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Where in our brains does consciousness lie?
Quote from: thedoc on 25/11/2016 20:53:02Where in our brains does consciousness lie?Inside neurons, in microtubules.
Neurological studies suggests that evan_au has the right idea. When a stimulus that is not sufficient to produce conscious awareness is given, it will produce a limited activation response local to the areas dealing with the relevant sense. It may cause localized activations in more distant areas, but they die out in fairly short order. When the stimulus intensity is increased until it crosses the threshold for conscious awareness (the subject reports sensing it), the initial activation is greater and causes a wave of activity to sweep across the cortex, triggering bursts of activity in many areas and 'echoing' back and forth for a much longer period.There do seem to be particular areas in the brain that control the various aspects of the sense of self (locality, agency, bounds, ownership, etc.), and these will also be particularly active, but conscious awareness seems to involve widespread activation and synchronization of activity across the brain.
How do you explain the neuroscience of brain-to-brain connectivity and neuronal phase coherence?
I agree however that synchronicity must be implicated in the neurophenomenology of consciousness. I suggest that macroscopic quantum coherence must be correlated to the optimal computation (hypercomputation) of conscious experience through bioelectromagnetic fields. The mind and matter are entangled together inside the brain at the molecular level where quantum-like interactions seem to orchestrate consciousness. I call this biological phenomenon "synaptic hypercomputation".
What do you mean by the 'neuroscience of brain-to-brain connectivity and neuronal phase coherence'? If possible provide a reference.
What makes you think hypercomputation is possible? why would it be necessary for consciousness?
I don't see how macroscopic quantum effects can be relevant. Explain what you mean by 'macroscopic quantum coherence' in the brain, and how it would aid understanding of consciousness. The quantum entanglement you mentioned previously is a non-starter; entangled particles must have a common source and cannot transfer or exchange information - also, entanglement resolves anytime an entangled particle interacts. The brain is not a vacuum - if there were entangled particles, they would interact within microns.
With respect, it just sounds like a bunch of speculative unexplained processes being invoked to explain consciousness, another unexplained process. That would be pseudoscience. You can't explain the unexplained with the inexplicable.
http://journals.plos.org/ploscompbiol/article?id=10.1371/journal.pcbi.1003723
http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S1877042815018406
My guess is that mind and matter "entanglement" (neuronal phase coherence) are part of a greater (collective) consciousness, allowing brain-to-brain connectivity in a group of people via quantum channels.
The brain is not consciousness.
Do you consider general relativity pseudoscience? I do believe in the power of the mind to physically interact with matter...
Your statement of belief is ill-defined metaphysics, not science.
Nice one, dlorde. I am surprised by the lack of evidences in your claims.
... please consider the reality of biological hypercomputation as a neurophenomenological science based on general relativity (GR), not pseudo-science.
With respect, I suggest you read more on the role of quantum channels and microtubules in the organization of consciousness.
Erika asked the Naked Scientists: Where in our brains does consciousness lie?What do you think?
... scientists have been probing individual regions of the brain for over a century, exploring their function by zapping them with electricity and temporarily putting them out of action. Despite this, they have never been able to turn off consciousness...
Quote from: jacck123 on 16/02/2017 09:36:55... scientists have been probing individual regions of the brain for over a century, exploring their function by zapping them with electricity and temporarily putting them out of action. Despite this, they have never been able to turn off consciousness...That is incorrect: Consciousness On-Off Switch Discovered Deep in the Brain.Also, of course, there are anaesthetics, and all the other involuntary means of turning off consciousness, such as a blow to the head, fainting, and so-on.
Why do discussions about consciousness always go off the rails?
Quote from: cheryl j on 21/02/2017 18:08:55Why do discussions about consciousness always go off the rails?The hard to grasp and the unexplained always seem to attract a raft of pseudoscientific debris...