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To the Fringe
By Eldon Taylor
One of the most important questions
each of us will at some time in some way deal with has been stated in the
admonition: Above all else, know thyself. How does one know themselves?
Each of us sense a state that
is the "stuff" of self, but what do we mean by that? Serious thought usually
yields the idea of mind. The self is somehow inextricably tied up with mind.
The world around us changes, the body changes, over time one looks different
than they did in their earliest memories of self. It's relatively easy for
all of us to imagine being without a body, at least in some spiritual sense,
and yet the notion of self somehow remains constant throughout. Why?
What is mind? Is mind a thing?
Does it exist independent of brain? If it does, what do we mean by exist?
Does it have a location, a size, a temporality? Is it the "stuff" of the
universe? Is it energy--subject to the laws of energy? Does it make any
sense to talk about mind in this way?
How do we know there are other
minds? Of course, we all assume that there are--but why? We can't see them
or touch them or weigh them or even measure them. As close as we can get
is the tracing of what they do. Electrical activity in the brain, behavior,
intelligibility, memory--the tracings of mind? And what about memory? Do
any of us know ourselves without memory? What would that entail? Is it possible?
I think not. Memory is the
key to how we know ourselves. Without knowledge of ourselves, we're not
apt to infer that anyone else has knowledge of themselves.
Let's imagine an isolated scientist
working on time travel. Somehow he is successful at opening a time/space
corridor and travels at near the speed of light for one hundred earth years.
To him this journey takes much less time--approximately ten years. Somehow
he is vaulted back into contemporary time, the time of earth. However, he
hits his head upon arrival and suffers amnesia. He has no identification.
His appearance seems odd (strange clothing) but apart from that he is just
a human being with a head injury. He is taken to a hospital and diagnosed
as an amnesiac. He is given the name John Doe as an operating identification
until his true identity is discovered. Pictures of our scientist are circulated
in the media, but no one comes forward to identify him. Time passes and
he acquires new friends, a job, a home and so forth. Then one day his memories
begin to return. "Wow," he announces to his friends, "I remember. I'm Albert
Einstein."
Who do you think will believe
him? Let's suppose he provides details about Einstein; how many will believe
this to be any more than some explainable fact easily dismissed just as
most of the world dismisses accounts of reincarnation? Sure, he has a natural
ability toward the sciences and is unusually bright. So what? So are a lot
of other people. If Einstein, in his own time, had said that he was Isaac
Newton, here to set the record straight and correct some of his scientific
assumptions while adjusting others to fit another level of observation,
would the world have believed him? Would his tale have discounted his scientific
contribution? Of course not. Just as General George Patent, who knew of
his prior military lifetime, was not discounted as the military genius that
he was in the lifetime as Patent (especially not by the Germans) so an Einstein
asserting Newton memories would not have discounted his genius.
Let's change the scenario a
little. Imagine that our 100 plus year old returned scientist had a love
for the piano. He sits down to the piano with no memory of playing in the
past. However, just as with all amnesiacs, his motor memory is intact. The
first thing he plays is a Bach fugue. He plays it perfectly. One would certainly
conclude that he had been a piano player, a musician, or something akin.
Suppose his skill was extraordinary. One might then begin to search the
record of missing musicians who fit the identity of our scientist. Now,
think of Bach. A so-called child prodigy that apparently did sit down and
begin to play just as though he were remembering an ability.
What is information that we
have no memory of how it was obtained? Generally, with the exception of
demonstratable genius, it is suspect information. That is, if I do not know
how I know something, then perhaps I don't really know it. The memory of
how information is acquired seems critical to the credibility of the information.
Memory again. What is it I don't remember?
I remember a favorite song.
I haven't heard it in years. I have been unable to find anyone that remembers
it. I don't remember the entire song or the title. I do remember certain
lyrics and the tune. No one recognizes the lyrics or the tune. Does the
song exist? Now I don't mean exist like a chair or a house exists.
Imagine we watch a video cassette.
It contains the digital data that represents a motion picture--a wonderful
film. The film is very touching. It is the best we have ever seen. The acting
is superb. The characters live on the television screen for two hours. Then
the tape comes to an end and in some Mission Impossible self-destruct style,
disintegrates. Only you and I have seen the movie. No one else has heard
of this movie. No one else has seen this movie. No one has heard of the
actors. Does the movie exist?
Well, it exists in our minds.
We can replay it as we wish--can't we? No, in fact, memory research shows
us clearly that each time a memory is recalled, it is altered. Sooner or
later, the movie becomes a shadow of itself in our minds. Whole scenes are
lost, detail is altered by recall, and so forth. Does that imply that now
part of the original movie is dead? It no longer exists?
If mind is memory, then how
do we know ourselves? If mind is not memory, is it possible to know ourselves?
If I remember myself being other than I am at this moment, fully recall
the feeling and thoughts and behavior, do I become the me I remember? Am
I both? Do we not see ourselves as constant, even somewhat predictable,
based upon our memories? Who are we then if we lose our memory?
What is the notion of a spiritual
self? Is it as memory bound as how I know to be myself? If not, in what
way? What possibly can be the definition of self without a self-reflective
path that necessarily implies memory. Self-awareness is itself the circular
reflection of memory. At least self-awareness in any contemplative sense.
Suppose a self-aware dog with
memory, that is, the dog knows its name, a few tricks, where it lives, comes
when you call it, sleeps on your bed and so forth, forgets everything. Now
the animal is strange to us. Is this our dog? Before you object to the dog
being self-aware in the first place, what is the difference between the
memory loop of the dog and that of the human? If memory is self awareness,
is the dog self-aware? Most would object to reducing the awareness of a
human mind to that of a dog. The principle argument would no doubt have
something to do with the difference in cognition. The human being is self-aware.
This is a circular argument. It is no more than a tautology if self-aware
means memory. No, for there to be a difference, there must be a fundamental
difference in the memory. Perhaps the dog does not lay in front of the door
thinking how it can be a better dog. Therefore, the dog might fail the test
of self-improvement memory. Perhaps the dog cannot think about itself at
all. Okay, now it fails the memory of thinking about itself test.
Is the human condition different
only because we reflect on ourselves in a unique memory manner? Is it our
method of memory, or type of memory, that sets us apart from other animals?
Is our use of tools, our development of science and technology, our interest
in religion and so forth, only a unique self-reflective pattern of memory?
Perhaps our brain evolution produced the capacity to hold a new kind of
memory--ala, the development of homosapien sapien.
I once prepared a paper titled
Memory Dependent Wellness. Today, I wonder if the paper could not be a little
more inclusive. Perhaps its title should be Memory Dependent Self. Perhaps,
if I wish to change something about myself, self-correct, self-improve,
then I should look to change my memory of self.
From the MIND REVIEW NEWSLETTER
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