those who habitually feel sentiment.
4. Because we can program ourselves to override responses, our responses to music can be engineered. However, if they're not in sync with what biology's doing, they'll be incongruent.
5. Lyrics are an entirely different matter because we respond individually to individual phonemes biologically (see 2) we have unifying archetypal responses to metaphoric language and we also have different individual conscious word associations. In some people these latter will be congruent, in some they will not.
6. We will become more like whatever we are surrounded by. Our responses will begin to synchronize unconsciously with the responses of those around us, and we will respond to sound more like they do. And vice versa.

If you put all this together, it's obviously very complex, the rabbit hole goes a long, long way down and this is an area its best to approach one bit at a time.

A great background is looking at cymatics and discovering what sound does to matter:
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cymatics
(but forget cymatic therapy; its a red herring on the 'whole organ' level. There's no evidence that whole organs or particular body parts respond to particular 'therapeutic frequencies')  :  )

http://www.cymatics.org/
http://www.rmcybernetics.com/projects/D … isplay.htm
(if you want to play)  :  )

Meanwhile, some optimistic news: From around 4000BCE until the 20th century, many societies developed a habit of labeling music 'immoral' if it made people get too happy, excited or horny. Some of the most controlling and anxious groups have banned music, singing and dancing altogether.

Requests for a law against waltz music were made when it was first heard in the UK, as 'encouraging lewd behavior and overexcitement' (at the same time, these goons were trying to ban tea for causing 'dangerous euphoria'). The TE lords of the time were frontloader politicians and religious leaders, both terrified of genuine emotion because it's their nemesis. Consequently Rock & roll got similar problems and was frequently referred to as the music of Satan.

But as we write, dear dudes, this barrier is breaking down largely because of global communication of culture and people like us, on the internet, sharing music, making music, listening to music, enjoying and weaving together the diverse strands that form the marvelous unified tapestry of human culture...

...[cue: Monty Python style narrator]:...And if you've only just joined us, ladies and gentlemen, the final score in that particular game was: Human Culture 1, Toilet Empire 0; another great goal for Humanity.
Even though today's game between Facts and Opinions is still ongoing and cooperation is low, points gained from Humanity's last two wins this season (Proof versus Superstition and Autonomy versus Restriction), the latter played right here on the internet, put Humanity in much better form for the finals, 'Intelligence versus Stupidity', scheduled for later this millenium, so well done us.


[and now for something completely different]

Re:  http://www.ted.com/talks/lang/en/michae … _time.html
I saw trouble coming (for neurology) when he said “the two sides of our natures: Instinct and intelligence” and then polarized 'faith & reason, instinct & intelligence”. I AM able to translate these terms into what he really means ('conscious mind & unconscious mind'), but this is a dualistic old paradigm context.
I was more confused with the 'what and how' argument because from a biological pov “what” is information of a particular type(in this case emotional weighting) and “how” is manipulation (communication & reception) of it -in other words 'how' IS music (or rather, music is one way it can be done).

So, not too thrilled about the ontology, but wohh, dudes, even from the few brief snatches, what a great pianist! Does he know, I wonder, that he's bonded to the instrument and it's treated as an extension of his own body map, in the mind?  That's always so cool to see. This dude is one of those people I think it would be soooooooo fun to jam with, and then you would end up wanting to start a band. Musicians in sync with their instruments* RULE  :  )

Best,
AR
PS Yes! I just watched the original series of Monty Python! We will become more like...etc etc.....

*what, no lewd comments from rock guitarists about the size of your instruments? oh please.


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Alex
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Re: congruous associations

Long mail, but not silly  :  )

[sirhinojo Wrote: ]the 4th Network is in the right half of the brain.

The 4th network, and all other networks, are all over the brain. Networks are not lobes.

This raises an important issue as it's a recurring problem of misunderstanding by a majority of students and I'd appreciate any ideas y'all have on how to get this concept across. I'm aware (but unfortunately still kinda baffled) that tutorials don't yet manage to convey that “the map is not the territory”; that what we are working with is a model of how intelligence works, just like the standard model is a model of how physics works.

Normally, we grasp these relationships between the real world and models. The physics standard model when portrayed in 2D places protons on the left hand side and force particles on the right, but we understand easily that in real life all protons are not on the left hand side of the universe and forces do not only work in the right hand side (actually that would make a great sci fi story*)  :  )

How can we help students (and ourselves!) to grasp this same relationship in a model of intelligence?  Is there difficulty in using a concrete model for an abstract concept (and if so, how did quantum physics manage?)
Maybe inserting more info in earlier tutorials would help but I'm also wary of going on and on about things and getting too repetitive and boring, so it's a difficult one.

