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the fear of decpetion is a serpent that strike each man in the face, making him too dizzy to actually see, how all things are if the same truth, respoken in many lanugauges and tongues, the language and tongue of each mortal....
prove how all is true, or prove all as untrue, but to prove some true and some not, is indeed the beginning of all bias, in one's own mind.... is bias bad, a sin to have? no more in that this be a words once used, as if bias is not seen by the people as bad, then why is it a dispised word amoungst all? mankind themself determines what is sin, by what is reacted to in a negative way.... if there is no sin, then there is nothing reacted that can be seen negative......... can one divide and say what is poitive and what is negative? can there be a definitive list of all that emcompass the aspects of these to opposites? then what is the realistic solution? all as one..... one for all and all for one? if there is these categories existing in the mind, they will divide the individuals mind into the two globes will it not? not allowing the two globes of the brain to work in unison? can this "connecting" the TWO LOBES TIE TOGETHER THE TOTAL ENERGIES WITHIN ANY BEING, BRING A SURGE OF ELECTICAL CURRENT THRU THE BODY, THAT AS FUSES THIS LOBE TOGETHER, AS THERE REALLY WAS A MARK IN THE FORHEAD? literal AND metoriphorical? so what has been written here? i have no earthly idea.... what the heart utters, the mind cannot look into.... peace..... if i prove all my neighbors words false, then likewise look to see if one can also disprove all oneself believes, which leaves what is true reality in plain site........ from some dumb site someone sent me, lol... The human brain is such a complex organ that we still don't fully understand how it works. We examine the science of our grey matter and offer a few theories as to what's going on up top... Brain science Following the Asian tsunami, scientists struggled to explain reports that primitive aboriginal tribesmen had somehow sensed the impending danger in time to join wild animals in a life-saving flight to higher ground. While some scientists discount the existence of a sixth sense for danger, new research from Washington University in St. Louis has identified a brain region. The anterior cingulate cortex (ACC) is a brain area located near the top of the frontal lobes and along the walls that divide the left and right hemispheres. "For a long time we've been interested in how the brain figures out how to integrate cognitive information about the world with our emotions [and] how we feel about something," explains Joshua Brown Ph.D., a research associate in psychology in arts and sciences. "For many reasons," Brown continues, "people think the ACC might be the brain structure responsible for converging these different signals. It seems to be an area that's involved in deciding what information gets prioritised in the decision-making process. It seems able to link motivational and affect information - things like goodness or badness - and to use this information to bring about changes in cognition; to alter how we think about things. It appears that this area of the brain is somehow figuring out things without you necessarily having to be consciously aware of it." At various stages of the series, we'll be using the latest scientific tools to measure what on earth is going on inside the brains of our psychic contestants. The German psychiatrist Hans Berger originally invented the electroencephalograph (EEG) in 1929 as a tool to study whether telepathy might be explained by brain waves. We'll also be using the services of US company NIRX Medical Imaging, a world leader in the brain imaging field, who use a combination of techniques including fMRI and near-infrared diffuse optical tomography to create high resolution 3-D images of the brain at work. We may even be able to discover whether the psychics are relying on different parts of their brains in order to complete certain challenges. Reality or illusion? Researchers have recently identified how two different areas of the brain process what we're actually doing (reality) and what we think we're doing (illusion, or perception). They found that the primary motor cortex managed perceptions of actual movement, while the signals from cells in a neighbouring area (called the ventral premotor cortex) were active when the brain was being deceived. We will investigate whether psychic ability is nothing more than self delusion, or perhaps a part of our evolutionary heritage that still survives in our limbic system. Cerebral cortex: The outermost layer of the cerebral hemisphere is made up of grey matter and divided into two hemispheres, both of which are able to analyse sensory data, perform memory functions, learn new information, form thoughts and make decisions. However, they have different specialisms. The 'left-brain' is in charge of logical interpretation of information, focusing on language, mathematics, abstract thought and reasoning. The 'right-brain' covers "Holistic Functioning", enabling us to build up complex and intuitive pictures of our environment, and engage in non-logical activities such as art and dancing. Corpus callosum: This connects the right and left hemispheres to allow for communication between them. Many human activities rely on both hemispheres simultaneously. Frontal lobe: This is in charge of cognition and memory, allowing us to concentrate and make value judgements. It's also the seat of our emotions and personalities. How much of our brains do we use? "The human brain is only 10% functional, at best." The first person to outline this theory was Australian Neurology Nobel Laureate Sir John Eccles, going on to state that "The brain indicates its powers are endless."