!Kaggen
Illuminator
- Joined
- Jul 12, 2009
- Messages
- 3,874
I rest my caseHow is that a corollary?
I rest my caseHow is that a corollary?
Well, if by "corollary" you mean "non sequitur" and by "rest" you mean "lose", then sure.I rest my case![]()
You think?
african masks
I am ordinarily ...
The cumulative effect of the different fields of all the ions is just a superposition of the fields, weakened by inverse square and additional attenuation through the tissue. If there's any effect, it will be mostly from nearby signals, and only effect neurons which happen to be on the trigger edge. In electronic circuits, the same thing happens, and it's called 'crosstalk'. Engineers try to avoid it, as it makes the circuit behave unreliably.
The whole thing seems superfluous. We have a huge amount of neurons, and and even bigger network of 'wired' connections between them. I don't see how adding another layer of wireless communication would make consciousness easier to explain. It seems more like a cop-out. Replace 'EM field' with 'Magic Smoke', and read the article again, and that pretty much how it sounds to me.
I am sorry that "no" is difficult to understand. If you're having trouble finding information on a particular topic, I'd be happy to point you in the right direction, but engaging directly - no.Blah, blah, blah. Put up or shut up. Inform us oh wise one of your views on consciousness, biology, whatever. Making excuses for using a known type of fallacious argument does not add to your credibility.
Who knows, maybe if you give me your arguments on the topic at hand I might be swayed. That is if you are willing to give it a try. On the other hand, if you do not want to give it a go, that is your business and I will completely understand. This weak sauce of just saying I am soooo wrong without even trying to show why bores me.
All the best to you all!
So what you're saying is, you never bothered to investigate the term I gave you, believing it to be just an alternate spelling. If you can't be arsed to read a wikipedia link, you can hardly demand others care about your ideas in return.There seems to be some controversy about the spelling of this, neuron versus neurone, neural versus neuronal, for me, neuron just sounds better so that is what I will use. If you do not like that then just add it in mentally when you see it (add an 'e' or 'on' here or there as appropriate).
I want to make a point here about the exposition above. Leaving completely aside for the moment whether neurons can effect each other through an em field, which is what the first paragraph above is about, the second paragraph has a definite bias in it.
EM fields are real things. They are real just like neurons, axons and dendrites are. The EM field concept is one of the cornerstones of scientific exploration. There is no cop out involved in analyzing the possible consequences of the EM field inside a brain (beyond just the connectionist paradigm). This is a legitimate scientific question.
It seems pretty evident as well that if there is a place for the EM field to affect neurons and be affected by neurons, then the computational complexity just went up a notch.
There seems to be some controversy about the spelling of this, neuron versus neurone, neural versus neuronal, for me, neuron just sounds better so that is what I will use. If you do not like that then just add it in mentally when you see it (add an 'e' or 'on' here or there as appropriate).
That's not clear to me at all.Case in point: while those masks you linked to may seem "creative" given the things the tribesmen had to work with, it is clear from even a cursory examination that the creative "diversity" among just the avatars of this forum alone far exceeds that of the entire set of all African masks ever made.
It's also not clear to me that we "have a far greater number of experiences to draw from", unless you mean vicarious experiences.Are we more creative than the tribal artists? It depends. We certainly have a far greater number of experiences to draw from, and that should count for something.
That's not clear to me at all.
It's also not clear to me that we "have a far greater number of experiences to draw from", unless you mean vicarious experiences.
We don't even have a decent video game of that experience.
So why does an MRI or a strong electrical field not give someone seizures?
I am sorry that "no" is difficult to understand. If you're having trouble finding information on a particular topic, I'd be happy to point you in the right direction, but engaging directly - no.
If you'd like a hint for where to go first, several people have recently pointed out that we are routinely exposed to EM frequencies which, if neurons actually did act as antennas, should leave us all in grand mal seizures. Yet we aren't. Why do you suppose that is?
So what you're saying is, you never bothered to investigate the term I gave you, believing it to be just an alternate spelling. If you can't be arsed to read a wikipedia link, you can hardly demand others care about your ideas in return.
It is only a transient setback. The next generation will be killing giant ground sloths in virtual worlds like the matrix. Full circle.
*rocketdodger is correct, my avatar is the title character from Howl's Moving Castle, by Miyazaki / Ghibli, in a flashback to when the fire demon stole the boy Howl's heart.
Sorry I am not addressing all of your post. I am not sure why an MRI does not give one a seizure, but I have read that strong EM fields will cause hallucinations. There is a professor who has a helmet (think it is called the god helmet or something) that when you put it on it makes you experience spooky feelings or even the sense of a presence as reported by some.
Now, to be completely fair, various em fields should probably have an effect in the current consensus model (as I take it you are advancing), in my pet theory and in McFadden's CEMI. I say this question should be looked more into if this is a point of contention.
As for how em fields can effect things on a macroscale, read McFadden's paper. See if you find his reasoning persuasive or not. If you can not find it let me know.
A similar argument suggests that the old world monkeys are a more diverse group than, say, all the life that can be found in two clumps of soil, one from madagascar and another from the amazon.Well just look at the images -- all the masks are pretty much similar.
Contrast that with our avatars. I have a flaming nazi zombie monster ( I don't care for nazis, this is just my favorite AI I have worked on ). Beelzebuddy has a dancing chicken. Mr. Scott has a kid with blue hair holding some magical light, I presume a still from some studio Ghibli movie. I can't even tell what your's is, and !Kaggen has a freaking winged albino eating a heart. If that isn't creative diversity, I don't know what is.