I Can Do This
Silver Member
Hi Hashi - I find this kind of discussion really interesting and I like to see your point of view. It helps me refine what I know and add what I didn't know!
That makes sense to me. I have a metaphysical understanding as well and I feel I am deeply spiritual. I think my personal life crisis forced me in that direction - but I'm glad of it now.
So I understand what you are saying that you don't believe who you are can be located in your brain. I get that completely. Our life force is of a divine source - and our "me-ness" leaves our body upon death - only the body dies and it is essentially our home or our vehicle. So while I completely agree that our "me-ness" isn't originated in the brain - I do believe the body is designed for our use while in it. And our bodies have a logical design that is virtually the same througout God's creations. As I have heard said before - we are a soul having a human experience. So on that we agree.
I think it is fair to say that any subject could be viewed from a micro level and a macro level. I think our view of ourself is both micro and macro at the same time. It might be a good way to separate the discussion. I would say that our soul and our "me-ness"as you are describing is at a macro level view. And the way our bodies work could be considerd a micro level view. There is a creative tension between the two that you always have to reconcile. So when I spoke in posts about the brain - I am speaking from a micro view of the brain. I feel you are trying to see how the brain works from the macro point of view.
Another way to see this is that we know scripture says "No weapons formed shall prosper against me". However in the material (micro) world we know that weapons can and do prosper against people every day. But if you view this scripture from the macro level - we know that no weapon can prosper against our soul. We can be killed but we are taken care of because "we" are not our body.
You are correct - childlike may not be the best word for it - it is primitive or immature behavior akin to the earliest stages of development. The part about the 7 years of age is about the development of the brain in the child. There are stages of development the brain goes through like learning to walk and talk - the mammalian and reptilian brain in essence finish their development at that age in humans. Then our development is focused more in the neocortex - which is where our "me-ness" has been found to be located through MRI and other technologies. This also makes sense because the child is now developing their intellectual abilities and further establishing their own sense of independence and "me-ness" as being separate from others.
The question about being pre-verbal aligns with this too. The subconscious mind doesn't learn cognitively - it learns experientially. Words are not needed for that. The primitive brain keeps us alive and safe while we are incapable of any rational behaviors which require language and thought. An analogy that works for me is that the subconscious is like a tape recorder that records all experience through age 7 (when we begin to use our reasoning mind to a greater degree in our next level of development) - then for the rest of our lives it scans the environment through our 5 senses for matches to the past recordings. If it finds a match that was unsafe in the past - we are immediately flooded with emotions because it feels unsafe.
This part of our brain is not our "me-ness" - it is the equipment that comes with having a human body and a human experience (macro view).
No - it wouldn't you are correct. But why it wouldn't is important here. Horses traumatised when young are often put down because they remain in hyper vigilance and harm or kill people. In the wild a traumatized horse (for instance birthing troubles) would not survive its traumatizing event - and if it did the other animals would leave it. In the wild, sick or frightened animals are killed, even by their own herd or pack. So a horse that is traumatized in the wild wouldn't make it long - and the ones that survive it in domestication only survive because of human intervention - yet are often put down because they cannot be managed safely.
Lastly on that topic - horses don't have a large neocortex and this is incredibly important - it is apples to oranges. They live in the moment - they cannot observe themselves. So what constitutes a trauma for them must be life threatening - their father dying would not be a trauma for them. Being beaten by man, and abused - that is a trauma to them and it would repeat in them every time they see a man - because they learned that man is what is to be feared - that would be PTSD-like.
Fun discussion! I love thinking about all these things - so thank you for the opportunity!!!! It doesn't matter who is right and who is wrong - just want you to know I am not disrespecting you - I just love a deep discussion.
I have a metaphysical approach and see things in terms of experience, energy and meaning
That makes sense to me. I have a metaphysical understanding as well and I feel I am deeply spiritual. I think my personal life crisis forced me in that direction - but I'm glad of it now.
So I understand what you are saying that you don't believe who you are can be located in your brain. I get that completely. Our life force is of a divine source - and our "me-ness" leaves our body upon death - only the body dies and it is essentially our home or our vehicle. So while I completely agree that our "me-ness" isn't originated in the brain - I do believe the body is designed for our use while in it. And our bodies have a logical design that is virtually the same througout God's creations. As I have heard said before - we are a soul having a human experience. So on that we agree.
I think it is fair to say that any subject could be viewed from a micro level and a macro level. I think our view of ourself is both micro and macro at the same time. It might be a good way to separate the discussion. I would say that our soul and our "me-ness"as you are describing is at a macro level view. And the way our bodies work could be considerd a micro level view. There is a creative tension between the two that you always have to reconcile. So when I spoke in posts about the brain - I am speaking from a micro view of the brain. I feel you are trying to see how the brain works from the macro point of view.
Another way to see this is that we know scripture says "No weapons formed shall prosper against me". However in the material (micro) world we know that weapons can and do prosper against people every day. But if you view this scripture from the macro level - we know that no weapon can prosper against our soul. We can be killed but we are taken care of because "we" are not our body.
I don't see survival instinct as a childlike behaviour. I see it as definitely related to the mammalian brain (all mammals share it) and not connected to age or development but to our animal nature at any age.
You are correct - childlike may not be the best word for it - it is primitive or immature behavior akin to the earliest stages of development. The part about the 7 years of age is about the development of the brain in the child. There are stages of development the brain goes through like learning to walk and talk - the mammalian and reptilian brain in essence finish their development at that age in humans. Then our development is focused more in the neocortex - which is where our "me-ness" has been found to be located through MRI and other technologies. This also makes sense because the child is now developing their intellectual abilities and further establishing their own sense of independence and "me-ness" as being separate from others.
The question about being pre-verbal aligns with this too. The subconscious mind doesn't learn cognitively - it learns experientially. Words are not needed for that. The primitive brain keeps us alive and safe while we are incapable of any rational behaviors which require language and thought. An analogy that works for me is that the subconscious is like a tape recorder that records all experience through age 7 (when we begin to use our reasoning mind to a greater degree in our next level of development) - then for the rest of our lives it scans the environment through our 5 senses for matches to the past recordings. If it finds a match that was unsafe in the past - we are immediately flooded with emotions because it feels unsafe.
This part of our brain is not our "me-ness" - it is the equipment that comes with having a human body and a human experience (macro view).
If a horse was traumatised when young, I can't imagine that it's animal instincts could include blocking out the memories of that and acting as if nothing was wrong until it had grown up, paired with another horse, had a foal together, felt secure that it had pasture in summer and hay in winter, and it's father died - at which point it started to get flashbacks and nightmares.
No - it wouldn't you are correct. But why it wouldn't is important here. Horses traumatised when young are often put down because they remain in hyper vigilance and harm or kill people. In the wild a traumatized horse (for instance birthing troubles) would not survive its traumatizing event - and if it did the other animals would leave it. In the wild, sick or frightened animals are killed, even by their own herd or pack. So a horse that is traumatized in the wild wouldn't make it long - and the ones that survive it in domestication only survive because of human intervention - yet are often put down because they cannot be managed safely.
Lastly on that topic - horses don't have a large neocortex and this is incredibly important - it is apples to oranges. They live in the moment - they cannot observe themselves. So what constitutes a trauma for them must be life threatening - their father dying would not be a trauma for them. Being beaten by man, and abused - that is a trauma to them and it would repeat in them every time they see a man - because they learned that man is what is to be feared - that would be PTSD-like.
Fun discussion! I love thinking about all these things - so thank you for the opportunity!!!! It doesn't matter who is right and who is wrong - just want you to know I am not disrespecting you - I just love a deep discussion.