Anyway, I digress: Why is N4 on the right hand side of the model and referred to as the 'front/right network'? -Most of N4's cell bodies are found towards the front and one side of real live brains (which side, in real life, varies according to the individual, and also as you note in cases of injury or damage other areas can indeed take over tasks and/or bits of other networks). N4's axons are everywhere throughout the brain's 3D space (and some axons of N1 & 2 are over a meter away from our brain, in our toes!)

Our whole body is filled with brain networks, because neurons are nerves. We have to standardize the model in order to look at the relationships between things, so we chose the areas of neuron cell body amalgamation hubs (ascertained by DTI) for the architecture of the model, then flattened it out to 2D, which gives a nice hexagonal cell and looks pretty in diagrams.


[s] Are these phonetic bits tied into our animal mind?

It appears so, yes. From T9:
“Micromuscular responses
Researchers filmed newborn infants as the babies listened to various sounds. Their analysis showed all healthy infants displayed micromuscular responses (micromovements) in response to the phonemes ('bits') of language, in synchrony with the rhythms of human speech.

Every person's micromovement repertoire is as individual as their fingerprints, and they last for our whole lives. Random noise, rhythmic tapping, or disconnected vowel sounds will not produce this "language-response-dance." Only the natural rhythms of human speech have this effect. The same muscle moves in response to the same phoneme each time the phoneme sounds, like an automatic coupling between specific sensory input and specific motor response.”

I wouldn't call the unconscious the 'animal' mind though. All of our mind is an animal mind, because we're animals. We're very smart animals, but still animals.

The unconscious is the part of our mind we're not consciously aware of, and that's most of it. No 'inhibition' is necessary, most processing just doesn't need to be displayed in conscious awareness in the same way that most of the processing on our computers doesn't need to be displayed on the screen. The conscious bit is our 'user interface'.


Re: McKenna, we choose our own role models for our own specific needs and reasons, but I don't think I'd be taking too seriously opinions on neurology from someone who died of what he died of. In fact I'd take it as a strong sign to avoid modeling them. (I hope nobody takes this personally as it isn't meant so.) Nor does this mean that sound evidence should ever be ignored, regardless of who does the experiments.

The brain doesn't perform higher functions, the mind does. Hardware becomes software when code is given meaning. There's no reason why a mind couldn't run on other equally complex hardware without a biological basis, but we haven't quite got there yet so we're stuck being animals and we gotta live with it, messy and inconvenient though it may be.

That doesn't mean we can't have transcendent experiences, as many of us know well  :  )  I think coming  to terms with it is about realizing how super nature is rather than  assuming it's supernatural. We are after all a part of all things. The atoms inside us were once inside stars. We literally 'embody' the universe.

I think we are racing ahead of ourselves with too much information and not enough defragging, and that's causing confusion too. It would be good to consolidate what we've looked at already in tutorials before adding more information. We are exploring one of the most complex things in existence, so shouldn't be surprised if we get confused sometimes. Just a short time ago the mind was mostly unfathomable, that's partly why its so exciting being the first generation with MRI, PCR, electron microscopy etc, who can 'boldly go'.

I get exactly this problem from time to time because I'm too impatient to understand things, and when it happens I go away and watch movies or do gardening or socialize with friends, and deliberately stop thinking about neuroscience. While we take that 'time out' the mind does a marvelous job of putting all the info together in more coherent ways, so sometimes we have to just sit back and let it do that  :  )

I share your wonder about how meat can think LOL  :  ) even though we know it's 'electrochemically'. The concepts that codes can be embodied and a whole mind can be a series of patterns are remarkable and magnificent and strangely exciting in an ACh/endorphiny sort of way, so who knows what my biology is doing there and who knows what the future holds for mind?  :  )
Yum.
AR

*But a very brief one  :  )


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sirhinojo
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Re: congruous associations

Hello Dudes,

I don"t think there is so much need to change the website to help students be very clear on that the model of the network brain-mind is just a model, and not a three dimensional reality. 

Or you could just write a short caveat paragraph and have it flash on the top of every webpage.

I understand the brain"s networks are messily rather scattered about.  But at least with the frontal (and network 3) are pretty well defined by hemisphere.  At least enough to the degree that it is talked about openly in lectures and media etc that there are some generalizations one can make about left and right hemispheres.  It is interesting.  But I am sorry and I realize that it is misleading to think that anatomical locations are assigned to mind.  It isn't the nerves themselves so much as the neurotransmitter soup that determine what happens.... I guess, I hope I am saying this right.

