|
|
|
|
|
by goldenkey
2983 days ago
|
|
I am pretty much back to normal except for the unsettling thoughts about alternate consciousnesses in the same being. Like you say, why wouldn't different parts of the brain have a will - the limbic system certainly has sway. Do you know if there have ever been experiments done to investigate whether alternate subconscious will can 'show itself conscious' by way of asking a person for a demonstration? Of course, this would require the subconscious to both observe the instruction and follow it, and have some method of conveying action. I tend to think that only the main consciousness would be able to execute direct actions. So I would guess the experiments would be very hard to perform without some clever setup. It sounds almost silly but I really do wonder if the other decision making / executive functional parts of the brain have some level of understanding about their relative capacity to influence the body they reside in? Sharing a mind seems like such a silly "alien body snatchers" kind of idea. But HTM seems to hint at it. https://discourse.numenta.org/t/oscillatory-thousand-brains-... https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hierarchical_temporal_memory |
|
If you're interested in the science, I'd suggest starting from the Libet experiments (who essentially thinks his experiments show that the subconscious makes decisions, and the conscious retains a veto right)
It's a fascinating thought to entertain. (But you will forever doubt if you our your subconscious made the decision to think about this ;)
If you care more for pop-sci, Kahnemann's "Thinking fast and slow" idea of system1/system2 thinking might be a good read.
That still doesn't mean that different consciousnesses share a mind. We certainly have different systems competing for attention, but what consciousness even means. (I'd recommend Popper as a starting point for that debate, but mostly because the science is still very much in the "Dunno, but what happens if we poke here?" stage, IMHO. Philosophy seems more apt)