Beyondo
Active Member
I've gone and done a really juvenile thing. I bought a coloring book and I colored all the tracings in it! Only this coloring book depicts the anatomy of the human brain... So what right? Well...there was an eerie sense of mechanism when I saw how fiber connections flared out like those fiber optic lamps that are sold on Amazon, and the interconnecting fibers between lobes looked like ribbon cables! Then when covering the development of the brain the neurons move about like amoebas! All this mechanization and I couldn't find the mind!
Some call the mind a gestalt which makes all that mechanization a sum of the parts that end up as the whole. But what does that mean? If I look at a computer program and see its code I can sequence what a machine will do. Now the parts of this machine are clueless as to what programming code is. The machine in fact doesn't really do math or searches. The machine's components just exchange electrons, switches turning on and off. So where's my code in this machine? Yet the machine ends up creating a gestalt called my application. Its as if my program where some kind of spirit or ghost inside my desktop, its not physical at all!
I like to think of the gestalt of anything as a theme of a machine's mechanics. The theme of a program isn't physical, no really its not. Just try and find it in a code listing it won't be there. But yet this theme can interact with the physical world. Is it a great leap to think of the human mind as the theme resulting from biological operations? And if so, then wouldn't that make the mind non-physical?
Some call the mind a gestalt which makes all that mechanization a sum of the parts that end up as the whole. But what does that mean? If I look at a computer program and see its code I can sequence what a machine will do. Now the parts of this machine are clueless as to what programming code is. The machine in fact doesn't really do math or searches. The machine's components just exchange electrons, switches turning on and off. So where's my code in this machine? Yet the machine ends up creating a gestalt called my application. Its as if my program where some kind of spirit or ghost inside my desktop, its not physical at all!
I like to think of the gestalt of anything as a theme of a machine's mechanics. The theme of a program isn't physical, no really its not. Just try and find it in a code listing it won't be there. But yet this theme can interact with the physical world. Is it a great leap to think of the human mind as the theme resulting from biological operations? And if so, then wouldn't that make the mind non-physical?
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