This is why I asked.  But it isnt really all that important.  I was interested in actually taking a look at some of the references you provide.  I usually dont click on them because I do not enjoy reading scientific papers.  And then I read that part about both of the brain areas they were discussing as being in the right singulate blah blah something or other.....

Poor Terence McKenna.  Are you saying that he is someone not to be modeled because he got brain cancer?  I am curious as to why you would say this?  Did he do something to get the brain cancer?  The doctors supposedly said that his brain cancer was not related to his mammoth pot consumption.  But it is kind of emotionally intense to think that he was such a psychonaut and died of weird nerve cell cancer.

I think we are getting somehow ahead of ourselves too.  I need to get back on feeling good.


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Alex
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Re: congruous associations

Hi dudes,
sirhinojo Wrote:
you could just write a short caveat paragraph and have it flash on the top of every webpage.
I considered whether to put the golden rules and other bits like this here and there in this way (but not flashing. We gotta be careful with flashy things 'cos people with epilepsy come here.) Ideally though I'd like to get the ideas across without repetition, especially when it may be out of context.

Do you think the 'hardware/software' analogy might make it clearer; for example if we think of the brain as robotic parts or machine parts whose behavior is controlled by software. The machine parts are the structure. Different bits of the structure can be used for different things depending on priority of processing, just as a computer can run a variety of software and in each application, different parts of the hardware do different things; the display on the screen is different for example but its the same screen; the same structure; running different programs. What we are modeling is not the structure; MRI does that best. We're modeling software and the behavior it prompts, and learning about the mind's different applications and how to hack them.


[s] I understand the brain"s networks are messily rather scattered about. But at least with the frontal (and network 3) are pretty well defined by hemisphere.

I still have quite some trouble telling from available data whether some things are going on courtesy of root processes in 4/5 or 6, and N3 sits in the middle but invades both temporal lobes and the parietal cortex. N2 uses segments of parietal as well as occipital lobes and many 'middle' structures. I'm not certain anyone can correlate structure/network/function that closely yet. But it's coming, it's definitely coming.

There certainly are specialized-by-hemisphere tasks and they're usually turning out to be complementary parts of the same process (language is a good example), but this idea in the past got very exaggerated by the 'split brain' brigade and a lot of dualistic ('reason versus feeling') type speculation has in retrospect turned out to be not true. It happened at a time when we had much more data about the brain's left half than the right half, and that's no longer the case. It's also becoming apparent that a lot of r/l complementary functions also use other networks (language is a good example here too). So it's still possible that all functions use parts of every network just like memory does. I find that quite exciting  :  )


[s] But I am sorry and I realize that it is misleading to think that anatomical locations are assigned to mind.
I don't get what there is to be sorry about? (Sorry; Mr Spock again)  :  )  It's hardly our fault that neurobiology is complex and mind software such a big unknown that those of us flying around the frontiers all get lost in it on a regular basis  :  )  We didn't design it, after all (although that would make another great sci fi story).


[s] It isn't the nerves themselves so much as the neurotransmitter soup that determine what happens....
Ooh, important bit this! Okay this is one step closer to software rather than hardware, but still not quite there. Remember the experiment where two groups people were both given norepinephrine, one group then had a sexy experience and one group had a scary experience? Exactly the same transmitter produced very different results. Likewise an anxious person can react to an unknown situation in fear whereas a non-anxious person can respond to the same unknown with excitement.

So this tells us it's not quite the transmitters that are determining what happens, it's what the mind believes is happening. It's thought. Thought controls everything; the SW controls the HW. Feedback from the HW gives the SW data but the SW has to decide what it means. Belief about what's going on modulates transmitter release.

Without the physical hardware nerves of course transmitter release wouldn't be possible, but at the bottom of it all whatever the unconscious mind believes is going on shapes every response, from the molecular to the physical to the behavioral to the psychological.

If what the unconscious believes is going on fits the observable facts, we have congruity.


[s] I was interested in actually taking a look at some of the references you provide. I usually dont click on them because I do not enjoy reading scientific papers.

It can get tedious. One of the reasons this site happened is we were thinking, wow no wonder people don't self-educate when it's this boring  LOL  :  )  It's not because most researchers are frontloaders, it's because the system of scientific reporting was set up by frontloaders centuries ago and everyone still chooses to conform to it. The 'abstract' sections are usually a relatively coherent approach with less details, so at least we know from a relatively short read whether the rest of the work is relevant to what we're pursuing.

[s] Poor Terence McKenna. Are you saying that he is someone not to be modeled because he got brain cancer?

