I used to have more resistance to some sort of or acceptance that the self is sort of a fictional continuity. But I really don't anymore because it's just as real as anything else's argues. If we if that mind existed in a separable body, I would have no problem saying that's a completely different person. It's just that it doesn't make sense to talk about that that way about ourselves.
David and Tamler discuss famous 'split brain' experiments pioneered by Roger Sperry and Michael Gazzaniga. What happens when you cut off the main line of communication between the left and right hemispheres of our brain? Why under certain conditions do the the left and right brains seem like they have different abilities and desires? What does this tell us about the ‘self’? Do we have two consciousnesses, but only that can speak? Does the left brain bully the right brain? Are we all just a bundle of different consciousnesses with their own agendas? Thanks to our Patreon supporters for suggesting and voting for this fascinating topic!
Plus, physicists may be able to determine whether we’re living in a computer simulation – but is it too dangerous to try to find out?
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