MD Brain Structure, Life on Other Planets, and the MoQ
From: Bob Wallace (rmwj@ix.netcom.com)
Date: Tue May 11 1999 - 01:19:34 BST
"Brain Structure, Life on Other Planets, and the MoQ"
by Bob Wallace
5/8/99
When I first read "Lila" a few years ago and encountered Pirsig's
thesis of the four levels of reality it occured to me that these four
levels correspond to the structure of the human brain as it evolved.
According to Pirsig, the levels, in order of evolution, are the
Inorganic, the Organic, the Societal, and the Intellectual.
Now let's take a look at the brain. Brain researchers state it is made
up of different layers--or levels--much like an onion. They believe
there are three layers, from the most primitive and least evolved at the
bottom of the brain to the most advanced and most evolved at the top of
the brain.
The most primitive, the least evolved part at the bottom of the brain,
is is the reptilian complex, or r-complex. On top of the that is the
more evolved paleomammalian system, which is commonly known as the
limbic system. On top of that, at the top of the brain, is the most
evolved and most advanced, the neomammialian, or neocortex.
The r-complex deals with sex, aggression, establishment of territory,
foraging, hierarchies, and establishment of groups. It's called the
"reptilian complex" because it's just about all reptiles have. And we
have it, too.
On top of the r-complex is the limbic system. It is our
emotional/social brain. It's the part we share with mammals. It's why
dogs instinctively understand our tone of voice.
On top of the limbic system is the neocortex, which is the rational,
intellectual brain. We have a great deal of it. (Dogs don't, which is
why they don't understand our words.)
Here I quote brain researcher Dr. Paul MacLean in Dr. Richard Restak's
book, "The Brain": "In its evolution the human brain expanded in a
hierarchial fashion along the lines of three basic patterns. These three
formations are markedly different in chemistry and structure and, in a
evolutionary sense, are eons apart...[t]he three brains amount to three
interconnected biological computers, each having its own intelligence,
its own subjectivity, its own sense of time and space, and its own
memory and functions."
And, I might add, each has its own morality, which is opposed to the
one above it.
Now let's take a look at Pirsig's four levels and apply them to the
brain.
Obviously, the brain is Inorganic--atoms and molecules and whatnot.
That's the first level.
Now let's look at the second level, the Organic. This is the
biological, the animal.
This corresponds the the r-complex.
The third level, the Societal, correponds to the emotional/social
limbic system.
The fourth level, the Intellectual, corresponds the rational,
intellectual neocortex.
If this correspondence it true (and it seems to me that it is) then it
means that the structure of reality outside of our heads is the same as
the structure of our brains.
This raises some interesting questions. If the MoQ existed before
humans did, then of course our brain structure should mirror it. I don't
see how it could be otherwise.
Another thought that occurred to me if that the MoQ is not a localized
phenomena, if it indeed is the structure of reality throughout the
universe, then by a process of deduction if there is any intelligent
life on other planets it would have to have the same brain structure
that we do.
They would have to be much like us. It should be fairly easy to
understand them. If dogs can understand us because we share part of the
same "brain" with them, it seems to me that we would have to share the
same "brain" that "aliens" do (I don't like using the word "aliens"
because it conjures up visions of fetus-like beings traveling trillions of miles
to perform proctological examinations on people, but I can't think of a
better word).
Let's put it this way. Scientists say inorganic laws--physics and math--
are universal. 2+2=4 even on the other side of the universe. Then are
biological, societal, and intellectual laws also universal? Are they the
same on the other side of the universe as they are here?
If they are, we can pretty much eliminate Vulcans and Klingons--the former
because their lack of emotion would mean they couldn't tell right from
wrong, the latter because they are so biological they'd kill each other
off.
I guess it also means there would be no Space Amoebas or Energy Thought
Beings with no bodies. Oh well.
This doen't mean there is life on other planets, but if there is they
wouldn't be utterly and permanently incomprehensible to us, as I have read
in some science-fiction stories. We'd be able to understand each other's
literature, music and art. We'd probably even understand each other's jokes.
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