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Before and After Human Consciousness, or The Voice of God vs. Auditory Hallucinations
Psychologist Julian Jaynes (1920 – 1997) asserted that humans were not fully conscious until around 4,000 or 3,000 years ago, the time when the two hemispheres of the cerebrum of our brain (left and right, physically connected by the Corpus … Continue reading
Posted in Consciousness, Evolution, Philosophy, Psychology, The Self, The Unconscious
Tagged Archetypes, auditory hallucinations, Bicameralism (psychology), Brain Stem, Carl Jung, Cerebellum, Cerebral hemisphere, cerebral hemispheres, Cerebrum, Collective Unconscious, Consciousness: Creeping up on the Hard Problem, corpus callosum, Daniel Dennett., Derek Parfit, Elizabeth Anscombe, Galen Strawson, God, Human brain, Hume, Jeffrey Gray, Julian Jaynes, Kant, Lateralization of brain function, Left Brain Functions, Life and Death, Limbic System, Locke, major structures of the human brain, mammalian brain, Marcel Kuijsten, mycelium, Nietzsche, Norman Malcolm, prohairesis, Reflections on the Dawn of Consciousness, Richard Sorabji, Right Brain Functions, Roger Sperry, Self: Ancient and Modern Insights about Individuality, Social Sciences, the gods, The Origin of Consciousness in the Breakdown of the Bicameral Mind, Tony Kenny, Wittgenstein, Śântideva
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