The basic premise of the GWT is that consciousness involves parallel processing between the various modules of the brain. Ofcourse, the brain itself does not operate in a vacuum and it directly tied to the rest of the nervous system, endocrine system, cardiovascular system, immune system, etc...
Directly? No.
The flaws you've listed aren't actual features of what I'm proposing.
Ah. So when you say it's a field, you don't mean it's a field, even though when pressed on what you mean by field you say it's a field.
Do I have that right?
But you legitimately don't understand what I'm actually saying I'll take the time to address your concerns.
Okay, great.
The mind seamlessly integrates modular processes across the brain to generate our conscious experience.
Nope. The mind
does nothing of the sort. If you say that the mind
is the integration of modular processes across the brain, then that I would certainly agree with. There's nothing seamless about it, though. Even the most cursory study of neuroscience or psychology shows seams all over the place. Information lost, inconsistencies, confabulation, that sort of thing.
There is no central administrator in the brain
There's no single central administrator, that's true. That doesn't mean that there's no part of the brain that is the key to consciousness.
so clearly, whatever the nature of the mind, it is a distributed function.
But yes, in general, this is quite correct. But it's not a
global function. Different parts of the brain performa different functions, and we can acutally see activity progressing from one part of the brain to another during (for example) visual perception experiments.
The most obvious mechanism for syncing all of these processes into an integrative whole would be a field.
NO.
The mind doesn't behave like that. It is not seamless. It is not synchronous. It is not unified.
The brain doesn't work like that. It's a switch network. The neurons are interconnected.
There is no transmitter for such a field. The RF signal of individual neurons is extremely weak.
There is no receiver for such a field. The RF signal of the whole brain is not powerful enough to change the operation of a single neuron.
There is no such field. Yes, the brain gives off electromagnetic radiation. This does not contain the information or have the effect you claim.
It's physically impossible. See all of the above.
So
EEGs and
MEGs are artifacts of science fiction?
Your computer radiates RF noise. That in no way implies that it works via RF noise.
And indeed it doesn't.
They're called neurons.
They're called neurons.
Sorry, no, this is completely wrong.
You can, with a sensitive antenna array and a special amplifier (and very close proximity), pick up the electromagnetic waves produced by the electrical impulses in the brain.
A neuron cannot do that. It just plain doesn't have the hardware necessary to transmit or receive signals that way.
What it does have is direct connections to other neurons. And we can directly monitor signals going from neuron to neuron, and and activity happening as bursts of signals fire between neurons in specific regions of the brain, and map it to various cognitive functions, and at no time is any field implied or requried to explain the observations.
TMS - transcranial magnetic stimulation - can induce cognitive changes. The magnetic field used for this is on the order of a Tesla. The magnetic field produced by the brain itself is on the order of a
femtoTesla. In other words, it's a quadrillion times weaker than what we know is required to influence the operation of the brain in the way you suggest.
That's what sciency types refer to as "physically impossible".
I'm not convinced and neither are any of the professionals which use brain imagining technologies like the ones mentioned above. Care to back up that assertion with some substance?
Read the MEG article you linked to, then look up transcranial magnetic stimulation, then try to bridge the 15-orders-of-magnitude gap.
For those playing at home, fifteen orders of magnitude is equivalent to saying that the planet Mars weighs the same as the Empire State Building.
Please explain why
Or that the US federal budget deficit is about a fifth of a penny.
In closing, I'll note that I understood perfectly what you were saying from the beginning. You said field. You meant field.
And it is completely impossible, exactly as I said the first time.