trentwray, this is how I understand:
There are one identity that observes and manage several "subdentities", sort of realms in the totality of the brain. The identity is unbound to any subdentity, and can choose from which subdentity it will view (and therefore how it's view will be colored) the rest of the brain.
But, because the number and styles of the subdentities not yet are finalized, i.e. the brain is evolving, and the identity is occupied with this evolution, it produces an existential experience of not whole, not one.
Once this evolution is complete, all the subdentities will merge with the identity, forming one unit.
The conciousness will be one, we will be whole.
Correct?
If you're summarizing what I was brainstorming outloud about the other day, that's basically it
One of the keys to the off-the-cuff hypothesis, was that the portions of our brain which are more or less "empty rooms", yet have the "lights turned on in the room" so to speak, are examining the needs and purposes of the other portions of our brain to find out what to become "next" that will be most helpful to us as a species. Considering our current need of global communication networks, entertainment input in virtual environments, stress related to securing our futures and understanding our psychological pasts, etc and so forth ... my idea was that our brain was trying to find ways to meet these needs for us to further evolve us in our environment. So it would only makes sense that we would "try" to develop abilities to communicate to others the way a phone works ... without a phone. Or the amount of worry and stress we spend on securing our futures ... to try to predict the future by looking for signs, thoughts, feelings, that might yield information for us (like a computer model). Considering our love of fueling our imaginations through visual and auditory stimuli ... why wouldn't our brains try and produce similar effects for us in real life (i.e. more ghost sightings, UFO sightings, paranormal experiences, etc etc)?
So those blank rooms have the lights turned on and maybe the basic, first step of a blank room is to know that , "I exist". After that ... it tries to decide how to furnish itself by examining the rest of the house. This might be what fuels part of the existential experience of the "unwhole" I suppose
It could be argued that religion and the paranormal has existed for thousands of years, and people have believed in ghosts and the supernatural for just as long. But how long is a long time? How long does a species take to evolve itself to "the next level"? I mean, the amount of knowledge we have available today for the average person to access and even be able to read/write to study it is tremendous. And compared to nature, our environment that we've created is increasingly complicated and foreign to us. We are more or less aliens in our own world in some ways. So in this sense, I was wondering if those parts of our brains that are waiting to evolve into the next useful function weren't just basically going ape-s*** in some of us LOL. So in other words, someone who is having "psychic" feelings might be completely delusional ... OR ... they might actually be experiencing say, 10% of an actual "ability" that humanity is testing to see if it's practical to be able to do naturally on some level. Does this mean that in 3,000 years we'll all be reading each other's minds? Perhaps not. But ... perhaps we could develop some other means of communicating that other animals possess already which we do not (like elephants for example, or dolphins, bats, etc). I mean, if animals evolve to better cope with their environment and the demands it places on them, combining with the "survival of the fittest" .... perhaps our brains view what computers and telephones and cell phones and televisions do as "competition" and in our attempt to be more like them ... we will actually get to do some of the things they do. Maybe one day we'll receive radio signals organically LOL.
Anyway, my guess would be that the brain would try to become one "conciousness" and thus, the "whole". In a way, it would be "making most of the muscle before making any more" I guess. Perhaps that is how we evolved to a degree in the first place? We made the most of whatever our brain matter was at the time ... and then exploded the size of our brains to a much larger size than we would need, until we maxed out that brain's potential as well. And once that size was limited, we exploded our brain size again ... etc etc. Each time, maxing out the ability possibilities of our brains. Currently, we obviously don't use all of our brain. So perhaps once we "max out" what we have, we'll make more in the future. ? ? ?
Anyway ... just brainstorming. That's all. Pun intended
ETA: and forgive me for doing neuroscience and/or principles of evolution / natural selection any injustice through my ignorance of the topics
