Consciousness, Brain and Certainty
- आँ Marilyn | FIGU USA INC
- 1 day ago
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Conscious self-perception is based in the cerebral cortex, although it also contains complex mental functions such as learning and remembering, while the temporal lobe processes, among other things, the impressions that arise through hearing. In the limbic system, which is located in the center of the brain, perceptions are unconsciously evaluated in terms of thoughts and feelings, with the small structure of the amygdala generating unconscious feelings from external perceptions and internal unconscious thoughts. In this way, impressions and impulses are mentally and emotionally charged with experiences such as fear, love and anger, which are often vital functions. In the prefrontal cortex, which is responsible for processing information and interpretation, familiar perceived signals are once again subjected to a learning process, which results in a sharpened sense for details, such as colors and structures.
If we take a closer look, we realize that human perception is first and foremost an individual interpretation, meaning that people themselves determine how and what they want to interpret in a positive or negative way. As a result, they also determine their own state in relation to a general feeling of well-being or unwellness, i.e. whether they are positively balanced or negatively unbalanced, whether they fall into depressive states or massive depression and lead a sick and suffering existence, or whether they live in high thoughts and feelings of health and joy. Basically, this is how people see themselves and how they feel mentally and emotionally, how they nurture and cultivate their thoughts and feelings and how they see and judge themselves based on these. So they create their own individual reality from all of this, and since there are more than 8.3 billion (2013) people on earth, there is not just one, but more than 8.3 billion realities.
Of course, every person can share their views, beliefs, opinions and ideas with a certain number of people around them to a certain extent, but they still have their own individual reality on the whole. What he therefore has in common with others is therefore, so to speak, a partial reality, a partial reality, because he conforms to a certain extent with the others. However, as soon as there is no longer any contact with other people, the partially conforming realities separate from each other again. The truth is that people need these partial realities, which they cultivate with their fellow human beings, because they can only exist as social beings if they can share certain things of reality with their peers. This division of reality functions, so to speak, as a tacit agreement on what is regarded and understood as 'normality'. A uniform norm is very important for people, but there are also people who deviate from it to a greater or lesser extent, which can result in a completely abnormal norm and a false reality that is harmful to health, which manifests itself, for example, in depressive states or severe depression. This can be caused by bullying or harassment, as well as a hereditary predisposition, drugs, medication, alcohol and purely chemical and biochemical influences.
Everything has the effect of distorting reality, because a false reality is created in the mind and emotions, which has nothing in common with the actual reality, but is only based on imagination and delusion. As a result, everything is perceived incorrectly and accordingly also interpreted and judged incorrectly, negatively, negatively and pessimistically, which corresponds to a serious self-deception maneuver that has serious health-damaging consequences. The normally naturally given - if there is no negative heredity - clearly constructed block of thoughts and feelings becomes a tremendous chaos of false perceptions and incorrect judgments. In this form, disturbances occur between the centers of objective perception in visual contact, the thoughts and the emotional center in the limbic system, the amygdala, whereby reality is distorted and signal transmission errors occur, through which a completely unique reality is created for the person. And this happens not only when observing, experiencing and experiencing events and situations etc., such as in an accident etc., but also in depressive states or massive depression - only that in this relationship it happens in a different way, in a thought-feeling-psyche-consciousness form. In this way, the whole thing also corresponds in a certain sense to a loss of reality, to which certain parts of the cerebral cortex are particularly susceptible, because the sensory information of the body flows together, but this is disturbed by false and negative thought-feeling-psychological influences.
False thoughts and feelings also disrupt reality in the cerebral cortex, which also has an impact on self-perception, including in relation to one's own being and its nature, because the brain misreads certain data. This creates a blockage that prevents a division of reality from coming about, which means that only a stubborn reality of one's own rules powerfully and no longer allows anything else. This is precisely the crux of the matter in depressive states or severe depression, as only a single and indivisible reality prevails, which can no longer be countered by anything other than what the blocked reality itself contains. Consequently, mentally and emotionally, everything becomes an endless run, an endless repetition of the same negative, negating and pessimistic thoughts and feelings, which inexorably revolve around the same things over and over again, resulting in a disturbed relationship with reality. Unfortunately, the boundary between sick and healthy is not always clearly recognizable, as it is often only a small threshold that needs to be crossed to create a completely abnormal and depressive reality. The effective fact is that the brain is not particularly or specifically concerned with whether something about an experience is visual, real, imaginary or even delusional.
The brain, as taught, is the origin of all things and movements, and thus also of thoughts and feelings, which in turn give rise to self-esteem, self-love and self-worth. However, these values only arise when people are concerned with themselves or their own personality, character and behavior. However, these value factors can only be created if people show themselves respect, love and an appropriate and benevolent appreciation. This in turn means that they must respect, trust and accept themselves as they are, with all their faults, weaknesses and shortcomings.
by "Billy' Eduard Albert Meier
February 7th 2013
ORIGINAL GERMAN SOURCE: Warum der Mensch das wird, was er ist und Kampf den Depressionen
This is an authorized translation of a FIGU publication. This translation contains errors due to the insurmountable language differences between German and English. The British-English language has been specifically elected by the Plejaren as being the most suitable English language variation for the translation of all German FIGU publications.
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