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Well DUH, they are calling it “inner zombies”, ……..

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Well DUH, they are calling it “inner zombies”, …….. Empty Well DUH, they are calling it “inner zombies”, ……..

Post by SamCogar Wed Sep 17, 2008 1:04 pm

But I am a professional and call it what it is, …… our “subconscious mind” that controls and directs our very being.

Could inner zombie be controlling your brain?

Evidence suggests self-aware part of our brains isn't always in charge

If you had to sum up the past 40 years of research on the mind, you could do worse than to call it the Rise of the Zombies.

We like to see ourselves as being completely conscious of our thought processes, of how we feel, of the decisions we make and our reasons for making them. When we act, it is our conscious selves doing the acting. But starting in the late 1960s, psychologists and neurologists began to find evidence that our self-aware part is not always in charge. Researchers discovered that we are deeply influenced by perceptions, thoughts, feelings, and desires about which we have no awareness.

Their research raised the disturbing possibility that much of what we think and do is thought and done by an unconscious part of the brain — an inner zombie.

Some of the earliest evidence for this zombie came from studies of people who had suffered brain injuries. In 1970 British psychologists Elizabeth Warrington and Lawrence Weiskrantz showed a series of words to a group of people with amnesia, who promptly forgot the list. A few minutes later Warrington and Weiskrantz showed them the first three letters of each of the words they had just seen and forgotten and asked the amnesiacs to add some additional letters to make a word. Any word would do. The amnesiacs consistently chose the words they had seen and forgotten; the inner zombie, somewhere beyond awareness, retained memories of the words.

Our inner zombies may also be able to control our bodies. In 1988 a woman known as “patient D. F.” suffered carbon monoxide poisoning and lost the ability to recognize objects and shapes. Her eyes were still relaying information to her brain, but the connections between regions of her brain had been damaged so that she was no longer aware of what was before her. Scientists at the University of Western Ontario set a card on a table in front of D. F. and then held up a disk with a slot in it. They asked D. F. to hold the card at the same angle as the slot. She couldn’t. But when asked to put the card in the slot as if she were mailing a letter, she immediately — and unknowingly — turned the card to the correct angle and slipped it in.

Mounting evidence of our inner zombie at work has led some scientists to downplay the importance of our aware selves. Earlier this year in Time magazine, Harvard psychologist Steven Pinker declared that “the intuitive feeling we have that there’s an executive ‘I’ that sits in a control room of our brain, scanning the screens of the senses and pushing the buttons of the muscles, is an illusion.”

http://www.msnbc.msn.com/id/26742742/

HA, Harvard psychologist Steven Pinker really doesn't have a clue how really frigging stupid he is.

Well DUH, they are calling it “inner zombies”, …….. 33948 Well DUH, they are calling it “inner zombies”, …….. 33948 Well DUH, they are calling it “inner zombies”, …….. 33948


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SamCogar

Number of posts : 6238
Location : Burnsville, WV
Registration date : 2007-12-28

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