Behaviors are really the issue not people. Certain behaviors are not good to model regardless of whom they are seen in, even if they turn up in someone really cool. Example: by all means model Hendrix's guitar style but don't model his benzo/alcohol habits. Most of us do things that nobody should model too; bad habits that we're getting rid of over time.


[s] Did he do something to get the brain cancer?

I never met the dude and have no idea at all of its origins or his response. The public info says he'd suffered a long time from headaches, which is certainly something I would follow up right away if either of my parents had suffered cancer (his mom did apparently), and that they worsened into migraines (at which point I'd be demanding brain scans) and finally seizures which led to diagnosis.

I realize there are many reasons for pursuing NH, and some are not prioritizing mind health they are prioritizing spirituality, altered states and/or fun, so fair play to this dude for doing what he wanted to do. But I don't see much factual information in this work that isn't intermingled with woo woo and it's a lot of work to disentangle the two. It's hard not to compare against Alex Shulgin, whose work with psychedelics is legendary but whose personal philosophy is virtually unknown.

Anyway, I guess the short version is: if we get a headache we should find out why  :  )

I shall be away for one week Mon 3rd – Saturday 8th sept. Consequently, replies to mails etc  may be late.
Best
AR


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Sakiro
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Re: congruous associations

Alex wrote:



[s] It isn't the nerves themselves so much as the neurotransmitter soup that determine what happens....
Ooh, important bit this! Okay this is one step closer to software rather than hardware, but still not quite there. Remember the experiment where two groups people were both given norepinephrine, one group then had a sexy experience and one group had a scary experience? Exactly the same transmitter produced very different results. Likewise an anxious person can react to an unknown situation in fear whereas a non-anxious person can respond to the same unknown with excitement.
AR

Hey guys, looking feedback a little late here =)

More details on this umm .. if i remember well when we are anxious we overproduce the NT norepinephrine right? and cortisol (fight and flight response) .. but the problem is not so much the neurotrasmitter per se (i mean, norepinephrine is as useful as the other ones)  than the lack of bloodlow in the frontal networks that comes with it? maybe norepinephrine is the one selected because affects the body as well as the brain? (increasing blood supply in the legs so you can avoid the danger,increasing hearth pulse etc) that's the reason that norepinephrine is the NT that is most produced in an anxious state and not the other ones???

That release happend in n5?? or in other areas of the brain?? or just the body? (i ask this because i wonder how it can affect front loaders vs rear ones ..)

The people in that experiment .. which could be the difference if they gave them dopamine instead norepinephrine?? ...

I don't know to what point given a "meaning" to some experience/stuff can override the effects of having x neurotrassmitter floating around our system .. which should at least "prime" you to have some kind of behaviour against others ..

Maybe i must interpret that, in a person without anxiety the behaviour that is prompted is the ones in "the green zone" and when we have anxiety will we have the ones in wronguse or nonuse if we have a lack of development in that area.. ?

In the case of norepinephrine (wronguse):

Greed, envy, avarice, hubris (unjustified pride), arrogance (unjustified confidence), conceit, narcissism, recklessness, compulsiveness, mania, projection (blaming others for own failings).

So .. NT could determine the behaviour of what will happend in a healthy state because will always be "green zone" responses/behaviours? the problem is when axiety step in our path .. and with that will get wronguse or nonuse reactions.

Edit: Ohh one last stuff that just pop-up in my mind .. buttt if you are not anxious BUT you have nonuse in x network you still get the nonuse behaviour ..? or the healthy ones???
Cheers


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Alex
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Re: congruous associations

Long mail, get coffee

Sakiro Wrote: . if i remember well when we are anxious we overproduce the NT norepinephrine right? and cortisol (fight and flight response) .. but the problem is not so much the neurotrasmitter per se (i mean, norepinephrine is as useful as the other ones) than the lack of bloodlow in the frontal networks that comes with it?

NE is needed for anything important that we want to remember -from tutorials (remember the slime mold?) you'll recall how its used in the first part of memory consolidation, so we release it when anything 'important' happens.

Cortisol is the stress hormone necessary for learning and only affects frontal lobe blood supply when in excess. Stress is good for growth, anxiety (chronic stress with no relaxation) is the problem. It's in chronic stress that blood flow shuts down.

[s]  maybe norepinephrine is the one selected because affects the body as well as the brain? (increasing blood supply in the legs so you can avoid the danger,increasing hearth pulse etc) that's the reason that norepinephrine is the NT that is most produced in an anxious state and not the other ones???

