American Dream wrote:Canadian_watcher wrote:AD - there are nuts in every walk of life. Lots of rapists. Lots of child molesters. Lots of murderers...
...People need something to believe in, to work towards, to put their stock in... I can think of worse things than a belief that
simply being loving and courageous will reward you.
Ok- but isn't there something about "faith" itself that can be part of the problem, too?
My understanding of how perception works is that it is a self-organising process, one where a pattern of neuronal activity is laid down (according to very phyical principles of neuronal behaviour) and that that pattern itself then has a direct effect on incoming information
A
passive system information system is one like a filing cabinet, where the existing information doesnt actively interact with new incoming information. A new file comes in, it goes into the cabinet, the end.
An
active information system is one like a rain in a rainforest. A drop goes down a tree branch. The next drop lands somewhere slightly different, travels for a few millimetres then links up with the previous one. This process repreated thousands of times, over different scales, gives rise to trickles, creates streams flowing into tributaries. What has happened before actively interacts with what is present
In a this way, perception gives rise to beliefs which then influence what one physically perceives.
It also means that there is natural tendency is to become prejudiced and invested in the value of what one already believes - and think this actually means something.
It doesnt - it is just the process of how neuronal network behaviour forms perception.
Why is this really important?Because traditional right/wrong logic-based thinking comes from a view of perception as a passive system. Things are or they are NOT. We seek to eliminate the false and shall be left with the truth. We are objective actors, engaging in our thinking like a good surgeon at work.
But we are not. Our brains are pattern making perception systems.
The problem is, the brain is brilliant at forming patterns. A small piece of perceptual input triggers a neuronal pattern that activates muscles that press the cross the road button on a pedestrian crossing. We dont need to
think about crossing the road as the 'road crossing pattern' is present - if we
did life would be very very inconvienient

so patterns are great.
This brilliant self-reinforcing pattern-forming process
adapts our perception based on what we believe.
This is what makes challenging our
own patterns so important - we are hard wired for righteousness.
In our own perceptual world, what we believe makes perfect sense.