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Consciousness In Four Dimensions: Biological Relativity and the Origins of Thought

Consciousness In Four Dimensions: Biological Relativity and the Origins of Thought

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Product Info Reviews

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Rating: 5 stars
Summary: A Good Theory
Review: Pico's book is a welcome addition to the growing body of literature on cognative studies. He is very clear about what he proposes and what he doesn't think we know at present. His work is a good complement to approaches from evolutionary approaches. His writing is engaging - you will have to stick with it if you aren't a medical person (I'm not - physics and theology are in my background). It helps to read this over a few days so you get the whole argument at once. He did a good job of calming our fears that we are losing something by not having an elan vital.

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: A New Day has Arrived
Review: The Brilliant Doctor has done it! No single philosopher, scientist or mathematician could have pulled together all the pieces that this book does. Consciousness as a frame of reference equivalent to what Einstein described for the space-time continuum. This new view will change the way I think about alot of things including where we are going in human evolution. I want more! Thank you!!

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: A New Day has Arrived
Review: The Brilliant Doctor has done it! No single philosopher, scientist or mathematician could have pulled together all the pieces that this book does. Consciousness as a frame of reference equivalent to what Einstein described for the space-time continuum. This new view will change the way I think about alot of things including where we are going in human evolution. I want more! Thank you!!

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: Finally, a physicial model of consciousness!
Review: THIS BOOK ALLOWS YOU TO OPEN YOUR MIND AND SINK INTO A WOUNDFUL UNIVERSE, THAT LOOKS A LIFE AND ALL THATS IN IT, IN A HOLE NEW PERSPECTIVE. IT READS CLEAR AND TO THE POINT.
A MUST READ IF YOU LOVE SCIENCE. YOU WOULD OF WISHED YOU BOUGHT THE BOOK THE FIRST TIME YOU LOOK AT IT. WELCOME TO THE FUTURE AND A GUIDE TO LIFE AND YOUR CONSCIOUSNESS!

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: Thank goodness for my PIMs
Review: What a great book!

I have never seen so clear a presentation of the mechanics of consciousness. Don't expect an explanation of qualia, but everything but that is included in this book.

Actually, the book is more original than I made it seem above. Pico makes an analogy between Einstein's allowing us to better understand gravity via his theories of relativity in 4 dimensions and the ability to see how our consciousness works by viewing the brain's functions in 4 dimensions.

His main point, I believe, was that unless one understands the proper frame of reference from which to view and analyze phenomena of consciousness we will not understand why the human brain so differs from the brains of even our nearest relatives. Further, we will not understand the narrative that we maintain that allows us to have a self. Certain brain changes have allowed a necessary holding space for afferent input (from senses and from memory stores) that holds info just long enough to allow efferent response that allows us to plod moment to moment in a line, so to speak.

One very interesting point that Pico makes is about a distinction between ape and human consciousness. He believes that the human brain alone has this ability to create a narrative, and that this new function is a SMALL change from ape brain structure. While apes may not have this similar ability to have the narrative, they almost certainly sense the qualia of the world in a way that is very similar if not identical to that of human beings. It is just that there is no moment to moment story in the ape brain. The only way that a moment to moment story to be allowed to nonhuman brains is when there is some aspect of the environment that, because of its properties, holds the context constant. Apes that know sign language, or African grays that can identify colors -- these can do these things only if there is a constant environment that can maintain a place holder, so to speak.

But the human brain has such a place keeping ability without needed a constant context.

READ THIS BOOK. NOW.

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: Thank goodness for my PIMs
Review: What a great book!

I have never seen so clear a presentation of the mechanics of consciousness. Don't expect an explanation of qualia, but everything but that is included in this book.

Actually, the book is more original than I made it seem above. Pico makes an analogy between Einstein's allowing us to better understand gravity via his theories of relativity in 4 dimensions and the ability to see how our consciousness works by viewing the brain's functions in 4 dimensions.

His main point, I believe, was that unless one understands the proper frame of reference from which to view and analyze phenomena of consciousness we will not understand why the human brain so differs from the brains of even our nearest relatives. Further, we will not understand the narrative that we maintain that allows us to have a self. Certain brain changes have allowed a necessary holding space for afferent input (from senses and from memory stores) that holds info just long enough to allow efferent response that allows us to plod moment to moment in a line, so to speak.

One very interesting point that Pico makes is about a distinction between ape and human consciousness. He believes that the human brain alone has this ability to create a narrative, and that this new function is a SMALL change from ape brain structure. While apes may not have this similar ability to have the narrative, they almost certainly sense the qualia of the world in a way that is very similar if not identical to that of human beings. It is just that there is no moment to moment story in the ape brain. The only way that a moment to moment story to be allowed to nonhuman brains is when there is some aspect of the environment that, because of its properties, holds the context constant. Apes that know sign language, or African grays that can identify colors -- these can do these things only if there is a constant environment that can maintain a place holder, so to speak.

But the human brain has such a place keeping ability without needed a constant context.

READ THIS BOOK. NOW.


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