Mental or Physical

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  1. TruthDebater profile image54
    TruthDebaterposted 13 years ago

    Which comes first, mental thought or physical action?

    Is it cells that create synapse the physical action that leads to mental thought?

    If we have cells creating our thoughts, what creates the cells thoughts? In another words, do cells have physical actions before a mental process?

    If the cells do have physical actions without requiring mental process, why don't we have all physical actions without requiring mental process? Our heart beats along with other physical functions without needing us to remind it. Why do not all physical processes run like this without need for our reminding?

    1. Sekharg profile image60
      Sekhargposted 13 years agoin reply to this

      This topic is much deeper than what looks on the surface.
      You must have heard of conscious and subconscious minds.
      We were designed in such a way that our subconscious mind takes care of functions like breathing; circulating the blood throughout our body, digestion etc.

      We use conscious mind to think and perform tasks.

      Coming back to your question, we think first (mental thought) and act on it. It is not the other way around.

      1. TruthDebater profile image54
        TruthDebaterposted 13 years agoin reply to this

        Thanks. What makes the thoughts and are they produced by the cells before we have them?

      2. Lisa HW profile image61
        Lisa HWposted 13 years agoin reply to this
    2. Pcunix profile image91
      Pcunixposted 13 years agoin reply to this

      Cells don't have thoughts any more than a memory location has a process.

      1. TruthDebater profile image54
        TruthDebaterposted 13 years agoin reply to this

        Thanks Pcunix. Can you explain to me how they function and have the capabilities they do? Have you seen them on youtube? They are pretty amazing.

        I don't know if this video is legit or not, but it shows a cell chasing a bacteria. http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=JnlULOjUhSQ

        1. Pcunix profile image91
          Pcunixposted 13 years agoin reply to this

          I had not seen that.

          I believe we are still many decades from understanding basic cellular chemistry. We have come a long way in the past few years, though.

        2. ceciliabeltran profile image63
          ceciliabeltranposted 13 years agoin reply to this

          Cool

    3. earnestshub profile image80
      earnestshubposted 13 years agoin reply to this

      It would take a while to explain here, but you can probably get the answers on google pretty easily.
      A heck of a lot is known about how our brain fires, what triggers the process and how it is dealt with.
      The "choke" as far as brain capacity is concerned can be seen like the bus in a computer.
      We are born with a limited number of connections, (around 45,000 apparently) and as we age we lose many of them.

      1. ceciliabeltran profile image63
        ceciliabeltranposted 13 years agoin reply to this

        I wonder if this is accurate, i remember reading somewher that the number is more on the millions

        1. earnestshub profile image80
          earnestshubposted 13 years agoin reply to this

          No, check it out. we do not have very many connections and we lose them at a rate of about 10% every decade when we get older.
          I can check my psych files if you need confirmation.

          1. ceciliabeltran profile image63
            ceciliabeltranposted 13 years agoin reply to this

            I will but I do know that men start pruning theirs heavily around 13, but women do not.

          2. ceciliabeltran profile image63
            ceciliabeltranposted 13 years agoin reply to this

            I think you need to clarify what connections there are. Because it really is more that thousands and the 10% loss is not based on age but mental activity. The less you apply your mind to learning, the more you forget. I wish I could find my source, but anyway...whatev.


            http://wiki.answers.com/Q/How_many_neur … _the_brain

            1. earnestshub profile image80
              earnestshubposted 13 years agoin reply to this

              With the type of brain function we are addressing here we are only referring to  dopaminergic, adrenergic, cholinergic, and sertoninergic neurons.

    4. Davinagirl3 profile image60
      Davinagirl3posted 13 years agoin reply to this

      Nothing happens without forethought.  Whether it's conscious thought, or not.

    5. Evan G Rogers profile image60
      Evan G Rogersposted 13 years agoin reply to this

      i think you're touching on what it means to be alive.

      The thing is that we're just a bunch of chemicals running around responding to events and conditions. If you take my DNA chemical (in a few of my cells) and screw around with it... there is not mental, just a physical reaction that will likely lead to cancer.

      Why don't we have conscious actions? because we've evolved a system of chemicals that react in such a way that we don't need to be aware of them

      What comes first? Well, the physical has to come before the mental, because you can't respond to nothing. The mental IS the physical.  For example, when a physical electron zips into your synapse, you are programmed, via billions of years of evolution, to say "yow, that hurt!"

