Instantly
receive three FREE mind power tools
when you join
the Mind Power News e-zine!
Rapid
Manifestation
Sleep
Less,
Have More Energy!
Magic
Power Words
Lucid
Dream in 7 Days
Five
Ancient Tibetan Exercises
The
Enlightened Salesperson
Underground
Hypnosis
Double
Your Way
To A Million
Our
Ultimate Reality
Create
Your Own Custom Subliminal CD
Life
Transformation Formula
Stuart
Goldsmith's
Inner Circle Course
Cyborg
Selling
Secrets
of Hypnosis Revealed
Academy
of Remote Viewing
7
Golden Secrets to Access Your Higher Self
Get
The Money,
Get The Money,
Get The Money
Holographic
Creation
Covert
Hypnosis
Lucid
Dreaming
The
Infinite Wealth Trilogy
Wealth
Beyond Reason
Secretly
Hypnotize Anyone
Grow
Rich While You Sleep
Audio
Motivation
Hypnosis
MP3's
Double
Your Reading Speed in 16 Minutes
Command
More Luck
How
to Persuade Anyone
Powerful
Sleep
Subliminal
Power
How
to Hypnotize
Fit
Over 40
Manifest
Life Portal
Dancing
With the Universe
Ancient
Warrior Secrets for Modern Life
|
|
Is
"Reality" Merely a Movie Inside Your Head?
Is
consciousness a seamless experience or a string of fleeting images, like
frames of a movie? The emerging answer will determine whether the way
we perceive the world is illusory
By
Christof Koch
Source:
Scientific
American
The brain is an amazingly dynamic organ. Millions of neurons in all corners
of our gray matter send out an endless stream of signals. Many of the
neurons appear to fire spontaneously, without any recognizable triggers.
With the help of techniques such as electroencephalography (EEG) and microelectrode
recordings, brain researchers are listening in on the polyphonic concert
in our heads. Any mental activity is accompanied by a ceaseless crescendo
and diminuendo of background processing. The underlying principle behind
this seeming racket is not understood. Nevertheless, as everyone knows,
the chaos creates our own unique, continuous stream of consciousness.
And yet it
is very difficult to focus our attention on a single object for any extended
period. Our awareness jumps constantly from one input to another. No sooner
have I written this sentence than my eyes move from the computer screen
to the trees outside my window. I can hear a dog barking in the distance.
Then I remember the deadline for this article--which isn't going to be
extended again. Resolutely, I force myself to type the next line.
How does
this stream of impressions come to be? Is our perception really as continuous
as it seems, or is it divided into discrete time parcels, similar to frames
in a movie?
This excerpt
is from an article originally published by Scientific American. Please
read the full article here.
RELATED
ARTICLES:

|