Monday, September 21, 2015

psychoanalise their plan to "train" the mind under sleep acording to neurologist or while awake in physical activity as buddhist asume brain alertness to learn,......robotics control mind has been put our lives in risk specially brain function by the insert of devices that burn sensors,stealing neurons,or brain fluids to"shrink" brain etc...,fkout robotics retardation of control the being behaviour in benefit of the ambitious militarism sci in technologies studies

 some neuroscientists now believe that cognitive faculties are not fixed but can be trained through meditation. And there may be scientific backing to the Buddhist belief that consciousness extends into deep sleep


“The standard neuroscience view is that deep sleep is a blackout state where consciousness disappears,”

In Indian philosophy we see some theorists argue that there’s a subtle awareness that continues to be present in dreamless sleep, there’s just a lack of ability to consolidate that in a moment-to-moment way in memory.


A study published in 2013 found that meditation can affect electro-physical brain patterns during sleep, and the findings suggest there could be capacity to “process information and maintain some level of awareness, even during a state when usually these cognitive functions are greatly impaired,” according to the researchers


But neither neuroscience nor Buddhism has a definitive answer on exactly how consciousness relates to the brain. And the two fields diverge on certain aspects of the topic. Buddhists believe that there’s some form of consciousness that’s not dependent on the physical body, while neuroscientists (and Thompson), disagree


In conclution;

“In neuroscience, you’ll often come across people who say the self is an illusion created by the brain. My view is that the brain and the body work together in the context of our physical environment to create a sense of self. And it’s misguided to say that just because it’s a construction, it’s an illusion.


By Quartz
http://qz.com/506229/neuroscience-backs-up-the-buddhist-belief-that-the-self-isnt-constant-but-ever-changing/

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