      The physical happened (happens) before the mental.

    6. profile image0
      mtsi1098posted 13 years agoin reply to this

      if the mind controls the body than mental must come first

      1. Pcunix profile image91
        Pcunixposted 13 years agoin reply to this

        How much control does a newborn have?

        1. profile image0
          mtsi1098posted 13 years agoin reply to this

          It is controlled by the mother smile

          1. Pcunix profile image91
            Pcunixposted 13 years agoin reply to this

            Exactly.  The brain is not yet functioning enough to control.

            Stimul. Response.  No magic.

  2. timorous profile image81
    timorousposted 13 years ago

    Many people take physical action before having a complete mental thought to guide it. big_smile  Some people talk at lot, but have nothing to say. roll

    I suspect the actions on a cellular level are interactive..one electrical impulse setting off another, eventually coming back to the first point after making the rounds and gathering a consensus about what to do next, and how to respond.

    Some of the responses are learned and stored so the next time the same circumstance comes up, the brain can use a shortcut.  You might call it 'second nature', after a number of times.

    1. TruthDebater profile image54
      TruthDebaterposted 13 years agoin reply to this

      Thanks. On the cellular level, do you believe they have mental activity before physical like we do? Do they stimulate the electrical impulse or does it stimulate them?

    2. profile image0
      kimberlyslyricsposted 13 years agoin reply to this

      big_smile  big_smile  big_smile  big_smile  big_smile  big_smile  big_smile  big_smile

  3. Lisa HW profile image61
    Lisa HWposted 13 years ago

    I don't think you separate and say which comes first.  They work together.  The brain is a "physical" thing "underneath" the "thoughts part of it".

    Some people and/or some situations mean that one or the other will tend to "take over", but at the core, they're working as a team.

    1. TruthDebater profile image54
      TruthDebaterposted 13 years agoin reply to this

      Thanks Lisa. I agree they both may play equal roles. I am asking the origin of thoughts. Either the mental or physical has to come first, correct? So are you saying the brain creates the thoughts? If so, do the thoughts create the synapse or do the cells create the synapse in the brain which cause the thoughts? Is it the cells control of what we think or our control?

      1. Lisa HW profile image61
        Lisa HWposted 13 years agoin reply to this

        That goes back to that they're working together - right from the start.  I'm no expert in neural systems, but I do know this much:

        If you have a brand new baby and put in in a room and never expose it to words, that baby will not know the words and won't have them to "use in his heads" to form thoughts.  Perfectly normal babies have been "turned" severely developmentally disabled by leaving them in cribs in orphanages.  The fact that I can write whatever thoughts I'm writing here comes from the fact that I've read and heard words for my whole life.    So right from the time a person learns the most basic words (if he learns them, which most people) the words for forming and understanding thoughts (which the brain then does) come from outside.

        But, something that happens is that talking to a baby will help create "wire" a baby's brain in the direction of development that allows for more advanced thoughts and thought processing.  Talking isn't enough to do it, though, a baby needs to feel safe and secure and happy (most of the time) in order to have (what I guess is) the "right blend of brain chemicals/hormones for certain types of development.  Nurturing requires talking and meeting emotional needs.

        Whether it's babies (or even pets), a newborn starts out with the simplest of brain "workings"  (a kind of basic blueprint) on which the whole, intertwined, process of growth and development take place. A newborn baby has awareness and a sense of discomfort, and "inner life" is pretty simple (but a baby is born with that much).  Babies (and to some extent that isn't even understood by a lot of people yet, some animals) are born with the potential to develop more advanced thinking (in animals it seems like it can only reach a certain stage of "advanced", but some animals are more "advanced thinkers" than others, especially if they're been well cared for by humans.

        Experts have described how a newborn's brain is at birth is like a  phonebook with space for x number of entries, but without the actual phone numbers and addresses entered.

        Based on that, we're both with x number of basic synapses and the potential to develop more.  From birth, for the most part, thoughts create the first set of "more advanced" synapses.  Once the brain is fully developed,  I'm guessing the degree to which thoughts/experiences affect the formation of new syapses (or even the destruction of the potential to develop them, which happens when nurturing isn't what it should be) is minimal (compared to what goes on with a child under three or four).

