In other words, insofar as the body is concerned, the brain/mind is a nonessential i.e. it can be and is shut down in times of crisis — TheMadFool
To sum it all up,
1. The belief we have that our minds/brains come first - defines what it is to be human, takes precedence over any and all - is a grand illusion, a delusion of grandeur, a misconception of the highest order.
2. The irony of this realization, if it counts as such, is not lost on me and the reader too must come to terms with the truth that this post/thread is simply the brain/mind telling itself how insignificant it itself is in the grand scheme of things I suppose. — TheMadFool
The 3-Part Brain
The Triune Brain model, introduced by physician and neuroscientist Paul D. MacLean, explains the brain in three parts:
Reptilian (brain stem): This innermost part of the brain is responsible for survival instincts and autonomic body processes.
Mammalian (limbic, midbrain): The midlevel of the brain, this part processes emotions and conveys sensory relays.
Neommalian (cortex, forebrain): The most highly evolved part of the brain, this area outer controls cognitive processing, decision-making, learning, memory and inhibitory functions.
During a traumatic experience, the reptilian brain takes control, shifting the body into reactive mode. Shutting down all non-essential body and mind processes, the brain stem orchestrates survival mode. During this time the sympathetic nervous system increases stress hormones and prepares the body to fight, flee or freeze.
Utter nonsense — Amity
Where did you drag all this up from and what do you hope to achieve by posting such ? — Amity
More facts about the brain:
https://www.rchsd.org/health-articles/brain-and-nervous-system-2/ — Amity
Removed comment. Not worth pursuing. — Amity
I don't see the brain as the only source of awareness — Jack Cummins
Take a moment to consider the phenomenon some unlucky folks experience in their lives viz. fainting/syncope. The usual circumstances in which people faint/have a dizzy spell/lose consciousness are those that involve an insult to the cardiovascular system, in layman's terms blood loss. The body, physiologists say, responds by diverting the diminishing supply of blood away from, here's where it gets interesting, nonessential parts of the body to the vital organs. In other words, insofar as the body is concerned, the brain/mind is a nonessential i.e. it can be and is shut down in times of crisis. — TheMadFool
fainting/syncope. — TheMadFool
what explains the loss of consciousness when the brain shuts down? — TheMadFool
Non-essential body and mental processes are shut down.
However, the brain is still essential. — Amity
I think you may be incorrectly assuming that the entire organ shuts down, but we commonly lose consciousness without losing all brain function. It is consciousness, then, that can be determined a non-essential function in times of crisis, not the brain — Possibility
The sympathetic nervous system makes sure the small blood vessels in your body's tissue maintain a baseline level of constriction. This resistance as blood flows through all your narrow blood vessels contributes to sufficient blood pressure for the whole system.
An increase in parasympathetic activity reverses this resistance, allowing blood to linger in the peripheral tissues rather than heading to the heart and brain. A lack of resistance, along with the lowered heart rate, causes a dramatic decrease in blood pressure.
And you've fainted – or more technically, experienced a neurocardiogenic syncope. While sometimes embarrassing, it's fairly common and, in itself, not overly dangerous.
the point is consciousness is the first to be switche off and that implies, it's of least importance. — TheMadFool
We're forced to conclude, like it or not, that the brain/mind is the most nonessential organ in our body. — TheMadFool
My brain talking to your brain...two nonessential items vying for what appears to be the last position in the rankings. — TheMadFool
All I can say is that we zonk out and to tell you the truth, it doesn't even matter which part of the body consciousness resides in; the point is consciousness is the first to be switche off and that implies, it's of least importance. — TheMadFool
The brain does not shut down in the case of loss of consciousness.
See previous responses: — Amity
You have moved from claiming that the brain is non-essential to consciousness being of least importance. — Amity
I’m not convinced that it’s the first to be switched off, though. — Possibility
I know when blood rushes from one head to the other head, we discover a beautiful truth. — James Riley
The body, physiologists say, responds by diverting the diminishing supply of blood away from, here's where it gets interesting, nonessential parts of the body to the vital organs. In other words, insofar as the body is concerned, the brain/mind is a nonessential i.e. it can be and is shut down in times of crisis. — TheMadFool
I’m not convinced that it’s the first to be switched off, though.
— Possibility
Sorry, you're wrong. — TheMadFool
I know when blood rushes from one head to the other head, we discover a beautiful truth. In that sense, two heads are better than one. But neither one can live without the other. It's like the chicken/egg question: Which came first, the big head or the little head? — James Riley
That consciousness isn’t necessary for life is plausible — Possibility
That the brain isn’t necessary seems ridiculous — Possibility
Consciousness is the first function to switch off in a crisis.
Therefore,
The brain is the least important organ in the body.
Sorry, try again. — Possibility
...consciousness isn't as important as it thinks it is. — TheMadFool
I’m thinking you might need to be clearer with your use of ‘brain’, ‘mind’ and ‘consciousness’. — Possibility
visiting the relevant Wikipedia pages — TheMadFool
this post/thread is simply the brain/mind telling itself how insignificant it itself is in the grand scheme of things I suppose. — TheMadFool
If it is consciousness that you wish to discuss, then think about folllowing the advice offered by Possibility
I’m thinking you might need to be clearer with your use of ‘brain’, ‘mind’ and ‘consciousness’.
— Possibility
visiting the relevant Wikipedia pages
— TheMadFool
If you haven't already researched 'Consciousness', here's a start:
https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Consciousness
At the very least, it is necessary to differentiate between the different types and approaches. — Amity
mankind's entire story can be condensed in one word "brain" or "mind" if that's more to your taste — TheMadFool
You’re right — Joshs
The brain-mind don’t dominate. It’s brain-mind-body and environment together. They cannot be separated except artificially — Joshs
Do you have a relevant point to make or are you just passing random comments? — TheMadFool
Using the sheep model, we were able to continuously measure region-specific CBFs. During controlled hypovolemia, cortical CBF remained constant until a blood loss of 10% compared to subcortical CBF, which remained constant until a blood loss of 20%. Even more important, the rate of reduction of CBF is more than three-fold higher in the cortex as compared to the subcortex, indicating that effective redistribution of blood flow is confined to the latter. — NCBI
And...? — TheMadFool
Your OP talks about brains, and minds, and consciousness, and blood, and the relative importance of other organs. It also suggests than none of that is what makes us human. When you look at animals (which we are), it is folly to talk of parsing out one essential revolutionary character as being more important from another. Loss of blood is more or less, from one place to another, and your brain loses some function with some loss, and all function with all loss. Unless you are going to start talking about souls or something, then all your considerations are nothing that hasn't been gleaned from the study of non-human animals. (I don't even think we are different in that regard, but it's beyond the scope of this thread.)
I think my original post sums it up quite nicely, and I stand by it. If folks would spend as much time analyzing what I say, as they do trying to understand the deep, profound thinking, and learned terms-of-art used by the more sophisticated posts on this forum, they would have gotten all of that from this rube. :grin: — James Riley
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