• Part 9: Concluding Remarks
    Apr 14 2023

    Sometime I smile because I am happy, other times I am happy because I smile.

    Fell free to contact me at : ysauve557@gmail.com

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    26 mins
  • Part 8: Making Sense in our Changing Environment
    Apr 14 2023

    The oldest fossil records of Homo sapiens where found in Jebel Irhoud, Moroco; they date 300 thousand years. In only the last iota of its existence as distinct species – starting 3.5 thousand years ago, with the Mesopotamian civilization – humans changed their physical and social environments. The most drastic transformations correspond to the dawning of the industrial revolution, 250 years ago, culminating to the ubiquitous use of the Internet, social media and smartphones over the past 20 years. The outcome is that certain of the then adaptive traits have become recently rapidly maladaptive. In the previous part, we just touched upon the hypothesis that wining an argument might have been more important than using logical explanations based on hard facts. Here, I would like to expand on how the maladaptation of our senses in the world we are altering, is affecting us.

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    39 mins
  • Part 7: Ignorance and Convenience
    Apr 11 2023

    “Nothing is more terrible than to see ignorance in action”. Johann Wolfgang von Goethe


    “If you think education is expensive, try ignorance”. Derek Bok


    “We do not err because truth is difficult to see. It is visible at a glance. We err because this is more comfortable”. Alexander Solzhenitzyn

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    1 hr and 1 min
  • Part 6: Feeling the Meaning of Life
    Apr 10 2023

    At various instances in this podcast, I mentioned, "breathe". My rationale was that paying attention to your breath connects you directly to your senses, allowing your thoughts to live their own life, accepting that thoughts are not entities, recognising that they captured your attention away from your breath and patiently reconnecting to the sensation of your breath, again and again, a thousand times. In this manner you develop a new relationship with your thoughts, you let them be, you acknowledge rumination without reacting, you are not intimidated by your thoughts, no matter how rebarbative they might be. In the fourth part, I spent time establishing that thoughts are incidental to the evolution of interneurons that build predictive mental models.

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    31 mins
  • Part 5: The Meaning of Life
    Apr 6 2023

    You ask, what is the meaning of life? You do so because you can. Your inclination and ability to ask this question are incidental to the evolution of predictive mental models. These models emulate and predict the specific physical aspects of reality that have determined survival and passage of genetic information from and between species over 3.8 billion of years.

     

    The fact that you can ask this question is an offshoot of your brain's ability to model and predict a reality without requiring sensory input or motor output. Your brain can now ruminate freely and endlessly. The urge we have to ask, "what is the meaning of life", is linked with our nature of being threat detectors. We have evolved because we detect threats and respond to them, all species do. The lack of sensory awareness to the neuronal activity that generates predictive mental models, creates a void, and becomes a threat in itself. Where are these endless thoughts coming from?

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    1 hr and 31 mins
  • Part 4: Our Brain Generates the Reality we Experience
    Apr 4 2023

    “When we look at a rock what we are seeing is not the rock, but the effect of the rock upon us.” Bertrand Russell

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    1 hr and 11 mins
  • Part 3: Between Sensors and Effectors
    Apr 3 2023

    Between sensors and effectors, the in-between becomes sense, trying to make sense, compelled to make sense. Let go, breathe, and come back to your senses.

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    36 mins
  • Part 2: Evolution Of The Senses (continued)
    Mar 31 2023

    We are now at 1 billion years ago, unicellular algae thrive, forming complex structures, some of which will fossilize as multicellular and morphologically differentiated macrofossils.

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    34 mins