        What we think as matured individuals comes from things more complex than just synapses, by themselves.  To the best of my understanding, using the ability to process thoughts and feelings with those synapses we've already formed; we form our own thoughts, based on what we know, how we feel, what we see, what brain-chemicals and hormones we're "under the influence of" at the time; and at the point the whole thinking/processing/hormones thing is a cycle of different things that take place within us, as the state our our "physiology" (brain and rest of the body, as its affected by our experiences/thoughts at the time) "feed off each other" and work together.

        Just as newborn babies are born with only the potential to do things like stand and walk, they're born with the potential to form more advanced thoughts once they're reached a certain level of development (but they only reach that certain level of development "under the influence" of what nurturing they receive, which means, again, that the brain and body are working together since birth.

        I've always found the whole thing interesting (as the length of my post here probably reveals.   smile  )

        1. TruthDebater profile image54
          TruthDebaterposted 13 years agoin reply to this

          Thanks Lisa. I enjoyed reading your post. Very informative and credible I think. Based on the fact that we operate on feedback from birth to create words and thoughts, how do you believe instinct is created?
          I believe instinct to be repetitive thoughts that lead to repetitive actions that may eventually become instinct. Can instinct be repetitive actions or memory without thought? Does it take subconscious thought for memory?
          In a cell for instance, do you believe the cells can have subconscious memory without thought?

          1. Lisa HW profile image61
            Lisa HWposted 13 years agoin reply to this

            I wouldn't go as far as to call it "operating on feedback".  I'd more call it "operating with input being factored in".  (The Mendelbrott Set, and the fractal formula that represents it shows it well.)

            There are two meanings for "instinct".  There's some instinct that we're "hard-wired for".  Then there's "instinct" as it applies to something like "instinctively dialing a phone number our "hands learned" (and minds even seem to forget).  I don't know enough about how that all works, but I know one thing:

            I've been typing since 1965, so you'd think I know the QWRTY keyboard "in my head" really well.  Not long ago I got a phone with the QWRTY" keypad (but the letters are on on one side of the keypad, and the keys are so small I can't just set my two hands over the keyboard (the way I can with the PC keyboard) and type without thinking about where the letters are.  My hands "know" where those letters are.   When I'm trying to SMS someone I sometimes have a hard time, because my "head" doesn't remember where the letters are very well.  I can remember "roughly" where letters are (like that a is on the left and t is in the second row.  For the most part, though, I don't have anywhere near the memory of where those keys are (at least not when I'm in a hurry and need to find the letters fast).  I could probably sit down, take my time, and write where the letters are on a keyboard (but I even think I might use my hands to remind me where each key is).

            My point is, that while I don't know enough about what gets sent/stored where (when it comes to the whole "neurons/cells" types of thing), I don't think my brain has where the keyboard letter are in stored in the same place it has, say, what my own phone number is or which house is mine when I drive up to it.   I don't know whether where the memory of where the keys are (at least for me at this point, for example) is stored, and I'm not sure it's stored in what is considered the subconscious.  Maybe it is.   You (or I) could probably look up where "motor memory" (or whatever it would be called) is stored.  I think I've heard that it's stored somewhere other than where "usual" memories are stored.

            The subconscious is a term used to apply to the "mind aspect of the brain".  I don't think that term would be used to apply to any "memory" (information stored the way information is stored on a computer chip).  I'm under the impression that type of memory is very much an "out-and-out on there" (or "in there") kind of thing, rather than "buried deep down").

            Here's a link I just found to back up the remark about feeling like where some things are stored shifts to a "different place"/part of the brain:

            http://www.brain.riken.jp/bsi-news/bsin … ciale.html

            1. ceciliabeltran profile image63
              ceciliabeltranposted 13 years agoin reply to this

              The subconscious is just a record player, it recordsvall responses to stimuli, all programs and plays it out when emotional  buttons are pushed.

  4. profile image0
    hamstersmessiahposted 13 years ago

    in the phenomenal world, the physical and mental cannot be separated from each other...  they are like the wave/particle duality in quantum physics.  each can only be expressed in terms of the other.  in the noumenal world, the world of causes, the duality is expressed in supernatural terms that bind the two concepts holistically.  immersed in a world of manifestation instead of deliberate creation, our view of the phenomana of mental and physical action is necessarily incomplete.

