Arti Within the scope of this research, I will try to analyze my thoughts about ones identity in order to determine whether I resemble an artichoke or an onion. I think that although the brain plays the most major role in determining our individuality, the body does play a significant role as well. When someone learns to ride a bicycle, the brain processes and stores everything that would contribute to the learning experience. This includes factors such as how to keep your balance, the full range of motion, which muscles contract and which expand at what points, taking your surroundings into account, hazards, trial and error, etc. These are all stored as memories in the brain of the person riding the bicycle. Also, the brain correlates all of these events with the body it is currently occupying, and as the body undergoes minor physical changes the brain quickly adapts to them. By removing the brain from the body and placing it in a completely different one, all of these correlations are broken, and the brain cannot adapt as quickly to its new surroundings.
As a result, whether or not she knew how to ride a bicycle beforehand is irrelevant, because even if both people knew how to ride a bicycle, the brain could not accurately tell a foreign bodys muscles how to ride a bike. Instead, it would have to re-learn this ability with its new body. In fact, the new person created from this operation would be similar to an infant just learning how to use its body. The brain would have to re-establish the correlations between prior memories and its current body. All of these are great arguments for what gives us our identity, but what about our personality? This is a much more intricate subject because ones personality is derived from a very large combination of inputs, some holding more weight than others depending on the individual. When discussing personality, we would tend to associate these as mental inputs, or more specifically the Memory and the Soul.
The Essay on How the Human Brain Stores and Retrieves Memory
Memory is the ability to encode, store and recall information. The three main processes involved in human memory are therefore encoding, storage and recall (retrieval). Additionally, the process of memory consolidation (which can be considered to be either part of the encoding process or the storage process) is treated here as a separate process in its own right. Encoding is a biological event ...
All of our thoughts can be divided up as either simple or complex. When we are born we have certain inborn thought patterns that allow us to develop simple thoughts. These simple thoughts are what we would consider to be common sense, as we grow older. Most of these simple thoughts are created from simple interactions and experiences with our five senses. By combining certain simple thoughts together with outside experiences, we begin to develop complex thoughts. By combining complex thoughts with complex events, we begin to develop our own thought patterns and develop reasoning and rationalization skills. The statistical chance of any two individuals experiencing identical thought patterns from birth is basically zero.
This much I agree with, because it is apparent that no two individuals think exactly alike. However, it is difficult to know where one would draw the line between memory and experience. One could argue that memories are simply more specific accounts of past experiences, which is why memories can fade, distort, or exaggerate reality. I believe that what actually effects our personality is not so much the specific memories that we accumulate, but rather the more general experience that these memories are based from. Our personalities are therefore stemmed from our Souls, and have in essence been handed down to us from a higher power. Personally, I have very little personal opinion about this notion because there is no scientific evidence or explanation of what the Soul is or that it exists, so it exists solely as a product of our imagination.
The Essay on Paintball Guns: Simple or Complex
Paintball Guns: Simple or Complex Paintball is quite a new sport and is becoming more and more popular. It has been around since 1982, but professional paintball teams have just recently come together in 2002. The first known paintball gun was made by John Barker in 1982. At the time he had a job designing air guns for Daisy Inc. After his work with Daisy Inc he created the first ever “paintball ...
This is not to say that I dont believe in the possibility of the Souls existence, but rather that I am indifferent to the subject. The basis of our individuality is perhaps one of the most difficult issues to really explain with certainty, and I believe that personally I am more of an onion than an artichoke..