Did I say it was the same as an electrical wire or phone? Dave, you're putting words in my mouth :-X
And for there to be an effect there would have to be induction states similar to what happens in electrical currents in phone or power line. That is my point.
Okay, heres the rundown...
All cells maintain an internal negative charge relative to their external fluid media via active pumping off ions across their membranes creating a voltage called the membrane potential. When certain signal molecules trigger the opening of ion channels it allows an influx of positive ions into the cell, depolarizing the membrane and triggering the propagation of an electrical wave signal called the action potential along the cell membrane. It just so happens that neural cells [and certain kinds of heart cells] specialize in utilizing this method to quickly relay signals thru the body.
pretty much in agreement.
I know I was waving my arms and foaming yesterday.
This is basic neuroscience. Do I have compile pages of citations to establish fact that you could easily look up yourself? Your questions regarding the CEMI model are perfectly legit but your insistence that action potentials are not electrical signals is downright bizarre and completely wrong.
because they are not electrical signals that will have action at a distance, there are no field effects that will occur between neurons at distance as in transmission lines and back current effects in romex cables.
Voltage is voltage and amps are amps. It doesn't matter if its in regards to power lines or cell membranes. I thought it would be sufficient just to list the general facts off the top of my head but I suppose you want me to look up specific figures.
The
resting potential [i.e. on not propagating electrical signals] is usually between -60 and -80 milivolts and shiftinng towards a lil' over 60 mV during depolarization. This tiggers the propigation of the action potential which is a propagation of an
electrical signal which happens to be generated by the passage of charged ions across the membrane. No, it is not the same kind of electrical signal that propagates along wires but I never claimed that it was
I know I was quite a sight yesterday, my wife wants the lampshade and soap box back, have you seen them?
Actually, my college and HS texts are in agreement that electrical signals are propagated along neural cell membranes; the college text just goes into much more detail.
You wouldn't happen to be just quizzing me, are you? -_O
The basic idea of the hypothesis [at least in McFadden's case] is that consciousness is the global EEM field of the brain and that activity of that field affects the charges across neural membranes and thus affecting the probability a given neuron, or group of neurons, will fire.
And that is where I call woo, his papers do not give any possible mechanism, nor do they offer one that is not refuted in common observation. Power company workers would have to wear helmets to shield their brains near transmission lines and near transformers if that was the case. The action potentials in their heads would be going crazy, and their hearts would stop.
As I've already pointed out before, the fact that intermodular and global brainwave patterns are directly linked to specific mental states itself lends strong evidence that consciousness is associated with, or identical to, the EEM activity of the brain.
No it does not, that is great speculation, but why don't people collapse and have seizures near high power transmission lines and in transformer stations?
Here are a few questions for you, Dave:
These I would take to another thread! They are great questions.
In short the brain manufactures perceptions, with the help of Gandalf the Plugger of Mysterious Gaps and Holes.
How do you propose that the release of neurotransmitters are translated to into conscious sensations?
Where is a thought in the brain and how and where are the disparate processes of brain modules brought together as conscious experience?
My answer is that they aren't. The smoothing of consciousness is probably like (in some vague and hand wavy way) like the persistence of vision.
When you form a memory where exactly is it stored? If one where to isolate an idea what would it physically consist of?
It isn't stored exactly anywhere, it fractured into disparate associations and then recreated. (Shot from the hip and I am to blame, I give love a bad name.)
If science were to isolate memes what would you propose would be the best way to do so? In your opinion, what would they most likely consist of?
I am not good with the meme theory, I would need to study it first. It sounds too neo-platonic for my concrete pragmatic self. Now is you ask my alter Whizzo the Sorcerer-Mystic and Wild Pagan Guy, I am sure he could whomp up a great string of spin.
I don't like the meme theory and would need to study it to give you good answer.
Like I said before, I can't do any better than make logical inferences from known neuroscience in support of the CEMI hypothesis and related postulations. If you want more comprehensive scientific papers you're going to have to cough up dough for subscription fees to the relevant journals. Either that, or I fly across the continent to where you live, book a tour of a neuroscience lab, and have a scientist or technician demonstrate to you that neurons actually propagate electrical signals. I don't have the time or the monies for all that >_<
\
Now need the main question is how does the EM directly impact other neurons? That is the question that bothers me, and that McFadden just ignores.
Why don't people have seizures in transformer stations? The magnetic fields there are billions of times more powerful than those in the head.
The evidence is there but the real problem is: how in the world are you proposing that I provide 'evidence' for the CEMI hypothesis when you won't even accept basic facts of neuroscience? Is it because
I'M the one saying it? Sometimes I get the impression that you and others would argue with me if I said grass is green and the sky is blue
just to be contrary
Tell me why people don't have seizures and die at transformer stations?
edit:Meh...its late here and I'm dead tired. I'll try to address your other responses later *_*
Cool, I have my bite stick ready in case I start ranting again
.