I didn't know that take8easy used to frequent East Vancouver about 10 years ago.About 10 years ago when I was living in an older house in east van I frequently saw an apparition of a brown guy wandering around.
Did you ever acknowledge it or try to talk to it?About 10 years ago when I was living in an older house in east van I frequently saw an apparition of a brown guy wandering around.
No I just left him alone. He never bothered me or seemed to acknowledge me either. Probably best that way. I don't feel its a good idea to mess around with spirits. If I was to reach out to one, I think it could possibly attract others who aren't nearly as benevolent as he seemed to be. I'll just stay in my lane and they can stay in their lane.Did you ever acknowledge it or try to talk to it?
To put this into perspective..lets say someone has brain damage to their thalamus and/or their hippocampus. This will likely result in memory impairment. But yet the brain damaged person still has a soul.Does the loss of memory equate to the loss of one's soul?
There seems to be a fairly common experience that they see a bright light at the end of a long tunnel and they feel loved like never before. Some report seeing dead relatives, angels or Jesus. So I'm wondering, what do buddhists or muslims report after an NDE (near death experience)?We all hear the stories of people who claim to have had near death experiences but are these just delusions from deep in their subconscious again based on their beliefs?
Of course, cogniitive neuroscience changes as fast as psychology. Studies have shown that other organs may also carry "memories", such as the heart. Possibly explaining why organ transplant can have some unusual side effects. As someone who has had a near death experience coupled with a TBI, I have spent over a decade talking with psychiatrists, psychologists, neurologists, neuro-psychiatrists, etc. In the end we always come to the same conclusion, we just don't know much about consciousness yet.Currently the general opinion in cognitive neuroscience is the brain produces the mind. But we're restricted at studying consciousness at an in depth level because of both the limits in technology and our own limits in how we, as humans, perceive reality. Our reality is nothing more than what each of our individual cognition/perception systems allow us to experience.
One of my closet interests (aside from weird sexy shit), is patching together nuggets from various disciplines to better understand how the mind works, and how we can be conscious and self-aware.Of course, cogniitive neuroscience changes as fast as psychology. Studies have shown that other organs may also carry "memories", such as the heart. Possibly explaining why organ transplant can have some unusual side effects. As someone who has had a near death experience coupled with a TBI, I have spent over a decade talking with psychiatrists, psychologists, neurologists, neuro-psychiatrists, etc. In the end we always come to the same conclusion, we just don't much about consciousness yet.