All these elements of consciousness are brain functions. Your memory of the experience requires an intact memory circuit. Your emotional experience requires an intact limbic system. The experience of the senses is most clearly dependent upon the sensory organs and relaled systems.
I have not claimed otherwise. I acknowledge the brains part in the process.
Are you aware that the image you see before you does not exist? The eye does not capture a full color focused image like a camera and piece of film. Your color vision and high acuity vision is limited to the very center few degrees of the visual field (fovea centralis) with which your brain scans the scene before you in a very systematic way. The visual system integrates the various fragments of information into a coherent picture which you "see". The colors you see depend on the visual pigments in your retinal cone cells. Change a single base pair in your genome and the pigment proteins change by one amino acid and you would be red/green color blind! Everything would look different!
Interfere with the normal action one of your 12 extraocular muscles and your brainstem will no longer be able to coordinate your binocular eye movements, and you will be unable to form a fused 3D image.
Your stable view of the world is entirely dependent on the proper function of your vestibular apparatus, whose mili-second to mili-second corrections of your head and eye movements you are completetly unaware of. Most of us dont even know this system exists unless you experience vertigo.
In short none of your sensory experiences can exist without an intact brain. Change the tiniest part of the systems and your experience of the world will be profoundly changed. Red and and green will not exist for you!
Actually the image I see before me does exist. What you have described is that how we view the image is simple not an accurate rendition of the actual thing being viewed.
This could explain why certain experiences seem more real than normal, because during those experiences we are consciously experiencing them as they actually are.
What we call 'reality' thus isn't the real rendition of actual reality.
This data is taken from dreams and hallucinations.
Do you believe the content of all dreams represents a reality apart from the waking world?
No. Dreams can relate to the dominant reality of the world (which we cannot as you have said, actually see in its true rendition.) but they are not real.
There are those who do. If you want to convince a skeptic of this you will need to produce some independently verifiable evidence of information gained in your dreams which your brain did not already have access to. Modern medicine takes the view that the brain generates dream content from experiences and memories.
This is how I understand dreams as well...
The feeling of floating outside your body and looking down on yourself is experienced by many. It can be induced by direct brain stimulation, hallucinogenic drugs, and epileptic seizures. Do you believe that an epileptic who experiences autoscopy as part of her aura is in fact floating above her body, or is she having this experience based on abnormal brain discharges preceding her seizure?
I have no beliefs either way. When I experienced leaving my body and floating up through ceiling and roof, and also when I experienced being pulled out of my body by an invisible entity (I mentioned that in one of my posts in this thread) I did not think to look back at my body so have no direct experience regarding that.
The visuals involved in those experiences were not random. They were purposeful and for that, had to have been created. The brain cannot do these things of its own volition. Why and how consciousness becomes an emergent of brains seems to involve necessity. My understanding of these types of experiences is that they are created by an aspect of consciousness which we loosely call the 'subconscious' and they are purposeful and specific to the individual experiencing them.
Having said that, there are similar things individuals experience, almost - if not totally - the same.
In relation to drugs, direct brain stimulation, seizures - these might be indicative of how the subconscious can work the brain to create the experiences for the conscious ego personality.
Without consciousness the brain by itself is no thing overly marvelous. An unconscious brain isn't as nearly interesting.
Think about it.
The brain does not drive consciousness, any more than a vehicle drives a person. A person drives the vehicle.
Consciousness drives the brain.
The brain is the vehicle for consciousness. This is far more logical than thinking that consciousness is the vehicle for the brain.
Not having seen the red marks (for which there could be a variety of rational explanations) count me a skeptic.
Sure - I only mentioned it in relation to telling my experience to my dad, and his immediate reaction. His experience in regard to my own, are hearsay in regard to you.
Many use drugs to highten their OBEs, but they will certainly not clarify their origin for you.
I would say many also don't use drugs. It is not here nor there.
I relation to those ignorant of this, yes. I am still getting to know it, and will be for the remainder of my days here on earth. It is really the choice of the ego personality as to whether they want to examine and utilize the ideomotor effect further then putting their own beliefs into it or ignoring it altogether.
The aspect of your brain function which is you (consciouness) is the smallest part of its total function. What you are describing is similar to the experience of intuition and inspiration. Composers and writers feel their work arises from within or outside them, scientists describe their breakthroughs as coming upon them suddenly (sometimes in dreams!). The brain does a lot of work (constantly) while "you" are not paying attention, and then up pops the answer as if it came from outside of yourself. So yes everyone has it. I believe what you are describing is your subconscious brain (your right hemisphere if you wish to think of it that way) in action.
You are confusing the brain with consciousness. I acknowledge, it has something to do with the overall process. When I communicate with that other aspect, the brain acts as a medium to help enable that process. The two aspects of consciousness use the brain for that purpose. Not the brain alone of course. What you and many others think of as the brain doing the inspiring etc, I know of as that other aspect of consciousness, commonly refer to as the 'subconscious' - which in itself is a very misleading term since, as you say - it is the bigger aspect. Truth be understood, it is like we the ego personalities who are the more the
sub of the two aspects of consciousness, but that kind of labeling has more to do with the vanity of the ego personality than with anything else.
The brain is a biological organ, wonderful mainly for the fact that consciousness (not just the ego personality part) evolved from its processes.