  5. Pcunix profile image91
    Pcunixposted 13 years ago

    Let me guess: you are trying to build a case for a"soul", right?

    It is all chemical.  All physical.  All comprehensible, given time. No magic dust needed.

    1. profile image0
      hamstersmessiahposted 13 years agoin reply to this

      where do chemicals come from?  how do they know to communicate with each other in such a specific manner?  do you understand the concept of "suchness?"

      1. Pcunix profile image91
        Pcunixposted 13 years agoin reply to this

        Chemicals don't "know", but in the right configurations can store information.  That is what it all is at the most basic level: store and release.  Computers work the same way.

        1. profile image0
          hamstersmessiahposted 13 years agoin reply to this

          where did they come from?  where is the world of causes?  direct experience leads me to believe there is a lot more to the world of phenomena than meets the eye.  string theory posits as many as 15? dimensions but we apprehend only three...  why?

          1. Lisa HW profile image61
            Lisa HWposted 13 years agoin reply to this

            Where the "chemicals in life" come from is one thing.  The "chemicals in an individual human or animal" are not so difficult to understand scientifically that anyone could safely and objectively assume that individual creatures are tied to those "chemicals in life" any more than one leaf is tied to the weather in another region, or the process of growth for a completely different tree.

            Things like string theory address/raise questions about "the basics of how all of life works."  We're "small" enough in that grand scheme, and similar enough to animals,  that it would take a whole lot of "jumping" to tie individiual, living, Earthly, creatures to the "grand scheme of the Universe" and individual role within the context of it.  I'm not saying "something else cannot possibly be going on".  I'm saying nobody today has anywhere near sufficient evidence to make that "big jump" to assuming more.

            Besides, if we, as individuals, are "connected to the grand scheme in ways we don't now know; we could assume that the "intention" of any "planned, Grand Scheme" would be that we focus on Earthly existence while we're here.  If there's more, we'll learn that when we get there.  If there isn't, we'll have wasted our precious, short, lives on Earth thinking about stuff that was only imagined.  hmm

          2. Pcunix profile image91
            Pcunixposted 13 years agoin reply to this

            Because (assuming string theory has any validity) the dimensions are too small.

            Of course there is more than you can see.   We've known that even before Leeuwenhoek.

            That doesn't mean it is mystical or beyond understanding, supernatural or anything else you want to fantasize about.

            People always babble on about the "mystery of consciousness".  There is no mystery - consciousness is just feedback and echos, nothing more.

            1. srwnson profile image61
              srwnsonposted 13 years agoin reply to this

              Babble is a harsh word, I suppose a person who considers someone else as babbling thinks that  what they're saying is worthless. Which definition of babble are you using sir?

              1. Pcunix profile image91
                Pcunixposted 13 years agoin reply to this

                I consider anything that paints consciousness as anything but what it obviously is - feedback - to be babble, i.e. nonsense.

                1. luvpassion profile image61
                  luvpassionposted 13 years agoin reply to this

                  So consciousness is obviously chemical feedback. roll

                  1. Pcunix profile image91
                    Pcunixposted 13 years agoin reply to this

                    Chemical, electrical, it's all really the same thing.  It wouldn't matter if we found out that cells communicate by gravitational pulses, it is still ordinary stimulous-response and there is nothing magical or mysterious about it.

                    If consciousness were anything mystical, then why would simple brains obviously be less clever than more complex brains?  Why can we be aware of more than a monkey, why are monkeys more clever than mice?

                    Because their brains are more physically complex.  Because there is more feedback, more circuitry at work.  If it were mystical, then you'd expect to see some mouse drawing geometric figures in the sand and inviting us to admire their intelligence.

                    Sooner or later, we will construct machines that plainly exhibit consciousness.  Some stubborn people will claim it is "emergent", of course, and others will claim it must be an illusion, but they all will be as wrong then as they are now.

