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Originally posted by QuantriQueptidez
reply to post by NorEaster
You're making stuff up, kid.
Stop trying to sound intelligent, while just running with the latest assumptions.
Originally posted by AllIsOne
Originally posted by NorEaster
Originally posted by QuantriQueptidez
Yea, because amnesia after organic brain damage is part of your soul taking a vacation, and alzheimers is the devil... ooookay.
Actually, the brain accesses contextually attributed residual fact sets that (as a result of the specific attributing system itself) reside in what amounts to a "memory cloud" (sort of like the data cloud concept within company intranets). If the brain is damaged in the region where specific access circuits are located, then those "memories" will never be accessible, and there you have amnesia or dementia-related memory loss.
Migratory animals share a "memory cloud" that helps them survive as a species, with some sets contextually associated with the migration process, and the brains evolutionarily developed to "reach" for those instructions when environmental factors hit a predefined "tipping point", which is why all such group-think occurs per locality, as opposed to species-wide.
Human beings do not share a memory cloud. Most predators don't as well, with lions and wolves being a prime example of apex predators that do share one, but on an as-needed basis.
When the human brain dies, the contextual specifics become meaningless, and the data itself is effectively "released" as simple Residual information - no different than any other fact set collective, as far as the rest of the environment is concerned. It wasn't created by the human brain. It emerged as an environmental default response to the specific information that the brain itself created. Once the brain has died, it's no longer unique or necessary for anything other than the Identity definition of the Contextual Environment as a whole, as is the case with all residual fact sets.
Fascinating, but my brain doesn't understand a single thing you are trying to communicate ... lol. Could you please drop the jargon?
contextually attributed residual fact sets
Originally posted by QuantriQueptidez
reply to post by NorEaster
You're making stuff up, kid.
Stop trying to sound intelligent, while just running with the latest assumptions.
Originally posted by centhwevir1979
reply to post by dominicus
People are assuming that you mean the christian god, perhaps? I sort of agree with you when you say that when we die we return to the "source." I believe that source is NOT a conscious, thinking, human-like entity that is sold by the christians... And I certainly have no tolerance for those who claim their "Lord" says that animals don't have souls. The same mysterious energy which allows human life to persist also operates in every other living thing on Earth, and I can't believe I have to try to convince anyone of that.
Could it also be that these individuals inherited some subconscious memories of their relatives that they are in essence "re-living" without any of them realizing this?
What I am trying to say is that I think it's possible we somehow "download" memories or "instructions" in how to behave a certain way or getting ourselves involved in certain situations even if we were never taught anything of the sort in our immediate environment.
Originally posted by Tetrarch42
reply to post by Astrocyte
Neurons contain memories within their cell nucleus? How?
I was under the impression that memory exists not within neuronal cells but rather due the the actions and interactions between neuronal cells.
Abstract -
Technological computation is entering the quantum realm, focusing attention on biomolecular information processing systems such as proteins, as presaged by the work of Michael Conrad. Protein conformational dynamics and pharmacological evidence suggest that protein conformational states-fundamental information units ('bits') in biological systems-are governed by quantum events, and are thus perhaps akin to quantum bits ('qubits') as utilized in quantum computation. 'Real time' dynamic activities within cells are regulated by the cell cytoskeleton, particularly microtubules (MTs) which are cylindrical lattice polymers of the protein tubulin. Recent evidence shows signaling, communication and conductivity in MTs, and theoretical models have predicted both classical and quantum information processing in MTs. In this paper we show conduction pathways for electron mobility and possible quantum tunneling and superconductivity among aromatic amino acids in tubulins. The pathways within tubulin match helical patterns in the microtubule lattice structure, which lend themselves to topological quantum effects resistant to decoherence. The Penrose-Hameroff 'Orch OR' model of consciousness is reviewed as an example of the possible utility of quantum computation in MTs.