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Global environment |
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Global environment |
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A 17th-century illustration of consciousness By Robert Fludd |
In recent years, neuroscience has gone through accelerated progress and transformation. However, establishing the physical basis of consciousness is necessary to turn it into a respected scientific field. The book The Science of Consciousness is a new contribution to this ongoing discussion, proposing a new physical worldview incorporating consciousness and evolution.
It has become increasingly clear that quantum approaches can explain consciousness. Today, the quantum-like modeling of cognition, such as the human mental lexicon, is a mainstream scientific idea. Psychology and other social sciences have increasingly turned to quantum mechanics tools in the past century. My theory builds on and supports these ideas but goes even further. I audaciously claim (and hope to prove) the brain’s electromagnetic balances give rise to the self-regulating mind. This physical entity is an elementary particle that interacts through emotions, the elementary forces of the mind.
The idea might be strange or even shocking. However, radical ideas require a jump in conceptual thinking. Although a new scientific vista generally involves inexact details and concepts that are not fully worked out, data for this original scientific thought is amounting, to name a few:
1. It is challenging to retrace our thoughts, and we have minimal control over them in the first place. The mind seems to h‘ve a’‘mind’ of its own. People occasionally carry out actions they have difficulty explaining or regret afterward.
2. Why is quantum theory a superior predictor of human behavior in psychology and economy?
3. What role do emotions play in intellect, and why are we so powerless over our emotions?
4. Our temporal closeness to events can change our conceptual vista to the point of reaching a diametrically opposite decision about a project (for example, most people have grand plans for their life or retirement but carry out almost none of them).
5. The findings by esteemed scientists show the role of positive emotions in success and health and the opposite effects of negative emotions. These highly consistent findings are difficult to explain in any other way.
Understanding consciousness gives you the tools to reach ambitious, wholesome goals. It opens the book on human motivation, allowing a deeper understanding of others and the self. The book is available on Amazon.
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Emotions are the most important motivating force of the most complex animals, birds, and mammals. We must examine the brain's workings to understand how emotions regulate our lives. A stimulus triggers neuronal activation patterns in the cortex, which can be replayed repeatedly. The appropriate temporal order of the constantly changing cortical projection triggers corresponding motoric activation, experience, and memories. This way, experience informs present behavior and produces a far superior response. But beyond the sensory and motor function, the brain's energy balances also give rise to emotions. The automatic regulation of the brain's energy balances means that emotions control our thoughts and actions.
High brain oscillations are essential for analytic thinking, detailed, focused work, preparation, or response to danger. Nevertheless, energy-expensive high brain frequencies are stressful and form a self-centered, insecure view, which prevents an overarching picture and decreases confidence. In addition, distorted, fractured mental images trigger negative emotions, which limit perceived opportunities. Over time, these energy-poor conditions handicap personal and professional success and cause health problems.
Our emotions may govern our actions today, but our present actions determine our feelings tomorrow. For this reason, there are tried and tested methods that, over the long term, can change faulty mental patterns. The most ancient technique to achieve lasting cognitive change is meditation. Meditation and prayer come from ancient traditions but generate mental stability in the modern setting. Although group setting is helpful for beginners, solitary practice is also productive. A more contemporary method is goal setting. Goal-oriented activity improves short-term memory and task success; motivation increases mental stability and reduces conflict, enhancing performance.
Worry and anxiety can prevent goal-directed activity, but positive social connections promote psychological and physical health and inspire mental transformation. Even in animals, grooming behavior is beneficial. The relaxing, trusting state provides health and mental benefits for both the giver and receiver of compassion. In contrast, toxic social connections can kill. Neuroscience supports these ideas.
Positive emotions are associated with lower brain oscillations, which lack details and allow the confidence of an overarching vision. In the mind, unnecessary details are eliminated, and the mental focus widens, allowing natural, creative solutions to emerge—psychology results from the role of emotions in an automatic mental operation. Calm minds cannot be easily disturbed. Just as energy flows from warmer to colder matter, emotionally stable (less irritable) people face challenges. Emotional stability also means engaging, relating to others and situations, and finding inherent solutions. These flexible people adapt to opportunities quickly.
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Common octopus by Albert Kok |
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