                2. srwnson profile image61
                  srwnsonposted 13 years agoin reply to this

                  Since I don't have any degrees in science I can't say your definition of consciousness is scientificly unsound. Speaking from a personal level I feel the consciousness is obviously more then nonsense. If it were compassion wouldn't exist, love hope all the things God gifted man with would could be recreated in the test tube. I know that cloning and things like this science say is possible, but will it really be the same?

                  God Bless

                  1. Pcunix profile image91
                    Pcunixposted 13 years agoin reply to this

                    There are no gods.  You don't need a degree in anything to understand that consciousness is just feedback - all you need is the feedback your own brain should be giving you about how things work.

          3. Evan G Rogers profile image60
            Evan G Rogersposted 13 years agoin reply to this

            i believe Einstein has the best answer to "where did chemicals come from" --- E=mc2.

            They've seen this in laboratories - two particles that who's binding force doesn't decrease with distance (think of magnets, but when you pull them apart, the force doesn't get weaker) have a peculiar behavior when you stretch them apart. As you pull them further and further apart.... particles begin to pop out of nothingness.

            You can check this out, and many other cool things, in the on-youtube.com video series "physics for future presidents".

            1. Pcunix profile image91
              Pcunixposted 13 years agoin reply to this

              It's probably not "out of nothing", but out of the energy that is present.

              At least as far as we know.. but  if particles do really pop out of nothing for no reason, you'd expect to see a slow but steady accumulation of new matter.   It's certainly possible that such creation is simply too small to notice or that it is conveniently balanced off by particles returning to energy - I suspect that it's all rather beyond our abilities to observe accurately enough right now.

            2. profile image0
              hamstersmessiahposted 13 years agoin reply to this

              E=mc2 is not a formula that explains where atoms come from.  it is merely descriptive of the properties of matter and energy and is itself incomplete, else we would already have a Grand Unified Theory.

              1. Pcunix profile image91
                Pcunixposted 13 years agoin reply to this

                "God did it" is even less of an answer.

                1. profile image0
                  hamstersmessiahposted 13 years agoin reply to this

                  i didn't say that "God" did it.  i am saying that each of us has the potential of realizing our own individual God-nature if we choose.  there are too many aspects of reality that are left unexplained by the physical sciences and are swept under the rug.  if we are only matter/energy beings, then science itself points to the fact that matter/energy can neither be created or destroyed meaning that we are all potentially infinite beings.  Bell's Theorem states (and has been found to be irrefutable) that any model of reality must include superluminal connections, i.e., information gets around faster than the speed of light and that information itself is not bound by the very physical laws in the universe it encodes.  either reality contains deeper levels of communication that we have not yet grasped or we must conclude that deep reality itself doesn't exist.  i know for a fact that i exist and i have experienced glimpses of deep reality in ecstatic states.  as real as the "ordinary" reality we observe in our mundane lives.  since these experiences are as vivid and real to me as the fact that i am sitting here, i, myself, can only conclude that there are deeper levels of reality open to human experience.  you might argue that these are mere hallucinations brought on by some "chemical" state in the brain,  but belief in chemicals is as much a belief as a belief in a deeper reality, especially when the consciousness can recall and experience these states in full consciousness and recall them as easily as ordinary consciousness.  you may never have experienced these states, but that does not mean that they do not exist, any less than the extra dimensions now posited by theories like string and M theory.  all you can truly state is that you have never experienced a deeper reality, you cannot testify as to whether it exists or not.  the nature of consciousness is intimately tied in with our notions of reality.

                  1. Evan G Rogers profile image60
                    Evan G Rogersposted 13 years agoin reply to this

                    actually E=mc2 shows that matter is energy. Adding an intense amount of energy to hydrogen creates helium, which is heavier than the original 2 hydrogen individually - some of the energy became matter.

                    In reverse, when you blow apart a chunk of uranium, the total amount of matter at the ending weighs less than the original chunk of uranium. The matter became energy.

                    Matter is like an uber-battery.

  6. bsscorpio8 profile image60
    bsscorpio8posted 13 years ago

    Conscious, subconscious. unconscious.THEN,action.

  7. Lisa HW profile image61
    Lisa HWposted 13 years ago

    Brain chemicals and hormones in the body are generated by the body, itself.  Something like the adrenal gland responds to a stressed out body (which may be stressed out as a result of thoughts).  Once a person is "under the influence of stress hormones" his thoughts and ability to process them can be affected.  As most people know, different parts of the brain are involved with different processes that take place in the body and brain, itself.