Strictly speaking, Norepinephrine affects the brain, epinephrine affects the body. Cortisol causes the release of epinephrine in the kidneys, that's the onset of the fight/flight response that shunts blood to muscles and bones rather than brain. Check the HPA axis diagram in T9. ACTH is part of the Cortisol cascade.
So we got:
NE in the brain preparing for learning & memory
NE in the ANS waking up the body and preparing it for interaction. All fine so far...
With anxiety we get:
Too much Cortisol in the brain signaling a fight/flight response, which causes:
Too much ACTH in the bloodstream triggering epinephrine
Epinephrine putting the body into defense mode
Frontal lobes shut down, mood shift to defensive.

All the stages of a chemical cascade would take up whole pages, include gene transcription, and be way too confusing for newbies, so we cut down to essentials in basics tutorials and start filling in the details in intermediate level. In advanced tutorials we'll see a lot more of the steps including epigenetic changes in some of these cascades.

[s] That release happend in n5?? or in other areas of the brain?? or just the body? (i ask this because i wonder how it can affect front loaders vs rear ones ..)

See above, plus: Most transmitters are made in rear nets, but the nature of neurotransmission is like wireless transmission-it goes all over the place but only the areas with receivers can detect it. Blood flow is what supplies the system with power. If blood flow to an area is restricted, that area has no power to transmit OR receive. It's like some hacker pulling the plug on half the network terminals. Doesn't affect the server, does affect the terminals.

[s] The people in that experiment .. which could be the difference if they gave them dopamine instead norepinephrine?? ...

It would be fairly easy to design an experiment where dopamine was given and two different scenarios presented, say, a sexy encounter versus a parachute jump.

Hypotheses: Those partaking in the sexy encounter would produce oxytocin as a second messenger and mood would shift into lust for sex, those participating in the parachute jump would release a small amount of cortisol, feel excitement and possibly slight alarm (if healthy) or anxiety & fear (if cortisol production did not stop). In both cases NE would be released to facilitate memory. In all healthy cases serotonin & endorphins would be released afterwards.

In the extremely anxious, even the sexy encounter would cause cortisol release and we'd see the sentiments of shyness/embarrassment or arrogance and possessive behavior.

...If anyone wants to run this experiment, can I try both?  :  )

[s] I don't know to what point given a "meaning" to some experience/stuff can override the effects of having x neurotrassmitter floating around our system ..

It doesn't override them, it just directs them in different ways, determined by our interpretation of context. Our interpretation of what a neurotransmitter-induced feeling MEANS and which behavior should be primed for is shaped by the context events occur in. If someone in a dark alley is holding a knife, we have a very different response than if someone in a restaurant or a butchers store is holding a knife. Intelligence must able to discriminate between risk and hazard, fact and fiction (otherwise we'd run from the butcher's knife, and the tiger on the movie screen). Context changes meaning even when events and objects remain the same.

[s] which should at least "prime" you to have some kind of behaviour

Yes, and 'which' behavior is the issue here. What we are learning is that context determines choice of interpretation of 'what's going on', and we prime for what we think is going on. Dopamine can create desire (second messenger Oxytocin) or alarm (second messenger Cortisol) because the desire not to die is just as strong and important as the desire to reproduce. Interpretation of our current context (imagination combines memory, prediction, current state of mind and current input to decide what the context IS) gives us the 'second messenger' transmitters that prime distinct behaviors rather than just 'a feeling'

Maybe i must interpret that, in a person without anxiety the behaviour that is prompted is the ones in "the green zone" and when we have anxiety will we have the ones in wronguse?

Yes, spot on, but more. Not just behaviors in the green zone, but the particular specific behaviors that are congruent with and appropriate to our current context. We won't for example feel lust when looking at an Anaconda, even though lust itself is a perfectly healthy green zone behavior.
...You could argue that some kinky people WOULD feel lust when looking at an Anaconda, and I'd say that's an example of how association-rewiring can be used deliberately for humor, fun or personal entertainment, but can also lead to serious mistakes.   :  )

[s] So .. NT could determine what happend in a healthy state because will always be "green zone" responses/behaviours?

With the 'contextual' caveat, yes (see above). The Amy has two choices for each network (like two bits of a jigsaw puzzle, only one of which fits the current picture) and N3 has the overall picture of what's going on. Once N3 matches up the two, it signals to put the pieces into the picture (the correct second messengers go out.)


[s] the problem is when axiety step in our path .. and the differente in wronguse/nonuse reactions.

Prolonging this analogy, once anxiety steps in, we've got the wrong pieces AND either the wrong picture, or no picture. The more pieces we try to shove in, the worse the confusion seems to get because none of them seems to fit.
Best,
AR


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