BRAIN ANATOMY AND EXTENDS
The brain is composed of 3 main structural divisions: the cerebrum, the brainstem, and the cerebellum (see the images below). At the base of the brain is the brainstem, which extends from the upper cervical spinal cord to the diencephalon of the cerebrum. The brainstem is divided into the medulla, pons, and midbrain.
Scientists say the brain purposely forgets certain memories in order to avoid information overload, and emotional hangovers.
This enables the brain to have a free flow of permanent storage without bridging or contradicting the sophisticated amount of inflows in information collected in a particular period of time.
This is to avoid déjà vu. The eerie feeling that you've been here and done this before is called DÉJÀ VU. It's French for “already seen,” and it can be a very strange and even unsettling experience. Logically, you know you haven't experienced this moment before, but your brain is telling you otherwise.
In a causal conundrum: it would seem that the brain can decide what's good for the brain but we can't decide what's good for us unless the brain decides for us.
It's laughable and is still very true, the brain uses it's own logarithmic statistics to understand the situation your are in and give you options to choose from, which you will choose from so from this you have only made your choice from what the brain has shown to you to select from and you can't choose from what is not in the data shown to you at the time. With this information accessed from the catalog provided by the brain it is what I see as brain 🧠making decisions for us.
The brain also corrupts 25% memories, erase 70% and remember 5% which also keeps crashing. do we have a format button?
Yes we have but can only be accessed by the brain itself not on our choice. The brain works with us as we learn new things, it dictates what is important to us from the process of you going back to that file repeatedly in a period of time, that will signal the brain to understand that, that very information is important.
LOL it Sounds like it's a whole living organism on it's own.
That's an article for another day...


Comments
Post a Comment