* In England, John Lorber did autopsies on hydrocephalics. This illness causes all but a 1/6th inch thick layer of brain tissue to be dissolved by acidic spinal fluid. He tested the IQs of patients before and during the disease, showing that IQ remained constant up to death. Although over 90% of brain tissue was destroyed by the disease, it had no impact on what we consider to be normal intelligence. The 10% figure is still highly controversial, and many scientists regard it as nothing but a myth. But it remains a core belief amongst parapsychologists who suggest that the remainder of our brain power must be devoted to psychic abilities. "Our minds are capable of remarkable, incredible feats, yet we don't use them to their full capacity. In fact, most of us only use about 10% of our brains, if that. The other 90% is full of untapped potential and undiscovered abilities, which means our minds are only operating in a very limited way instead of at full stretch. I believe that we once had full power over our minds. We had to, in order to survive, but as our world has become more sophisticated and complex we have forgotten many of the abilities we once had."** * Lecture: University of Colorado, University Memorial Center, Boulder, Col. July 31, 1974 ** Uri Geller in Uri Geller's Mind-Power Book, 1996 Instinct Another theory holds that the brain has developed distinct layers at various stages of our evolution. The neo-cortex, or outer grey matter developed most recently, covers most of the thought functions that we're aware of such as planning, language, logic and will. The Limbic system (or "rat brain") is emotional and essentially mammalian, allowing us to feel, form relationships, nurture, produce mental images, dream and play. The Reptilian brain, the oldest part, is purely concerned with instincts like survival, breathing, swallowing, the pulse and the startle response. Could these ancient brain structures be the seat of psychic ability? |
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Could be that Eve was actually bitten by a snake and hallucinated because of the poison!
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the fear of decpetion is a serpent that strike each man in the face, making him too dizzy to actually see, how all things are if the same truth, respoken in many lanugauges and tongues, the language and tongue of each mortal.... prove how all is true, or prove all as untrue, but to prove some true and some not, is indeed the beginning of all bias, in one's own mind.... is bias bad, a sin to have? no more in that this be a words once used, as if bias is not seen by the people as bad, then why is it a dispised word amoungst all? mankind themself determines what is sin, by what is reacted to in a negative way.... if there is no sin, then there is nothing reacted that can be seen negative......... can one divide and say what is poitive and what is negative? can there be a definitive list of all that emcompass the aspects of these to opposites? then what is the realistic solution? all as one..... one for all and all for one? if there is these categories existing in the mind, they will divide the individuals mind into the two globes will it not? not allowing the two globes of the brain to work in unison? can this "connecting" the TWO LOBES TIE TOGETHER THE TOTAL ENERGIES WITHIN ANY BEING, BRING A SURGE OF ELECTICAL CURRENT THRU THE BODY, THAT AS FUSES THIS LOBE TOGETHER, AS THERE REALLY WAS A MARK IN THE FORHEAD? literal AND metoriphorical? so what has been written here? i have no earthly idea.... what the heart utters, the mind cannot look into.... peace..... if i prove all my neighbors words false, then likewise look to see if one can also disprove all oneself believes, which leaves what is true reality in plain site........ from some dumb site someone sent me, lol... The human brain is such a complex organ that we still don't fully understand how it works. We examine the science of our grey matter and offer a few theories as to what's going on up top... Brain science Following the Asian tsunami, scientists struggled to explain reports that primitive aboriginal tribesmen had somehow sensed the impending danger in time to join wild animals in a life-saving flight to higher ground. While some scientists discount the existence of a sixth sense for danger, new research from Washington University in St. Louis has identified a brain region. The anterior cingulate cortex (ACC) is a brain area located near the top of the frontal lobes and along the walls that divide the left and right hemispheres. "For a long time we've been interested in how the brain figures out how to integrate cognitive information about the world with our emotions [and] how we feel about something," explains Joshua Brown Ph.D., a research associate in