    I'd guess it's safe to say that the ability for a body to generate its own "chemicals" is yet another potential newborn creatures are born with.  A brand new baby's body isn't as capable of regulating things (like body temperature) as an more mature child's body is.  A child's lack of experience/knowledge mean a child's brain isn't as as capable of "managing its own thoughts" and having a little more control over emotional responses (the form of first thoughts and then physical).

    I pretty much assume we all start our lives unconnected to anything other than the genetic predispositions or even genetic "determinations"; and that "soul" is either something that is our "on Earth" living "core, as a person".  Or else, there's the chance it could live on after we do.

    Of course, there is the "overall" connection of all things in life, as far as how "all of life works".  There's also a different kind of connection associated with any impact our existence on Earth has on others or the Earth.  Other than that, I pretty much think each of us is a more complex version of the individual leaves that come out on trees in Spring and then die, fall off the tree, and are replaced with new leaves the next Spring. 

    That's just kind of my case against "soul", the way a lot of people see it.  Not saying I'm right.  Just saying there's a valid case against it (in the interest of being objective).

  8. Jewels profile image83
    Jewelsposted 13 years ago

    You speak of origin of thought, this is not self publicity but I've written a hubs on this topic.  http://hubpages.com/hub/Consciousness__ … _the_Brain  and  some related hubs from that one.

    The mental activity can be separated from the physical though it's not currently measurable by science except in relation to meditative states where there is a major change in brain waves, as the stress of thoughts have less impact on the physical body,  Meditative states also have a marked effect on the chemistry of the brain.

    There is a major body of work called The Fourfold Model by Dr Samuel Sagan where there is a separation created by the physical body, the etheric or life force also known as qi (found primarily in plants and also within the human body), the impact of thoughts and emotions on the physical body and the etheric body ,  (the Astral body), and the last frontier of a higher mind, akin to a higher intelligence beyond that of the normal animal mind.

    The etheric is interesting in the natural rhythm that is held, as if there is a primal knowledge within the cells.  This is not the realm of mental activity, but more in line with a genetic memory.  There is a knowledge there that does not require our mental activity to stimulate it.  The heart pulses not because we tell it to, but because that is the genetic function of the heart to do so.  Same can be said for the breath, even though there is evidence by your own experience that you can manipulate it easily with thoughts, left to it's own natural function the breath is done on automatic pilot!

    It's a fascinating topic when you study the actions of your own body using the model.  Takes a fair amount of discipline but you can separate the functions.

  9. Greek One profile image63
    Greek Oneposted 13 years ago

    sexual

  10. Disturbia profile image61
    Disturbiaposted 13 years ago

    This is all way too deep for my little head.

    I act and speak before I think, and I've suffered the consequences too. lol

    1. luvpassion profile image61
      luvpassionposted 13 years agoin reply to this

      You and me both sister...so high five. lol

      1. Disturbia profile image61
        Disturbiaposted 13 years agoin reply to this

        lol lol lol lol lol

        1. luvpassion profile image61
          luvpassionposted 13 years agoin reply to this

          We could hijack it for instance, do you prefer soft, natural cotton basics or lingerie that has a little something extra? lol

          1. Greek One profile image63
            Greek Oneposted 13 years agoin reply to this

            lingerie!

          2. profile image0
            DoorMattnomoreposted 13 years agoin reply to this

            Im in a bikini

            1. Greek One profile image63
              Greek Oneposted 13 years agoin reply to this

              forum tease!

              1. profile image0
                DoorMattnomoreposted 13 years agoin reply to this

                wink Im headed back to the pool now. Have fun everyone, wichever comes first, thougths, physicality, magik or God or science, I hope your all enjoying the day.

  11. psycheskinner profile image82
    psycheskinnerposted 13 years ago

    Thought *is* the action of neurons.  Neuronal activity doesn'r "cause" thought, it *is* thought.  Just as kicking is something legs do, thinking is something brains do.

    1. Pcunix profile image91
      Pcunixposted 13 years agoin reply to this

      Exactly.  And they do it with chemical and electrical circuitry, not with magic.

