It looks like you're using an Ad Blocker.
Please white-list or disable AboveTopSecret.com in your ad-blocking tool.
Thank you.
Some features of ATS will be disabled while you continue to use an ad-blocker.
uk.reuters.com...
WASHINGTON (Reuters) - A man with an unusually tiny brain managed to live an entirely normal life despite his condition, caused by a fluid buildup in his skull, French researchers reported on Thursday.
Scans of the 44-year-old man's brain showed that a huge fluid-filled chamber called a ventricle took up most of the room in his skull, leaving little more than a thin sheet of actual brain tissue.
"He was a married father of two children, and worked as a civil servant," Dr. Lionel Feuillet and colleagues at the Universite de la Mediterranee in Marseille wrote in a letter to the Lancet medical journal.”
Originally posted by Buck Division
reply to post by SlightlyAmazing
In later years, with the advent of CT Scans, medical doctors were interested in learning what damage, if any, had occurred due to this advanced (and now cured) hydrocephalus. Had the brain somehow recovered?
No. In many case, it was clear from the CT Scans, that these children (now adults) had suffered extreme brain damage. In a few cases, these completely normal people had no real brain at all, and their skulls were simply empty voids, with a thin line of cerebral tissue, and the rest filled with spinal fluid.
It is an amazing story. I saw this documented on the Discovery channel a few years ago. They interviewed these young adults. They were obviously normal. One was a chess grandmaster.
Originally posted by Buck Division
So what is the conclusion?
Obviously, the conscious mind does not exist in the cerebrum or the main part of the brain. It probably exists in the "brain stem", also called the "reptilian brain", which is the oldest part of the brain, and the part that connects the other portions of the brain to the spinal column. That is just a guess, but it makes sense to me (as much sense as anything else I've heard, anyway.)