Pup
Philosopher
- Joined
- Dec 21, 2004
- Messages
- 6,679
That wasn't what I had in mind. You know how you feel when your walking into an area and you suddenly get the feeling it's not safe? Your environment is feeding your subconscious information that affects your emotions and works as a survival mechanism. I'm thinking that as evolution proceeds we ought to develop a more integrated way of thinking so that it's not a matter of picking up on "feelings" without knowing the cause for those feelings. I guess I'm trying to imagine what heightened awareness might include and it might allow us to see more and experience more of reality than we do at the moment.
Well, we can check again in a few hundred thousand years and see how it turned out.
Sure, one can speculate that people who survive to reproduction age best, by avoiding dangers in unsafe environments, will have their genes passed on, as long as there isn't some other thing that causes more harm, either by using up too much brain power (they're so vigilant they don't spend enough time grooming themselves, paying attention at work, flirting after hours, or anything that makes them attractive and successful in our environment), or it makes them directly less attractive in other ways ("come on, just relax; what's the matter?")
What you say is true but any change will interact in incredible complex ways with other factors. The fact that we have an intuitive sense of danger has got us this far, and farther along that direction may not be better overall. Or may--hard to say.
If we have no idea what consciousness actually is but people continue to report what we consider to be delusions or hallucinations then I would think that warrants further research. Some of those delusions/hallucinations have clear cut causes like mental illness if they are repetitive. I'm not so certain that's the case with a one time occurrence.
Hallucinations/delusions/memories that dont match shared reality are a perfect example of something that needs explained.Isn't that a huge popular field of research right now, especially because better MRI is available? What studies do you think are being neglected?
One-time delusions/hallucinations would seem hard to replicate, but the gorilla-basketball experiment, where people distracted by counting basketball tosses typically failed to see a person in a gorilla costume, shows that the mind hiccups in surprisingly predictable ways.
Just googling to see what's up, I ran into
Faith or delusion? At the crossroads of religion and psychosis. ...recognition of social dynamics and the possibility of entire delusional subcultures is necessary in the assessment of group belief...
Psychological characteristics of religious delusions ...[not one-time, though] Religious delusions are common and are considered to be particularly difficult to treat. In this study we investigated what psychological processes may underlie the reported treatment resistance...
Understanding delusions [in India] ... Delusion is never a mere object which can be objectively detected and described, because it evolves and exists within subjective and interpersonal dimensions only, however “pathological” these dimensions may be... [Difficult reading, but looks like it might be worthwhile.]
Self-Deception, Delusion and the Boundaries of Folk Psychology ...in the general (non-clinical) population. Here is an example of self-deception. In spite of having at her disposal evidence to the contrary, Sylvia believes that she failed the driving test because the examiner was prejudiced against female drivers. Her belief responds to the need of preserving a positive image of herself as a competent driver... [may not be relevant but I'm thinking of delusions like "Grandma can't be dead because I saw her ghost last night."]
These are just papers I could pull up literally as quickly as I could touch-screen from the google search string delusions normal abstract inurl:nih Investing more time with a specific topic in mind would yield far better results. But I really do think there's been a lot of work lately seeking a definition of consciousness (which i didn't search for at all), and exploring the various ways it acts and reacts with delusions and hallucinations still within the range of normalcy, not to mention memory glitches. At a certain point, "I saw a ghost yesterday" becomes the same as "I remember seeing a ghost yesterday," even if it's just minutes rather than hours later.
All fascinating stuff, perfectly amenable to scientific investigation unless one wants to start or end with the conclusion that ghosts (or another common paranormal belief) are really real, mind closed. The first person who scientifically proves ghost are real will get a Nobel Prize just for starters, so there's no need to worry that scientists are holding back any secrets.
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