psychology in arts and sciences. "For many reasons," Brown continues, "people think the ACC might be the brain structure responsible for converging these different signals. It seems to be an area that's involved in deciding what information gets prioritised in the decision-making process. It seems able to link motivational and affect information - things like goodness or badness - and to use this information to bring about changes in cognition; to alter how we think about things. It appears that this area of the brain is somehow figuring out things without you necessarily having to be consciously aware of it." At various stages of the series, we'll be using the latest scientific tools to measure what on earth is going on inside the brains of our psychic contestants. The German psychiatrist Hans Berger originally invented the electroencephalograph (EEG) in 1929 as a tool to study whether telepathy might be explained by brain waves. We'll also be using the services of US company NIRX Medical Imaging, a world leader in the brain imaging field, who use a combination of techniques including fMRI and near-infrared diffuse optical tomography to create high resolution 3-D images of the brain at work. We may even be able to discover whether the psychics are relying on different parts of their brains in order to complete certain challenges. Reality or illusion? Researchers have recently identified how two different areas of the brain process what we're actually doing (reality) and what we think we're doing (illusion, or perception). They found that the primary motor cortex managed perceptions of actual movement, while the signals from cells in a neighbouring area (called the ventral premotor cortex) were active when the brain was being deceived. We will investigate whether psychic ability is nothing more than self delusion, or perhaps a part of our evolutionary heritage that still survives in our limbic system. Cerebral cortex: The outermost layer of the cerebral hemisphere is made up of grey matter and divided into two hemispheres, both of which are able to analyse sensory data, perform memory functions, learn new information, form thoughts and make decisions. However, they have different specialisms. The 'left-brain' is in charge of logical interpretation of information, focusing on language, mathematics, abstract thought and reasoning. The 'right-brain' covers "Holistic Functioning", enabling us to build up complex and intuitive pictures of our environment, and engage in non-logical activities such as art and dancing. Corpus callosum: This connects the right and left hemispheres to allow for communication between them. Many human activities rely on both hemispheres simultaneously. Frontal lobe: This is in charge of cognition and memory, allowing us to concentrate and make value judgements. It's also the seat of our emotions and personalities. How much of our brains do we use? "The human brain is only 10% functional, at best." The first person to outline this theory was Australian Neurology Nobel Laureate Sir John Eccles, going on to state that "The brain indicates its powers are endless."* In England, John Lorber did autopsies on hydrocephalics. This illness causes all but a 1/6th inch thick layer of brain tissue to be dissolved by acidic spinal fluid. He tested the IQs of patients before and during the disease, showing that IQ remained constant up to death. Although over 90% of brain tissue was destroyed by the disease, it had no impact on what we consider to be normal intelligence. The 10% figure is still highly controversial, and many scientists regard it as nothing but a myth. But it remains a core belief amongst parapsychologists who suggest that the remainder of our brain power must be devoted to psychic abilities. "Our minds are capable of remarkable, incredible feats, yet we don't use them to their full capacity. In fact, most of us only use about 10% of our brains, if that. The other 90% is full of untapped potential and undiscovered abilities, which means our minds are only operating in a very limited way instead of at full stretch. I believe that we once had full power over our minds. We had to, in order to survive, but as our world has become more sophisticated and complex we have forgotten many of the abilities we once had."** * Lecture: University of Colorado, University Memorial Center, Boulder, Col. July 31, 1974 ** Uri Geller in Uri Geller's Mind-Power Book, 1996 Instinct Another theory holds that the brain has developed distinct layers at various stages of our evolution. The neo-cortex, or outer grey matter developed most recently, covers most of the thought functions that we're aware of such as planning, language, logic and will. The Limbic system (or "rat brain") is emotional and essentially mammalian, allowing us to feel, form relationships, nurture, produce mental images, dream and play. The Reptilian brain, the oldest part, is purely concerned with instincts like survival, breathing, swallowing, the pulse and the startle response. Could these ancient brain structures be the seat of psychic ability? Imagine if all energy once spent on dividing all one perceives into positive and negative was redirected into ALL possibility! What a tremendous relief! (yeah... dumb site ) |
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