    2. TruthDebater profile image54
      TruthDebaterposted 13 years agoin reply to this

      Thanks. If you are angry about something, the neurons are creating the angry thoughts. If you choose to change your angry thoughts, did you choose what the neurons were making you think of to what you wanted them to make you think of?

      If a depressed person goes to get antidepressants to change the chemical balance and thoughts in their brain, did the neurons make them think to do this or did the persons awareness and choice decide this?

      1. Pcunix profile image91
        Pcunixposted 13 years agoin reply to this

        The neurons aren't creating thoughts.  The are reacting to inputs.  You experience the feedback from large groups of cells(and the hormones released)  as "anger".

        Feedback.  Stimulus-response.  Nothing more.

        1. TruthDebater profile image54
          TruthDebaterposted 13 years agoin reply to this

          Thanks. Then what creates the thoughts? If the neurons are reacting to the chemical or electrical inputs by synapse, wouldn't they be creating the thoughts? I think anger is the emotional response of upsetting thoughts, I may be wrong. What do you mean feedback, stimulus, response, nothing more? There are always variables and unknowns in how to think and react to a stimulus or whether to react at all.

          1. Pcunix profile image91
            Pcunixposted 13 years agoin reply to this

            Thoughts are simply complex responses and feedback.  You make the error of believing  that your "thought" is anything different from a branch test in a computer program.  Far more complex, and utilizing different methods, but conceptually the same.

          2. luvpassion profile image61
            luvpassionposted 13 years agoin reply to this

            It you want to think that chemicals are the only means by which your brain functions...fine. Yet you should realize the workings of the mind are subject to that wonderful blender known as imagination.

            Most people assume that the real world is outside, that the way to live life is by contact an external reality, by seeking input, mental or physical, from without. "Most of us have never considered severing outwards contacts in order to see what happens inside. We would rather explore the far side of the moon or the bottom of the ocean than the hidden depths within ourselves. smile

            But in fact the universe exists for each of us only when we experience it with body and mind. It is never elsewhere, it is always here and now.

  12. profile image0
    Home Girlposted 13 years ago

    I used to tell my kids: think before you do something.
    After long experience I keep quiet now. I guess physical comes first, at least in my family...

  13. profile image52
    helenacorpusposted 13 years ago

    Perhaps the nested dolls or nested collanders concept applies: the physical body connected to the mental body, the mental body connected to the spiritual body....


    Natura Colon

  14. TruthDebater profile image54
    TruthDebaterposted 13 years ago

    This question is for PC or anyone else that wants to answer.

    In cases of people that can override their biological instinct in instances such as blocking out pain, is this free will or genetic determinism?

  15. kalixao profile image61
    kalixaoposted 13 years ago

    In 1933, a young researchist posthumously deemed "The Father of Russian Psychology", had watched children at play and conducted discreet experiments to determine the nature of cognitive functions and their relationship to action, i.e., to figure out which came first, the idea or the action. He concluded that, "Like all functions of consciousness, it (imagination) originally arises from action." (Vygotsky, 1978[1933]).
    What he meant was that young "raw" minds (0-3 years) act largely on reflex and respond to, more than manipulate, their environment. For all their tantrums, they are rather helpless and it dawns on them that they need to refine strategies. They begin to think, to imagine, to create virtual realities, to use instruments to help them draw lines between imagination and reality (i.e., what they want and what they can't have). Toys, symbols, tools, prompts, costumes, and language, itself, assist the developing mind at these stages, until those instruments of mediation between the virtual and the real formulate a cognitive virtual reality, housing simultaneously the consciousness and a full awareness of that consciousness, through a transformational process peculiar to human beings - from reflexive action to thought and then to external speech and action or withholding of action, the human consciousness is galvanized, structured, transformed, and continually refined and refining others.
         Will is the primal driving force behind all this socialization and transformation - will, alone. Without will, a child is trained like a monkey, to answer questions correctly without comprehension, to "talk a lot but have nothing to say", to identify and label but not be able to generate original categorical taxonomies for organizing his inner and outer worlds, in short, to perform without imagination or originality, like a trained monkey.

         So, in answer to both your hypothetical dichotomies, according to Vygostky, thought comes after action, in all cases, and blocking pain is an act of will, not genetic predetermination.

 
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